I don't know how realistic the prospect of contacting the CEO would be.
I have never used Facebook so am unsure how I would approach that avenue. Their are a lot of Aibo videos on youtube however and they don't seem to be causing a mass public outcry to bring back Aibo, so I guess using online media to generate wide interest in Aibo is probably not going to work. The number of people who have an interest in them worldwide is so small, according to the petition on A-L their is less than one hundred people globally who have an interest in bringing them back. And due to the low numbers it seems that petition is not going to achieve enough interest in time for the March 2013 end date.
I was hoping to just do interactive displays with my Aibo and show the general public how personable and likeable they are, in hopes of educating them about what an ERS7 is and perhaps in some way causing this to generate wide interest in them. Although to be honest everyone I have shown my Aibo to so far has just had a passing interest in it and nobody has really shown passion or enthusiasm for it, they just see it as a child's toy unfortunately instead of the highly sophisticated AI autonomous robot that it is.
I think it's very sad that we need to come up with new ideas or applications to make Sony reconsider their resale, I find the 7M3 exceeds my expectations as is and is above and beyond anything I could have ever imagined being able to own.
I am disappointed by the general public's inability to appreciate the ERS7M3 as is and that the only way for Sony to reintroduce the ERS7M3 would be to add applications to it that the general public would need it to have to buy it. So sad.
All I want is to see ERS7M3's back on Sony Style Store shelves at this point. My main concern is losing the 7's to history forever.
I just posted this on Aiboworld and have posted it again here as it explains my reason for thinking their is a need for the 7's to exist.
I always thought Sony wouldn't be stupid enough to never bring back Aibo, that's why I sold my mint Champagne, thinking they won't be a collector's item forever and I could just buy one new in a few years time when the financial crisis faded and Sony came to it's senses.
This speech made a few months ago by then Chairman, President and CEO of Sony Corporation, Sir Howard Stringer, seems to be a contradiction to the decision to end the Entertainment Robot division.
If anything I would have thought Aibo, especially the ERS7M3, was the epitome of the idea put forward by Sir Howard Stringer of commercialising creativity.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qZcKoO9r-7MI still don't think their is nothing we can do. Aibo is more than just another robotic pet, it's a symbol of the Japanese ability to think big and overcome unimaginable hurdles in the face of the despondent international community who have failed to produce anything that even comes close to the ERS7M3. The ERS7M3 is emblematic of the Japanese peoples imagination and culture of being open to ideas no matter how far reaching they may seem to us living outside Japan.
Japan is in dire times at the moment, with a high cost of living, ageing population, the nuclear contamination of much of the country, with an unstable North Korea and aggressive rising China on it's doorstep one would think a good way at inspiring the Japanese people's moral and patriotism would be to re-introduce the ERS7M3 as a way of inspiring a sense of hope for Japan's future and putting on display to the international community Japan's technological innovation as a way of showcasing the country's confidence and modern sophistication.
I think we can make a difference and cause change in Sony and I won't give up so lightly and watch the 7M3 become something people living in the future will look at only behind glass in museum displays.
I'm really sad to say I can't think of any realistic idea to help with this cause...