"Ben Wood" is a British visual artist living and working in San Francisco. Over the past decade he has carried out public projects in San Francisco and exhibited in Mexico City, Honolulu and the United Kingdom. Many of his projects use digital media to display images in the built environment.

File:missionbasilica.jpg/thumb/300px/Photo of projection of Sacred Hearts onto Basilica dome, January 23 to February 7, 2004

An early public project was to reveal a hidden 18th-century Mission Dolores mural/mural in San Francisco's Mission Dolores. In 2004 he worked with archeologist Eric Blind to capture the first photographs of the mural, keeping the 1796 reredos intact. He then projected digital images in a public display onto the interior dome of the Mission Dolores Basilica. On April 14, 2011 a recreated version of the mural was unveiled on San Francisco's Bartlett Street as part of the Mission Community Market.

Since 2004 Wood has conducted a series of video projections at Coit Tower, mostly illuminating native San Francisco and California heritage. These were presented in 2004, 2006, 2008 and 2009.

More Ben Wood on Wikipedia.

Nokia's main priority must now be to stabilise its market share by Q3 and hope that it can reverse the current decline in Q4.

You're definitely looking at single digit margins, but Motorola will use the ultra low tier to attract consumers to its brand and eventually sell up more expensive models.

The Rokr was kind of a disappointment. You hear a song, go home, find it on iTunes, connect your phone and download. The real goal is to download it directly.

Sony Ericsson's W800 Walkman phone and the K750 are seeing healthy demand in distribution and retail. They are in short supply at retail.

Vodafone has got serious about 3G now. It is using its size and purchasing power to put together the best portfolio of 3G phones and services.

The other network operators are starting to get their story together so they can take the fight back to Hutchison and try to take the 3G mindshare back from them. The gloves are off. We're going to see aggressive competition for 3G.

If you look at the hype-ometer, music is definitely the hottest. But no one has quite got the right model for the business yet.

This is the first year-on-year decline after years of phenomenal growth.

In the face of aggressive competition from Motorola, Samsung, LG and Siemens this is going ot be a challenging goal to achieve.