Posted on 05 March 2008
You should visit Cnet’s Webware 100 for 2008 and vote for your top websites for 2008. My predictions were…predictable, and I chose sites like Pownce, Twitter, Last.FM, EMusic, Wordpress, Google Adwords and others. I will release a full list after the polls are closed, not to inadvertently change the outcome with my influence.
That was said in a self-depricating, wry tone.
Check it out - Webware is a great site.
Posted on 01 March 2008
Virb is a social network aimed at people who “create things”. It’s great - it offers the advanced customizability that other social networks don’t which, of course, is most important to the demographic Virb covets. Sarcasm aside, I really like this network. I like music - especially indie bands - and Virb is a haven for these folks. My friends list is currently limited only to t-shirt brands I like, cute girls with odd pictures, artists, or indie bands whose music I actually like. Something about Virb makes me want to be selective. Which is odd for a social network where friends are currency.
But I tried an experiment on Myspace that didn’t work. For those that remember, my goal on Myspace was to brand myself as “cool” according to whom I befriended. The sad thing is, while I was able to amass some fantastic friends on Myspace (Kevin Smith, Ryan Adams, Barack Obama) it clearly didn’t matter. Myspace was the exception to my social experiment of “selective friending” as a way of defining my personal brand. It works on other sites, and Virb is one of them. I get hit up by bands every week, and some are good - so I friend them.
Check out Virb.com for more, and if you sign up for an account - send me an invite if you think you are cool enough to stimulate my personal brand.
Posted on 01 March 2008
Everyone must love Twitter. Twitter is a Web 2.0/Social Media institution. Twitter is like the Saturday Night Live of social networking - it has it’s low seasons, but somehow it always manages to find relevance again.
For the record, I love Twitter. I loved it when I had a Blackberry because it was the only fun thing I could do on my Blackberry. I love it now, because I have a Twitter widget on my Netvibes homepage and can twit whenever I’m working without feeling terrible about it. Why is Twitter so great you ask?
Really? Have you tried it? Really??
Twitter is like haiku blogging. You get limited words/characters and it’s more about - “what are you doing RIGHT NOW” - than really telling a story. The beauty of Twitter kicks in only after weeks of monitoring your friends twits and realizing that despite your reading their blog or knowing them from work, Twitter has actually given you better insight than anything else about who this person really is (or thinks they are.)
It’s brilliant. It’s stream of consciousness blogging, without the space for embellishment.
Of all the social media ideas to come since Facebook, Twitter will be the one that lasts and that will join the list of Facebook, Myspace, and blogging as social media concepts that business try to conquer (or at least adopt.)
Follow me on Twitter. From time to time, I actually twit in haiku.
Posted on 01 March 2008
Pownce is great. Of all the social networks I’ve joined, it’s the one I find most useful. And while I’ve never analyzed this, it may be Pownce’s usefulness that makes me have less fun using it. Which I realize is completely lame and has nothing to do with Pownce and everything to do with my level of maturity, or lack thereof. But hear me out.
Pownce allows microblogging and “friending” in a similar fashion to Twitter - well really, it’s like Tumblr COMBINED with Twitter - and throw in file sharing. I love that when I add friends to Pownce I can swap songs and prove my continued prowess in selecting GREAT upcoming bands that no one knows about yet except people who are PAID to know about great obscure bands. I can also hook up with my freelance design friends and share files.
Of course, I could also email them - but I like how I can post something to Pownce and not get lost in email with pictures of cute dogs laying on couches they’ve eaten or some dude who has impaled himself on a wrought-iron fence. It’s like file sharing, microblogging, and escapism. It’s great and super useful and I use it every day.
It’s just slightly less fun than Twitter. And that’s ok.
Posted on 01 March 2008
People waste time. (See Perezhilton.com, Halo 3, nature photography, romance novels, etc.) But at a certain point the entertainment value wears off of everything. Video games build their business model around this. Movies, television and radio may have trained us to feel this way. Something that starts great and interesting and new and exciting before long is trite, played out, and stale. So some day very soon people will begin asking - what am I doing with my time on Facebook (or Myspace, Bebo, and Friendster?)
Why do I believe this? I have friends on Pownce, Twitter, Facebook, Myspace, Kluster, Behance, and other social networking sites (some that I’ve completely forgotten about.) I’m not alone. There will be a time, very soon, where the social world begins to consolidate. When that happens there will only be a couple of “entertainment” based networks left standing (my money says only one survives.) Facebook has ceased being the “new thing” and people will quickly figure out that most of the Facebook apps suck and start asking “now that I’ve tracked down my pals from 5th grade, what the hell am I doing here?”
To all the folks who think I’m just going negative - I hope you’re right. I hope there is some awesome wicked sweet widget or app that will sudden have me changing my tune about Facebook. Maybe I will come up with it myself - I love being contrary, even when I get to contradict myself. But I see the fatigue coming, and I hope Facebook is anticipating this. Google will always provide a valuable service by letting the world search for anything - but now that I’ve reconnected with Jill Smith from my 9th grade gym class I’m left wondering what I get back for all this time I’ve spent on Facebook?
Am I one of many to soon close the Facebook? Do I signal the inevitable downfall of Facebook, or do I just not have any interesting friends?
Posted on 28 February 2008
Despite my complete boredom with Facebook right now, I went ahead and joined a new social network called Kluster. This is not social networking as defined by Facebook and Myspace, nor are you likely to track down buddies from your fraternity in college on Kluster. Instead, Kluster is like a cross between social networking, think-tanks, and focus groups. But that really doesn’t do justice to the concept of Kluster because unlike social networks the goal isn’t broadcasting your life or connecting with cool dudes or hot chicks and racking up long friends lists. Kluster is about creation.
Here is the general concept.
You create a profile on Kluster that describes your interests and background.
You post, or participate in “Projects”. These “Projects” are websites, products, business ideas that you would like to see become reality.
Users are given “Watts” which are currency. You invest your “Watts” in ideas (yours or others) that you want to see succeed.
You can post a reward on a project, and the payout of that reward goes to users who invested their watts (distributed by % of investment.)
You are not limited to a # of projects, only a finite # of watts - so invest wisely. When your “investment” proves successful, you win back your Watts plus more.
There is more to it, but visit: http://www.kluster.com for the details.
I’m hooked on Kluster. It’s brilliant.