Monday, April 12, 2010

Ipad will be the future for online surfing

I purchased an Ipad for my father, the founder and namesake of the company, R. L. Rasmus Auctioneers, Inc.

It was an easy decision. After purchasing all nature of gadgets from PCs, to notebooks, to Kindles, I have been trying for years to get him comfortable with online technology so I could get his valuable feedback.

After toying around with the book, facebook and Wall Street Journal apps, then bookmarking Rasmus.com and the Washington Post, it seems the intuitive user interface of pointing, tapping, swiping and pinching is just right.

Truth be told, were anxiously waiting for the release of the G3 model, and his birthday was a terrific reason to both try again to get Ron online while at the same time, getting my Ipad fix in advance of the 3G release.

What's truly amazing about the Ipad is how comfortable it feels on you lap. Pick it up, push the home button, and BAM instant on. tap the web icon and BAM your online, tap the map icon and BAM your cruising the streets. Fast, efficient, intuitive, pleasurable, bright, colorful, productive and fun.

As easy to toss on the couch or coffee table as a magazine. Massively productive, the web in a picture frame on your lap. Tap, swipe, pinch, drag, scroll, look, listen, watch, see, it works, really well.

I love my iphone, but its small screen and relatively sluggish response makes it marginal for the web.

But this Ipad, and the way it does the web and apps... It's definitely the next thing.

Hey look, dads on the internet!

But he's not returning emails yet. :)

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Technology is Grand!

Today my sister/assistant is having surgery and the entire familiy is pecking and tapping away on macbooks and ipads, communicating with family, customers and clients.


The primary reason we moved our model to the internet, was the huge saving in time it afforded both our company and our buying clients.


In the old days, we would load up station wagons and vans with all nature of TVs, A/V stands, folding tables and chairs, terminals, radios, Wi-Fi, office supplies, sound equipment, projection screens, bidder boxes..... The list went on and on.


Like a band of gypsy's we would travel to the event, unload and set up our dog and pony show, put on the auction and pack it all back up arriving back to our office, exhausted and ready for a two day break.


Given our staff of eleven employees, we could hardly manage the setup, sale and removal of more than two or three events per week, leaving no time for new business development, client visits or office productivity.


One day, in Boston for a Fortune 1000 client, we received a call from the licensing authorities advising we were not going to be able to conduct a live auction.


What a blessing... we advised buyers at the preview that the event would be internet only, as opposed to internet & live.


The rest as they say, is history.


Last year, rasmus.com conducted over 300 auctions throughout the United States.


There are many days I check rasmus.com and remember we just closed an auction or two or three.


I'm often asked, "do you miss doing the live auctions"


For all of our "live" auction fans, I'm sorry to report, "we don't miss the live auctions a bit."


We are, however, completely charged up, preparing for the day, in the not so distant future, when we can sell over 400 auction per year by internet only auction.


While all the time, the Seller, Bidders and Auctioneer participates from the comfort of their home, office, cell phone, Ipad, desk or pajamas.


No, we don't miss live auctions a bit :)


See Ya


Chris Rasmus