web development


Sample Crest Nicholson iPad App Screen 1Virtual Viewing has been working closely with Crest Nicholson to produce a revolutionary new iPad app that transforms the delivery of off-plan property sales.

The new app uses touchscreen technology and the portability and ease of use of the tablet computer to seamlessly blend together a rich tapestry of information that incorporates

• development plans
• floorplans
• property specifications
• CGI images
• photos
• video and 3d animation.

Sample Crest Nicholson iPad App Screen 2Without the restrictions of print formats, every aspect of property sales can be presented in the way that is most compelling and captivating. As well as interactively displaying text and images, the app can also play video tours and 3d flythroughs, creating an immersive and dramatic environment that brings an enthralling and exciting realism.

Linked to wall-mounted flat-screen displays, the app can turn a site office visit into a persuasive cinematic experience. Taking the technology one-step beyond, the app can also control a physical model, using remotely controlled lighting to highlight different aspects and elements of a complex multi-phase development.

Sample Crest Nicholson iPad App Screen 3Linked to easily updated web-based admin systems to ensure the latest updates are automatically downloaded at every use, development, availability and property details are fully searchable by a range of criteria – property type, size, location, price, number of bedrooms, etc.

The app will continue to scale as further phases of the development are released for sale, with each phase viewable separately.

For more information, call Virtual Viewing on 01908 930 300.

Computer Weekly Social Media AwardsWe’re thrilled to announce that our WPD Smart Grids animation has been shortlisted for “Best IT video of the year” in the Computer Weekly Social Media Awards 2011! Computer Weekly is one of the largest and most widely circulated computer and IT magazines in the UK: to be shortlisted for this award is superb news, and we’re hugely proud of everyone in the team who worked on the project.

We’re already hugely proud to have won the Socitm 2010 Local Government IT Excellence Award for Supplier Excellence for our collaboration with the London Borough of Redbridge on the Ilford Blueprint project, since when we’ve also Local Government Supplier of the Year and been listed as “best practice” by the Royal Town Planners Institute.

If you’d like to help us add another trophy to our mantelpiece, you can vote now at the Computer Weekly website – please note that voting finishes on November 25th.


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Although it’s becoming a buzzphrase that’s sometimes misused, Augmented Reality (AR) describes technologies that interactively combine the real world with the virtual, in real time and in 3D. Although the concept has existed since the early 1990s, it has come of age in the last couple of years – driven in part by gaming, but particularly by the widespread adoption of smartphones.

Although the potential range of applications is enormous (and certainly not restricted to mobile handsets), the initial mainstream impact is most likely to be felt in your hand or your pocket. Based on a smartphone’s ability to know its owner’s location, AR can – for example – overlay a 3d map of the area to show you the location of hotels, restaurants, public transport, cinemas, even particular shops that you’re most likely to be interested in.

By integrating with the phone’s GPS and sat-nav abilities, you can then be guided to exactly which one of those options most appeals – possibly even book or buy online, read reviews, access further details.

Their initial potential is being realised in city guides by existing publishers, but the potential for tourism, navigation, advertising, entertainment and many other industries is enormous.

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Online systems – whether they manage websites or air-conditioning – are essentially software. While anyone working in IT will be familiar with the phrase “Read the manual”, many other people who’ve tried doing so have decided that was where their problem started. Or rather their second problem.

Traditional technical documentation has an unfortunate tendency to describe how to use software from the point of view of either the software or the people who wrote it. These aren’t usually people who need to add new sales brochures, announce special offers or the Christmas opening hours. They usually think in terms of database schemas or phrases like “enter an alphanumeric string of <80 characters; apply auto-truncation and disallow HTML tags”.

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measurementsMonitoring online performance brings to mind two clichés: ‘never mind the quality, feel the width’ and ‘if you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it’. As even the best statistics are measures of volume, the human tendency – to take the easiest path, by measuring what’s easiest to measure – is to monitor the width. Or in traffic terms, the volume.

That’s not wrong per se – you need to know which web pages are (and aren’t) being looked at, which email newsletters triggered the most clickthroughs – but it’s not the whole story. Like any kind of statistic, online traffic figures require interpretation.

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From 1 March 2011, there is an important change in the legal scope of the Committee of Advertising Practice (CAP) Code, which will be extended to include:

Advertisements and other marketing communications by or from companies, organisations or sole traders on their own websites, or in other non-paid-for space online under their control, that are directly connected with the supply or transfer of goods, services, opportunities and gifts, or which consist of direct solicitations of donations as part of their own fund-raising activities.”

As CAP point out, this doesn’t rule out promoting causes or ideas (which may be the case with campaign groups or social enterprises), although it does cover any material that in any way solicits donations. Nor does it mean that websites cannot contain material – such as editorial or public relations material – that is not marketing.

But the revised Code recognises that web pages, email campaigns or social media presences (your Facebook page or LinkedIn group are both “non-paid-for space online under your control”) don’t need to quote a price or include a ‘Buy Now’ button to fall within the extended remit, nor do they need to “seek overtly an immediate or short-term financial transaction or include or otherwise refer to a transactional facility”.

The ASA and CAP will be allowing a six month period of grace to raise awareness and educate business on the new requirements of the CAP Code, and that period of time could be wisely spent seeking their advice and that of your Internet services partners and providers.

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Given the recent economic turmoil, it’s easy to overlook the success of e-commerce in the UK. A recent Boston Consulting Group report highlighted figures that should give hope to those with e-commerce businesses or ambitions.

Even with broadband not yet nationally universal, the UK is a global e-commerce leader: we have the world’s highest online spend per capita. In 2009, the Internet contributed nearly £100bn – 7.2% of GDP – to the economy, and we have the second largest online advertising spend in the world.

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Beat the VAT increaseAs announced by the Government in the Emergency Budget in June this year, the VAT rate increases from its current rate of 17.5% to 20% on 4th January 2011.

We may be web-developers, 3d modellers and Internet strategy consultants rather than economists, but we have a sound grasp of business too and we realise that any opportunity to save costs is an opportunity to be firmly grasped. (For some business tips, see our earlier post: Be Your Own Chancellor.)

Quantitative easing on the Bank of England’s scale is beyond our current capabilities, but we can do something that not helps our customers with an on-going cost – the hosting of their websites – but also thanks them for their on-going loyalty.

Any Virtual Viewing web-hosting customer who pays for their hosting in 2011 before 23 December 2010 can therefore save themselves the cost of next year’s VAT increase and rest assured during the coming year that one cost is not only already fully met, but that a cost hike has been avoided.

To arrange for invoicing, please contact accounts@virtualviewing.co.uk and we’ll take care of the rest.

Peter Parkes at SocitmWith many people, success goes to their heads. As you can see, in the case of our Project Manager, Peter Parkes, it’s gone straight to his cummerbund.

(Even Judith Carson, Capital Projects Development Manager at our project partner, the London Borough of Redbridge – seen right – seems politely surprised at his sartorial choice.)

Personal styling aside, we reckon Peter has grasped one important things about awards – in this case the Socitm 2010 Local Government IT Excellence Award for Supplier Excellence (read more about our recent vistory here): the most gratifying place to have them is under your belt!

Virtual Viewing receive the Socitm Supplier Excellence Award 2010

© Socitim Press Office, 2010

We’re delighted to announce that our project in partnership with the London Borough of Redbridge, the Ilford Blueprint (visit the website or download a Case Study (PDF)), has won a Socitim 2010 Local Government IT Excellence Award for Supplier Excellence at the Socitim Annual Conference in Brighton. The competition highlights public sector IT projects that improve the efficiency and delivery of services within local communities.

The Ilford Blueprint Online – which already created a major splash at the Property Lynx conference – is a web-based marketing tool that incorporates 3D visualisation of development potential in the borough using Virtual Viewing’s Massive Scale Modelling technology. Socitm said the project team has combined web based commerce and gaming technology with planning policy and regeneration, to promote development opportunity sites identified in Ilford’s Area Action Plan.

Judith Carlson, project manager for regeneration at the London Borough of Redbridge, said the project represented a “cutting edge approach to promoting Ilford, the borough’s main town centre, with technologies widely used in the film and gaming industries that brings the council’s vision to life”. And she applauded Virtual Viewing as making the Ilford town centre area action plan “more accessible by developing a user-friendly interface for developers”.
[Image © Socitim Press Office, 2010]

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