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For those of you who missed out on the OG version of the Lucy Exposed figure, Made By Monsters announces its special Japanese version of Ron English’s “Lucy Exposed.” This new version is set to drop on January 20th, 2010, standing 8″ tall and limited to only 100 units worldwide. Retail is set around $110 USD
Posted by Jolynn Wong

OK our latest installment to Sony Football Asia – introducing the KICKATHON. Can you kick your way to South Africa? Well if you can there are some 2010 World Cup tickets in it for you – check it out here.
Posted by David Brown

Want the ultimate football experience in your living room? Check out our latest Sony HD World football centre and get your creative juices flowing.
Posted by David Brown

Get your football brain out and test your skills in our new Facebook game for Sony Football Asia - Click here.
Posted by David Brown

Finally after weeks of toil and deliberation our new campaign for HP Thin and Light notebooks is live. Check it out here.
Posted by David Brown
Microsoft launched a new Silverlight-powered Bing Maps experience into beta, which offered a myriad of new features including powerful visualisation that stitches together images contributed by users (yes, clients’ favourite “UGC”) into 3D photo collages, via their Photosynth technology.
Both Microsoft and Google are experimenting with a variety of tools that make hunting for locations far more immersive, and they’ve a new Application Gallery that enables developers to include their own information on a map. If they are able to open the platform up to more developers (and hopefully for the platform to come to our shores soon), we are then able to truly realise the vision of making maps more like a video game than an Atlas utility. Imaging a virtual walkthrough of places you have never been before (possibly an idea for tourism boards), leveraging on local insights for specific data ranging from tweets, blog posts, local lens, videos, and even real time vodcasts.
While we’re sure Bing will continue to open up the technology to developers and to further enhance its visualisation properties, one can only hope they also improve the loading speed (if only its available here and we have the New Generation Broadband to overcome this challenge), the usability with the influx of functionalities, and of course for a growing pool of hungry photography prosumers to contribute colour vibrant pictures for massive stitching.
Explore Bing Map now:

Posted by Jolynn Wong