s Company | Bluewall Media LLC

Company

Company

BlueWall is a visionary and leading-edge Internet multimedia company with expertise in audio, video and code. As digital architects and content developers, we focus on products and services that monetize all types of content through aggregation, integration and syndication. As a company, BlueWall's core strength lies in our ability to move easily between the realms of code and content, helping move media  from the microphone to the iPhone.

The technologies and digital solutions developed in the BlueWall think tank and laboratories are content enablers designed to proactively unify fragmentation in the global marketplace through convergence, synergy and transformation of media and technology.

We develop from the premise that the old model does not scale -- that  it’s simply too labor intensive and expensive to meet the promising, fragmented micro-revenue models of today and the future. We figure if you have to store media, that one file should be automated to do everything else necessary to share and monetize it. The result is a two-fold empowerment plan for the content holder: Save Money. Make Money.

With new digital philosophy, language and solutions, BlueWall has arrived  to make round the flat world of digital media.

 

Web Clippings

The following clips were aggregated and filtered by Bluewall. Try our ground breaking aggregation service for yourself.

  • Point: Memes are a key conceptual tool for understanding the wave of protests and mobilisations which have swept the globe over the past year.

  • Counterpoint: Memes are not a useful tool for analysing contemporary social practices and technological relations, nor are they key to grasping the way in which protesters have been fighting.

  • The topic of the third Quarterly Digital Intelligence Briefing is social data: what businesses are looking for, how they are using it and the problems they face. 

  • Professor Ferdinand von Prondzynski, Principal and Vice-Chancellor of Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen, Scotland suggests, "It would be foolish to believe that using the new media to broaden the scholarly community and shape its influence is wrong."