Top 10 Most Memorable Tech Super Bowl Ads 179
theodp writes "From 1977's lovable Xeroxing Monk to 2007's smug-and-rich SalesGenie pitch man, Valleywag has rounded up videos for its Top 10 most memorable tech-oriented Super Bowl commercials. The commercials are: Apple (1984), Monster (1999), CareerBuilder (2005), GoDaddy (2005), Xerox (1977), E*Trade (1999), Pets.com (2000), Computer.com (2000), SalesGenie.com (2007) and OurBeginning (2000). This year's ads are coming soon." I've always been a fan of the Outpost.com gerbil cannon spot.
digg? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:digg? (Score:5, Interesting)
But I really like the updated layout. They're no longer wasting valuable real estate on the pointless left-hand column.
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Breaks page down and page up (Score:2, Insightful)
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It's pretty nice - at least until you realize that long horizontal lines of text are more strenuous to read. Shorter lines with more rows are a lot easier on the eyes.
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My Firefox windows are spawned with a geometry of 850x1100 which makes for nicely legible text on most sites (and often hides some of the right hand ad bar on the wide ones).
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Grumpy old men... (Score:5, Interesting)
Jeeeeez people, calm down. As of composing this, about 75% of the comments are complaining of digg similarities, the new discussion system, blah blah. Calm down, people.. it's still slashdot. As best I can tell, they've just debuted a new section (idle.slashdot). You can still post your retarded memes (In soviet Russia our new CSS web 2.0 overlords welcome I, for one), and otherwise go about your typical slashdot business.
Back to the actual article.. I'd never heard of computer.com.. I guess it would help if I watched the superbowl.. but, yea, I don't. After viewing all the ads in TFA, some are decent (and I've seen re-run later), and some aren't terribly memorable (the salesgenie ad looks like something a 12 year old kid could storyboard in about an hour). Most of the dotcom ads are from companies I'm aware of (monster, pets.com, etc), although I never heard of computer.com or ourbeginning.com.
I tried to do some research on computer.com to see what its story was (currently a doorway page [computer.com] for a linkfarm).. and as best I can tell, it burned out right away (Seattle PI story from 2yrs later [nwsource.com]). (They raised $6M+ in venture funding [medialifemagazine.com], and blew $3M on the superbowl ads). There's even a 3yr old
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Re:digg? (Score:5, Interesting)
But anyway, this is scaring me. Why is slashdot trying to copy and compete with the likes of Digg? I come here because this place is DIFFERENT, the discourse is often intelligent and insightful. If I wanted mindless links to ads, Ron Paul you tube videos, and funny pictures I wouldn't be on a site that purports to cover "News for Nerds".
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You must be new here. You can count on Slashdot discussions to contain gems of wisdom like:
Re:digg? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Not all geeks are libertarians. In fact I'd say most are not. The ones that are just happen to be incredibly vocal.
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Sometimes it's really hard to find the wheat amongst the chaff.
Yeah, but so what? That's always been true anywhere, well except for moderated newsgroups on Usenet.
Moderation sucks and slashdot moderations suck harder. Read at -1, ignore the moderation and skim past the offensive posts.
There's a lot of entertaining material here, you just have to get past the moderation to see most of it. I'm not the only low 5-digit or less Slashdot ID who still reads and posts here. Any web site that keeps readers for over a decade is doing something right.
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It's called filters and it works great on Usenet. Unfortunately it takes work.
Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen's scoring mode in Gnus was a great idea at the time, but even with work it didn't work all that well in real life (sorry Lars).
Google seems to do a little better with gmail, but it's far from perfect and is getting worse over time as SPAMmers get more sophisticated. I regularly have mailing list mail misfiled as SPAM and get SPAM in my inbox. I also have a decade+ old email address that I've used to post to Usenet.
Any company[microsoft.com] that keeps it's customers must be doing something right.
Ouch. You win (except for the grammar - it's "its" not "it's").
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No, I'm not from the US
Re:digg? (Score:5, Insightful)
Side note: Scrolling in this new comment system does suck. Go in to Prefs and turn off "Enable Dynamic Discussions" for a speed boost.
Re:digg? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:digg? (Score:5, Interesting)
The millionaires who demand subsidies to build stadiums or they'll move their team elsewhere insisted that their sporting events helped the local economy by bringing in tax revenues. The first baseball strike proved what a lie that was. What actually happened was people did other things in their cities. They went to dinner and a movie or the theater, etc. They spent roughly the same amount of money except they spread it across multiple businesses instead of only at the stadium. This was actually BETTER for the local economy. More businesses benefited and the tax revenues were often bigger because the professional sports team often received a tax break to stay in town.
Screw professional sports. The next time one demands the taxpayer's cough up money or they'll walk, show them the door.
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This new look... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This new look... (Score:5, Funny)
I'm sorry, this is against the Slashdot terms of conduct.
There are links ...? (Score:2)
Why didn't anyone say?
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I'm sorry, this is against the Slashdot terms of conduct.
Indeed. On Slashdot, doing that would often send you to the moon...
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On the plus side it's in its own section with a design so gaudy I can easily avoid it. That's the only plus though. The bad part is it will attract
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What, people who aren't afraid of change?
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No one, and I mean no one, reads the f*cking articles here. Click the picture. n00b.
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I remember when Digg started up, and there was a plethora of comments that linked to Digg and referred to it.
If there's worry about the "Digg crowd," it's important to remember that much of the "Digg crowd" really is just old /. people. I don't go to Digg, personally, but I can't imagine both sites having mutually exclusive memberships.
You would think... (Score:5, Insightful)
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I don't like the now very small text boxes to input text in though, among a few things.
This message was brought to you to by the Resistance From Geeks Reluctant To Change.
Also Updated Firehose - http://idle.slashdot.org/ (Score:2)
Interesting... if you remove the story from the link, going straight to http://idle.slashdot.org/ [slashdot.org] you still get the Superbowl ad story, but under it you'll see an Idle Firehose in a new interface. The page title becomes Firehose as well.
Changes are afoot!
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Also the new comment system doesn't work on my Wii. The scrolling bit just takes up the whole screen.
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Re:You would think... (Score:4, Insightful)
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I'd then complain that the big Slashdot-green box within which is contained the article text is annoying. It doesn't flow for shit, and is furthermore hideous.
And I'd also complain that the box surrounding the text on the submission page is too small. I want it bigger. And it was bigger prior to this change. Last time this port
It's just the Idle section (Score:2)
And yeah, like the other guy said, this theme is ONLY for the idle section. You can probably just change the idle.slashdot.org to www.slashdot.org to get rid of it, actually. I know I had to make a script to do that so games.slashdot.org doesn't get blocked at work (I think I changed games -> it).
Idl
errr..... (Score:5, Funny)
Idle (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Idle (Score:5, Interesting)
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http://slashdot.org/users.pl?op=edithome [slashdot.org]
Its the only section that you can't shutoff from showing up on the main page. Obviously just forgotten but still ironic they'd miss the only section a significant number of members will shut off.
Join! (Score:2)
oh my god (Score:5, Funny)
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Poor article got the shaft (Score:3, Funny)
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The 1984 Apple advert was clearly a classic and the 1977 Xerox one (while seriously dated) was pretty entertaining. The rest, it seems, were really scraping the bottom of the barrel. Were there really no good superbowl commercials in the last 30 years? The pets.com one looks like the kind of thing that made me give up having a television in my house.
Back off topic, I quite like the new layout but the comment submission page sucks beyond belief. Was the CareerBuilder.com advert
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The only one worth my time is the E*Trade one, which appealed to the cynic in me
BTW, where is The Dot? (Score:3, Informative)
And then there were IBM's OS/2-toting nuns ("my mobile") & gears supplier (to Japanese clients)... Sightings, anyone?
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wait a second... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Still waiting... (Score:3, Informative)
My vote for the biggest vaporware product ad evah.
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http://www.myvu.com/ [myvu.com] for display.
some random umpc for computing.
a mobile phone doing hsdpa or evdo for connectivity.
problem is input and battery life...
godaddy (Score:2)
I ask purely because I know there was one famous dot com bust faliure known for a great superbowl advert that failed soon after, and I can't recall the name.
There, and I didn't mention the hideous new layout once....
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It seems that computers.com did not fare good as well.
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Outpost.com gerbil cannon spot (Score:2)
Budwiser should fire their add agency (Score:3, Funny)
And they paid first commercial money for that. Ouch.
10 Best Ads Already Done (Score:3, Interesting)
http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Desktops-and-Notebooks/Super-Tech-Ads/ [eweek.com]
Steven
Really? The go daddy ad? (Score:3, Funny)
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My personal favorite (Score:4, Funny)
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The only one I've seen so far that's worth mentioning is the E*Trade one from TFA.
I'm not from the US and so don't see the commercials, but even I've heard they're supposed to be good...nothing that memorable yet.
IMO, the Apple vs PC ones are way better...
Arrrgh... top 10 lists (Score:4, Funny)
ok... trying to focus...
Top 10 lists. Is it just me? Or does everyone when they see any kind of "top 10" list they immediately think:
1. Lazy worthless journalists.
2. Product placement / viral marketing / ad by stealth
I need to work 10 list of things I'd like to do to journalists. But it'll have to wait until after I have recovered from the brain damage that is this new layout...
apple ad, prophecy? (Score:4, Funny)
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Microsoft and Apple were both 'liberating' from that computer culture, with the notion of everybody having their own computer on their desk.
The 'IBM
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check your sarcasm / irony detectors, cadet!
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I really wonder who Apple's ads are aimed at (like the endlessly irritating Mac vs PC ads). Surely they aren't intended to convince PC users to switch - insulting someone usually isn't an effective way to do that - so the only point of them must be to keep the Apple brethren convinced of their innate superiority.
(this comment composed on a G4 Powerbook, freshly rebooted after the latest kernel panic)
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However, I think that Windows does a terrible job for the general populous
I think the problem is that no OS can fit the general populous without having problems. Windows is a jack-of-all-trades, master of none platform. That's why there are so many editions of Windows, Microsoft can't just release 'Windows' and have everyone happy. Home users don't care about running a domain controller and most business users are not too keen on media center.
You'll always have other platforms out there, simply because they can fill in the niches that Microsoft can't dedicate enough time for.
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WTF? (Score:2, Insightful)
what (Score:2)
I don't know or care about football games, but.. (Score:2)
This odd little number which reminds me of THX1138 and 2001 [youtube.com]
And. .
Sisko doing Morpheus [youtube.com]
These tap into the love of geeks for sci-fi and ideals about freedom in a manner which must have been fun for the guys making these ads. --Which goes to show that having a huge ad budget means you can do some cool stuff from time to time.
-FL
Re:I don't know or care about football games, but. (Score:2)
I still prefer the E*Trade one from TFA.
Super Bowl?!! (Score:3, Funny)
I can't filter idle? (Score:5, Insightful)
Everyone's so focused on the 'new look' (Score:2)
that time linux got a superbowl commercial (Score:2, Interesting)
It was a couple of years ago. It was IBM, and I thought it did a pretty damn good job of explaining to the world WTF Linux is and why they should care.
and it was pretty damn awesome.
Subject (Score:2)
Best line ever... (Score:2)
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While I'll agree Rubber Band Man should be on that list, and a few that are on the list shouldn't be (I mean, come on, what's funny or interesting about the SalesGenie.com or GoDaddy.com commercials?), there's no question the 1984 Macintosh ad is the best, so far, and will probably remain the best for a while. Seriously - the thing was directed by Ridley Scott. Of course, if you actually watched it when it originally aired, it was a lot m