Monday, 6 December 2010

CD Team Festive Quiz 2010!

To say thank you to our 2010 customers our sales team has put together a festive trivia quiz. Click here to enter

Answer all of the questions correctly and you will be entered into a prize draw for a chance to win one of the following classic prizes:

 1st Prize: One lucky customer will receive a Hotel Chocolat Classic Christmas Selection LUXE and a bottle of Bollinger Special Cuvée NV Champagne.
2nd Prize: Four runners up will receive a Hotel Chocolat Classic H-Box Christmas Selection and a bijou bottle of Moët et Chandon Champagne.

Haven't placed an order this year? Don't worry you still have until the 17th to place an order and enter the competition. Alternatively you can just pit your wits against our sales team for fun.

Call your Account Manager on 01491 63 63 73 if you get stuck.

Terms and conditions:
  • Closing date for entries is Friday the 17th of December 2010
  • The competition is open to CD Team 2010 customers only
  • Only one correct entry allowed per person
  • The correct answers will be published here on Monday the 20th of December 2010
  • The winners details will not be publishedThe closing date for entries is Friday the 17th of December 2010.
Author: Richard Dearing, Director


The Answers

Christmas Songs and Lyrics:
Q. Which song is considered America’s most popular Christmas song?
A. White Christmas

Q. Which popular Christmas carol is considered to be a lullaby?
A. Away in a manger

Q. In a “Holly Jolly Christmas”, the lyrics tell us to have a cup of what?
A. A cup of cheer

Q. What are the only two reindeer mentioned in the lyrics of “Here comes Santa Claus”?
A. Vixen and Blitzen

Sports:
Q. Which Premier League Football team does Andy Carroll play for?
A. Newcastle

Q. What Winter Olympic Sport would see you penalised for "Slashing"?
A. Ice Hockey

Q. Which country does Stoke footballer Tuncay represent?
A. Turkey

Q. Which famous singer is a fanatical Manchester City fan?
A. Noel Gallagher (correct answer)

Food and Drink:
Q. In order to make their geese happier, fatter and tastier for the coming Christmas season, farmers in Cheshire have begun to:
A. Dress them in woolly hats and scarves

Q. Which chef created a Christmas menu in 2007 where dishes included Babe in a Manger and Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh?
A. Heston Blumenthal

Q. Similar to the tradition of putting out cookies and milk out for Santa, the children in Sweden try to please the Swedish Santa, Tomte, by leaving out:
A. A bowl of rice pudding

Q. Which doyenne of food writing advised: “In my experience, clever food is not appreciated at Christmas. It makes the little ones cry and the old ones nervous”?
A. Jane Grigson

Christmas TV:
Q. Who played the very first Doctor Who in 1963?
A. William Hartnell

Q. Who plays Dad in The Royle Family?
A. Ricky Tomlinson

Q. Which programme is the most watched TV programme ever on Xmas Day?
A. Eastenders

Q. Which movie was voted the nations favourite festive film of all time?
A. ET

Music:
Q. In which year did Bob the Builder make number one with Can we fix it?
A. 2000

Q. Which group had 3 consecutive Christmas number ones in 1996, 1997 and 1998?
A.Spice Girls

Q. Which Michael Jackson song was a UK Christmas number one in 1995?
A. Earth Song

Q. Who sang Little Drummer Boy with Bing Crosby and made a chart topper at Xmas?
A. David Bowie

Christmas Crackers:
Q. Which ocean is Christmas Island in?
A. Indian Ocean

Q. Which continent is the turkey from?
A. North America

Q. What “must-have” gift for Christmas 1998 had desperate parents fighting in the aisles?
A. Furby

Q. Another popular Christmas novelty is the cracker. Who invented the snapper that makes the bang when the cracker is pulled?
A. Tom Smith

Thursday, 25 November 2010

In-house disc publishing, only 34p per disc!

Xpress XE with Xstreamjet printer and 3 years on-site support, only 34p per disc!

The Xpress XE disc duplicator is a professional disc publishing solution, perfect for creating unique content in a production area or networked environment.

The Xstreamjet is an industrial strength, high volume, bulk ink disc printer.

Priority On-Site Service and Support. Our dedicated technical support team has over 35 years combined experience in the IT industry and specific expertise with optical disc duplication equipment.


The cost per finished disc example below is based on the following:

Xpress XE with two CD/DVD recorders, Xstreamjet Inkjet printer, bulk ink kit and 3 years Priority On-Site Service and Support.

Discs per month = 3,000
Discs over 3 year period = 108,000

Cost of equipment* and on-site support* = £0.07
+ £0.23 (DVD discs**)
+ £0.04 (bulk ink**)
= £0.34 per finished disc

*When you take advantage of the current special offers:
  • Order a Microtech Xpress disc publisher before the 31st December 2010 and we will give you 10% off the list price and send you a £100 Visa gift card!
  • FREE upgrade from back to base to Priority On-Site Service and Support when you purchase a new Xpress Disc Duplicator
 **Based on a monthy order of 3,000 white inkjet printable discs and a quarterly order of 6 bulk inks.

Call 01491 63 63 73 or visit our web site to find out more about the optical disc products and services we offer.


Author: Richard Dearing, Director

Tuesday, 19 October 2010

Henley to New York by Disc

When CD Team was formed over 15 years ago in 1995, a recordable disc could have cost you £15 and take an hour to record on a CD recorder that had cost you £2,000!


If all the discs we've supplied were put end to end....

Every single business day since 1995 we've been supplying CD, DVD and Blu-ray discs throughout the UK and Europe to our customers, and thankfully, due to market growth, at much lower prices today.

After 15 years, it see! ms a good time to reflect on what just some of our customers have used those discs for:

Press kits, rat management in rural indian villages, training, software releases and updates, mapping data, gas pipe information, game code distribution, talking books, product launches, parts catalogues, backup data, brand awareness campaigns, Christmas cards, newsletters, radio archiving, film pre-release, music mastering, data archiving, instruction manuals, training programmes, court submission information, wedding day recording, aircraft flight operation, market research distribution, reboot discs, microfilm conversion, charity promotion, military vehicle operation, general security service work, heart data recording, films on demand, music on demand, software on demand, county council records, central government databases, brand guidelines, product warranty registration, business strategy launches, data encryption products, patient recor! ds, financial updates, legal recording, credit information, sea change data, outside broadcast recording, karaoke, digital photo albums and libraries, cv's, church sermon recordings, self help guides, live concert recording, oil pipeline data, annual reports, competitions, mail shots, Christmas decorations (hung from a Christmas tree they shine and look ironically cool), tourism audio guides, library archiving, university launch packs, pharmaceutical product analysis, architect drawing and design, CCTV, Police surveillance and other things we are not at liberty to talk about!

This list is by no means exhaustive and the continued innovative uses of this stable format for transferring and storing data, sound and images continues to roll along. This is especially true where newer technologies such as Blu-ray and 3D broadcasting are growing in popularity.

We looked at our records and wondered how far all the discs ! we had sold would reach starting from our offices in Henley?

....they would reach right across the Atlantic to New York!

Who knows, in just a few more years they could reach all the way back to Henley again!

Our discs reached the Big Apple, now here's your chance to win a Little Apple! Enter our Little Apple Competition for a chance to win a New iPod Nano 8GB or his and hers DKNY Be Delicous gift sets.


Call 01491 63 63 73 or visit our web site to find out more about the optical disc products and services we offer.

Author: Jo Fone, Managing Director

Little Apple Competition

Our discs reached the Big Apple, now here's your chance to win a Little Apple!

See the Henley to New York by Disc blog post.



Just tell us how many 120 mm optical discs*, laid flat, edge to edge, would it take to reach from London to New York and we will enter you in a prize draw for a chance to win a New iPod Nano 8GB or his and hers DKNY Be Delicious gift sets.

*to the nearest 250,000 discs (30 Kilometers)

To enter please email your answer to cdtnews@cdteam.co.uk before the 30th of November 2010.

If you get stuck give your Account Manager a call on 01491 63 63 73.

Author: Richard Dearing, Director

Friday, 8 October 2010

Cost effective business communication by disc

Discs make an excellent communication medium, and you’re only limited by your imagination when developing the content.

CD Team custom printed disc examples
Marketing with CD’s and DVD’s

CDs and DVDs: chances are you have more than a few in your car, by your TV and next to your computer.

The optical disc has made a big impact throughout today’s modern society. Everyone knows that disc technology has revolutionized content delivery, and changed the nature of the film industry with the DVD.

But the effect of plastic discs embedded with code goes far beyond entertainment. It has introduced new opportunities for attention grabbing and effective business communication. And that’s especially critical during an era when every marketing and PR expenditure is closely scrutinized.

CD’s and DVD’s represent a unique and effective way to communicate with many different audiences: customers, prospects, partners, students, trainees, newly hired employees, audio book listeners, catalogue browsers, and many more. They can be packaged and delivered using a wide variety of materials and shipped inexpensively.

The range of content that can be effectively delivered on CD’s, CD-Rom, DVD’s, DVD Rom spans virtually anything that can be digitized and can fit on a disc – from 650MB to 8.5GB (dual layer DVD) of data. For Blu-ray, which can store up to 50GB of digital content in dual-layer, the possibilities are even greater.

Discs offer a simple, low cost, universal means to convey information in the digital form to anyone, anywhere. You have to do some serious hunting to find a household that doesn’t have a DVD player, and, the drives included with most computers play everything from the latest movie releases to the earliest audio CD’s. Today you can send just about any kind of disc to anyone with a high degree of confidence that they will be able to play it, providing of course you choose a quality disc.

Durability is also a plus. Unlike magnetic media, where stray electrical fields can corrupt data, information on CD’s and DVD’s exists in a circular spiral of tiny impressions in a metallic surface, detected and read by laser beam reflections. Even if the surface gets slightly scratched, error correction algorithms allow the information to be read. The durability and longevity of information of disc helps build a strong case for its use not only as a communication medium, but also as an archival medium.

Recycling discs
And, for businesses looking for ways to lessen their impact on the environment, discs are made of materials that can be recycled with relative ease. The polycarbonate substrate can readily be salvaged and turned into other products. As an ISO14000 accredited business we not only recycle our in-house out of date or scrap discs, we also take delivery of our customers used products for secure recycling. Discs are first shredded to ensure data security.

Call 01491 63 63 73 or visit our web site to find out how we can help you create, enhance and deliver your content today!

Innovative businesses are still successfully getting their message out and telling their stories on optical disc, delivering all types of content in a form that is increasingly easy to create, highly portable, cheap to distribute, user-friendly, and simple to recycle.

Our client base is truly rich and diverse and after reading our customer testimonials and seeing the companies we work with, we hope you will have the confidence to call us and find out how we can positively affect your business.

Author: Jo Fone, Managing Director

Wednesday, 15 September 2010

QR Codes

Introduction 
The world of barcodes is becoming vastly more interesting in recent times, with 2D barcodes allowing us to represent anything from URLs to invoices, which in turn allows us to connect physical images to applications in all kinds of interesting ways.

QR Codes storing addresses and URLs may appear in magazines, on signs, buses, business cards or just about any object that a user might need information about.

A user having a camera phone equipped with the correct reader software can scan the image of the QR Code causing the phone’s browser to launch and redirect to the programmed URL.

This act of linking from physical world objects is known as a hardlink or physical world hyperlinks.

Barcodes: a brief history
Life is truly black and white when you are dealing with barcodes. Those little lines that grace the backs of our books, boxes and just about everything else have become ubiquitous in our society - so much so that they have become symbols of capitalism, namelessness and government control.

Some readers have never known a world without barcodes, and for others it may just seem like that, but the barcode is barely in its middle-age crisis.

Officially, the first patent for a barcode was awarded in October 1952 for tracking train cars. It was another 14 years before the barcode caught the eyes of manufactures and put into commercial use. Another 15+ years forward to the 1980s, and barcodes were being slapped on just about everything we buy.

A barcode is a combination of thick and thin lines used to represent a series of numbers. For books, these numbers encode an ISBN, which has become so popular it had to be extended from a 10 to a 13 digit number! But a barcode can encode any value, not just ISBNs.

The series of lines represents digits, and the thickness and combination of those lines describe which digit is being encoded.

The traditional barcodes you see everyday are sometimes called one-dimensional barcodes. This is because they are scanned, or "read", in only one direction - horizontally. The vertical height of the barcode makes for easy scanning, but in itself does not add any additional information.

The next generation of barcodes is generally referred to as 2D, two-dimensional, barcodes. These new style barcodes get their name from the ability to be read both horizontally and vertically, therefore increasing the density of information that can be encoded in the same amount of space.

QR Codes
QR codes are the most robust of the current 2D barcode formats. They have wide adoption in Asia and Oceania and are making headway in Europe and the Americas. What makes QR codes so special is that they are capable of encoding non-ASCII characters, along with URLs, telephone numbers, SMS messages and even binary data.

Created by Japanese corporation Denso-Wave in 1994. The “QR” is derived from “Quick Response”, as the creator intended the code to allow its contents to be decoded at high speed.

Since you can encode just about any data, you can begin to use it for applications such as inventory control or unique ids for database look-ups, and beyond. Below is an example of what a QR code looks like.

Example QR Code (links to http://www.cdteam.co.uk/)

You can recognize a QR code by the 3 large squares in the corners. These are registration marks - they tell the QR Code reader which side is the top.

A good scanner can read a 2D barcode from any direction and rotate it in memory so those registratiion marks and the rest of the barcode are in the right orientation. The black and white squares in the area between the registration marks are the encoded data (well, it is slightly more complex than that, because there is some error checking and correction added into those squares).

This makes the format even more robust and resistant to damage from the elements. With the highest level of encoding and error checking it is possible to damage up to 30% of the barcode and have it still be decoded into its original data.

QR codes can also encode more data than other barcode formats, over 4000 ASCII chars. The more data that gets encoded, the larger the barcode grows.

Example QR Code  (500 characters)
You can see that the dimensions have grown and there are additional, smaller, registration marks to incorporate the additional information. 

So what kind of things can we use QR’s for?
Well there’s many possibilities and you’re only limited by your imagination – here’s a few:

Example 1: Game Promotion
Imagine the gaming poster of the near future: A large 2-color poster with the game name & photo. At the bottom there is a series of 2D barcodes. The first is a link to a calendar file. You follow the link and it adds the release date into your phone's calendar so you don't forget about it and double book that evenings gaming in. Another 2D barcode is a 30 second preview video clip of the game that you can check out on your mobile. The 3rd 2D barcode links you to a site selling the game. You take a picture of the barcode and Instead of typing in your credit card number, you simply get the price of the game added to next month's phone bill and the game is delivered to your door.

Example 2: Branded products:
All physical media and content can be branded with specific QR codes. This enables the user to access further content by for example, via a mobile friendly social network site that is linked in with a specific product. You could also back trace its CSR credentials.Points in a ‘virtual clubcard’ format could be added to user accounts to be submitted for various incentives. Of course by registering and continuing to be active via this type of information exchange, gives deeper insight into specific demographic and consumer information.

Example 3: Accessibility:
Your phone is much more versatile than just accessing URLs. Your desktop web browser knows several different protocols – http, https and mailto to name a few. Your phone, on the other hand, knows about these and some others, namely the tel and sms protocols. In much the same way that you link to an email address with mailto:enquiries@cdteam.co.uk, you can link to a telephone number with tel: 01491636373. The former will launch your email client so you can send a message, and the latter will launch the dialer on the phone so you can make a call. The protocol sms:123.456.7890 works in a pretty similar fashion. Now you can begin to encode barcodes that act as links to dial out.

Example 4: Conference/Live engagement
Imagine you are at the next national gamer convention, all around are various forms of displayed artwork with QR codes on. Including people wearing the codes on specific product branded t- shirts, hats, bags etc. Visitors can scan and get straight onto information sites about featured games, obtain unique user downloadable content, enter competitions – the list is endless. Also displayed around the venue via gobo projectors are QR codes in discreet places that are linked to the latest hot game release – this here – there could be a website that allows the user to download special weapons, maps, engage on specific online tournaments, special deals on merchandise, invites to one off seminars that day at the conference, etc.

Example 5: Personal user’s artworked T shirt, incorporating a link to your twitter feed.

So what do you want to tell the world today?
While status updates may not be the most fascinating use of QR codes, Facebook’s move does reflect a bigger trend. PCWorld has more on their overall use:

The QR Codes are just a simple bridge from the Internet to the Outernet. They allow you to get Internet content about something that you are close to or looking at in the real world.

If the people I’m talking to are correct, QR Codes — or something like them — might start showing up everywhere. Especially as mobile get faster and mobile devices get easier to use (think iPad). Stop me if you’ve heard this one before, but QR Codes are already quite common in Japan.

I can imagine a roomful of people wearing their QR Code T-shirts pointing their devices at each other, deciding who they want to meet, in a sort of augmented speed-dating ritual.

And don’t be surprised if you start seeing QR Codes as standard on business cards everywhere.

The biggest hurdles to adoption of 2D barcodes are not technical issues; these are solved. The next phase of their evolution is user interaction.

On the web people have learnt that underlined blue text is a link. We need similar conventions for barcodes - where does this barcode lead, is it a URL or an email, or a phone number? There are no de facto standards for interactions - we are learning as we go, testing what works and what doesn't and mapping that to user expectations. There is much more to be explored beyond the technical achievements of 2D barcodes and that is where the real interesting parts begin.

Links to download the software for your camera phone:

Iphone: Go to the app site and type in barcode reader- there are loads free and paid for. NeoReader seems to work for me.

Nokia: http://mobilecodes.nokia.com/scan.htm

I-nigma reader by 3GVision: Install via mobile browser: http://www.i-nigma.mobi/ or download to a computer and transfer it to your mobile device from http://www.i-nigma.com/

NeoReader by NeoMedia Technologies / Gavitec AG - mobile digit: Install via mobile browser: http://get.neoreader.com/

UpCode reader by UPC: Install via mobile browser: http://www.upcode.fi/ or download to a computer and transfer it to your mobile device from www.upc.fi/en/upcode/instructions/download

Semacode reader by Semacode: Install via mobile browser: http://semacode.org/ota or download to a computer and transfer it to your mobile device from http://semacode.org/software/

QuickMark reader: Download to a computer and transfer ir to your mobile device from www.quickmark.com.tw/En/basic/index.asp

Call 01491 63 63 73 or visit the content creation services page on our web site to find out more about the creative services we offer.

Author: Nick Watts

Tuesday, 3 August 2010

Blu-ray for Business


Blu-ray is a great format for entertainment, but it's MORE than that.

With the ever increasing quantities of data being generated by businesses today - and the enormous capacity of the Blu-ray format there is a compelling argument for upgrading to Blu-ray in your business today.

MORE storage
Blu-ray discs get their name from blue laser technology. The blue laser has a shorter wavelength of 405nm compared with the wavelength of 650nm for DVD (which utilises red laser technology). The shorter wavelength makes it possible to write smaller data pits and therefore vastly increase the amount of data on the disc.

With an impressive capacity of 25GB, single-sided Blu-ray discs are the ideal solution for your medium to long-term storage and archival needs. For optimum storage, dual-layer discs hold up to 50GB of data. As well as taking up less physical space, the fewer discs you have your data archived on, the easier it is to search your discs, and make additional back-up copies.

Less packaging also means decreased transport costs, and a smaller carbon footprint per gigabyte. So Blu-ray discs are a greener option too.

MORE affordable
When you examine the cost per Gigabyte of data, you'll be pleasantly surprised to find the costs compare favourably to that of DVD. Factor in the additional convenience benefits of Blu-ray and it really starts to make sense.

MORE options
Blu-ray discs work alongside your existing Optical Media. You will require a Blu-ray drive, but that drive will be compatible with your existing CDs and DVDs. CD Team sell Blu-ray discs in either Slim cases, Jewel cases, or 10 and 25 spindle packs, in both the BD-R (Recordable) format and BD-RE (Rewritable) format

MORE durable
When archiving your data, you really don't want to take any chances. Blu-Ray discs have an extremely long archival life and are superbly protected by the manufacturers hard coating technology, which protects them from everyday wear and tear fingerprints, dust, scratches, static and water.

MORE evolved
Just as DVD technology followed CDs, Blu-ray is the next generation of optical media, offering significant benefits. It's tomorrows business format, available today.

MORE professional
Using thermal technology, Blu-ray printable disc surfaces can help make that first impression go a long way. There are only a few thermal printers on the market, most of them being used in professional duplication equipment, ensuring the highest of standards are produced time and time again.

MORE for your money when you work with CD Team
CD Team is an experienced and highly recommended business to business content delivery supplier. We work in partnership with you to deliver your project. We provide valuable assistance to ensure your project meets all of your requirements. We deliver on time, within budget and go that extra mile to ensure that deadlines are met and projects run smoothly. Whatever your content delivery project, CD Team can help you. So let our team become part of your team.

Call 01491 63 63 73 or visit our web site to find out MORE about Blu-ray for business today!

Want to make sure you don't miss out on the latest Blu-ray technology updates? Then sign up to our monthly email newsletter. Please visit our web site and complete the 'How can we help' form on the left or send an email to: enquiries@cdteam.co.uk.

Author: Richard Dearing