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Tips for Exploring the Online Freelance Market

Tips for Exploring the Online Freelance Market

My bi-weekly tech column in the Warrington Times (UF student run business newspaper)
- Original Article: Tips for Exploring the Online Freelance Marketplace (Published Issue 7, 24th Jan’10)

The art of “freelancing” has grown rapidly online, where people from all over the world can access the skills and talents of independent contractors for hire. A freelancer is an individual that is not under the employment of a company, but instead is contracted out by clients for work in their specific area of expertise. The Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that about 10.3 million US workers are freelancers (equating to about 7.4% of the workforce). Freelancers enjoy the freedom of setting their own hours and choosing the work they desire, as they are essentially a one person business.

In recent years the online revolution has also helped to spur the growth of this freelancing market. Many websites now serve as a hub to facilitate freelancers and those looking to hire them. Some of those websites include:
www.getafreelancer.com
www.ifreelance.com
www.guru.com

A quick registration on any of these sites would enable you to either setup your own profile as a freelancer or post a job listing of your own for freelancers to bid on. It’s an online job marketplace where individuals are being contracted out every day for their skills. Some of the popular skill areas for freelancers include: writing, software development, website design, marketing & advertising, graphic design, and many others. Posting a listing in its appropriate skill category will allow individuals fitting the job description to place bids on the project and provide an estimated time to complete.

After reviewing the bids and experience levels of each of the freelancers, a more formal agreement can be setup to begin contracting of the work needed. Often after an initial project is completed, the freelancer is offered additional work by the original contractor, having shown the ability to accomplish the task efficiently.

To really understand the beauty of what freelancing can enable lies in the ability to access the skills and experience of others, who more than likely live hundreds of miles away. For a startup business venture, bringing in experienced persons to build aspects of your business can be extremely difficult. Hiring can be a daunting task for a small startup strapped for cash and the limited reach they have in acquiring qualified employees. The playing field is leveled now that startups can hire the experience they need through the online marketplace of freelancing. Creation of a website detailing the aspects of their business can be contracted out on the freelance hub sites. This saves valuable time and money that normally would be exerted in scouting out a local web developer or corporate web design entity.

Similar scenarios can be seen across many different business opportunities. Looking for a writer to contribute articles to your site? Hire a freelancer. Looking to create an iPhone app for that great game idea? Hire a freelancer. If you need an advertising specialist to promote your online presence on the web, you’ll find great freelance talent out there ready to work and ready to bid on the opportunity to work with you. They say jobs are scarce in this marketplace, but you might disagree after spending some time on these sites.

What kind of freelancing are you most interested in?

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Article Extras:

Here is a short PowerPoint presentation I did highlighting the uses of Freelancing:
Freelance (PowerPoint 2007)
Freelance (PowerPoint 2003)

Augmented Reality at the Consumer Level

Augmented Reality at the Consumer Level

Continuing with another article I have written for my bi-weekly column in the Warrington Times (UF student run business newspaper):

Augmented Reality at the Consumer Level

By Nick Carson - Published Issue 5, 16th Nov’09

The military has uses for it, as does TV and their associated advertisers. The real question, however, is whether augmented reality can become useful for the average consumer.

Augmented reality is the use of computer generated images and information overlaid on a view of the physical world.

All of us have been exposed to it at some point. Football broadcasts are a prime example of the use of augmented reality. The yellow line denoting the first down marker is overlaid on the playing field to “augment” the view of the game. Of course, you won’t see this if you actually go to the game.

Broadcasts also overlay advertisements directly onto both the field and surrounding environment as a cheap alternative to physically printing the image. The military also employs the use of augmented reality by using HUD’s (Heads Up Displays) and HMD’s (Helmet Mounted Displays) to display tactical information directly to aircraft pilots.

Consumer level applications could be next as the demand grows for enhanced information-based systems. We have already seen several iPhone applications break into this new market. One of these is “Monocle”, a new feature of Yelp’s app, a service to find and review businesses. Monocle uses GPS and the compass to locate where a user is and to display markers and information about locations as you look through the iPhone’s camera. However, looking through a phone is a very clunky way of using the technology. It’s likely that a more advanced method of viewing our physically space will be needed.

Advances in wearable displays could realize the full potential of augmented reality. Embedding displays within glasses or contact lenses would provide for a permanent visual solution to look through. This kind of accessibility could pave the way for what will be a revolution in the way we experience our world.

Consumers would have a variety of opportunities to incorporate this technology into their everyday lives. With a visual display pointing out areas of interest to the user, even walking down the street would be a new experience. The augmented reality could be used to identify passing faces of friends and contacts, displaying their name and relevant information on demand.

Advertisers might also attract customers to their products via a whole new dimension of advertising. Imagine walking through Wal-Mart, wearing the embedded display glasses, picking up a product off the shelf and a video instantly plays to highlight its features. Augmented reality would be highly customizable, allowing the consumer to choose exactly what they wish to see when viewing the world.

Another important aspect of this technology is its ability to replace physical displays and input devices. With just your one pair of embedded display glasses, any location or object could be a virtual display. Why buy a TV when you could project a virtual one on your wall or desk? Products of the future could be controlled by visual cues overlaid on an object, allowing you to press and manipulate these virtual controls that exist only within augmented reality.

We’re not talking sci-fi here: all of these technologies exist and are currently in development.  Given time to mature, the right companies will take up the challenges of integrating these technologies. Augmented reality will permeate into each of our lives to redefine what it is to view an information based world.

WiTricity will change the Tech Market

WiTricity will change the Tech Market

Article I wrote for my bi-weekly column in the Warrington Times (UF student run business newspaper):

View Article @ Warrington Times:
WiTricity will change the Tech Market

By Nick Carson - Published Issue 1, 14th Sept’09

You’ve probably never heard of it, but there is a new technology that is emerging which could change the dynamics of the technology market in a huge way. It’s called WiTricity, and the concept is simple: Wireless Electricity.WiTricity is a technology developed by a MIT team led by Professor Marin Soljačić and it solves problems we all deal with everyday. We all carry laptops, cell phones and iPods around with us, and we all struggle with the problem of powering these devices.

Imagine now if all these devices could be powered without ever plugging them into an outlet. The technology uses electromagnetic resonance to transfer electricity wirelessly and safely over a distance of several meters. So the next time you come home and set your bag on the counter or sit in class at your desk, WiTricity could be automatically powering or charging your mobile devices. No more plugging in power adapters and messing around with all those cords.

The applications are limitless, everything from mobile electronics to wall mounted TV’s, medical devices, electric cars and more. The benefits are obvious of wireless power to the consumer, making our lives easier and removing some of our everyday headaches. The technology is real and was recently demonstrated in July at the TED Global conference by Eric Giler, CEO of WiTricity.

TED WiTricity Video – Eric Giler

What does this all mean for the technology market and businesses? After WiTricity emerges, we could see a surge in its adoption across many markets. Companies could find themselves incorporating the technology directly into their products to allow consumers the ability to charge or power their devices wirelessly. In addition, they could be utilizing it to reduce costs and increase efficiency within their business. Dell, Apple, HP, Toshiba are all major corporations we could see in the coming years implementing wireless electricity into their mobile devices and laptops. Future versions of the iPhone will no longer ever need to be plugged into an outlet. Netbooks and laptops could throw away those ugly power adapters.

A wave of new products with wireless electricity would force companies to revamp their strategies. Consider the impact it will have on the battery market. Duracell (parent company Proctor and Gamble) and companies alike will need to innovate quickly if they want to stay in business.

With a widespread adoption of WiTricity, two things could happen: First, many products will do away with batteries all together such as remote controls, mice, keyboards- basically anything that stays in your house all the time. Second, mobile products like laptops and cell phones would integrate the technology, with most companies opting to have rechargeable batteries tied directly to the WiTricity component. If major battery companies fail tonotice the impact it could have, they might suffer the same fate as Kodak did when digital cameras first came on the scene.

WiTricity is just one of the many new technological innovations set to make a splash in the tech world in the coming years, possibly eliminating the need for batteries all together.

Will you be using WiTricity in the near future?

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