Showing posts with label social networking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social networking. Show all posts

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Wasn't the Web Always Social? (now we just know people's names)

So facebook is launching new features. Too bad I never really bothered to learn the old features, that might make it harder to appreciate these. The jist I get so far is that sites can add a little 'like' Facebook button so that people can click on it and it gets added to their Facebook 'feed' and shared with their friends. Okay, that seems a lot like all the other sharing buttons that showed up on "web 2.0" (shudder) sites a while ago. You know: digg, stumbleupon, twitter, technorati, del.icio.us... there's more.


There's probably more to it than just pasting another share button on every site out there. I think I read that you can see a list of items on the site that your friend liked. Okay. Forgive my lack of excitement. This smacks of the same feeling I got when Apple announced its new iAd platform recently. GREAT, tremendous, revolutionary new features... for companies, but really not much change or improvement on business as usual for the users they're excited about leveraging.

I guess maybe that's not true. For people who use Facebook to share articles and web pages with their friends, this is a streamlined improvement over copying the url, opening a tab for facebook and pasting the link in their stream. But for the rest of us it seems like just another button littering the edges of every post. (at least on sites that add it)

I wonder why every site needs to code Facebook integration for this type of interaction. Its the user who wants to connect Facebook with the site, why can't they add something (maybe a plugin) to their browser that enables this for any site they're viewing. Then they wouldn't be at a loss when they happen across a site that hasn't rewritten its code to accommodate Facebook. This would also enable users to choose any service they want to share items of import with their followers; it could be a blog, maybe a twitter, a google reader stream, whatever they want. And we wouldn't need to add 200 little thumbnail logos everywhere.

But maybe that's my problem with how Facebook (or twitter) is approaching the "social web" to begin with. They obviously envision themselves as the central hub around which all information is traded. They can do this because we've all given them our social maps and they haven't given us a way to take them back (or somewhere else) so we stay. But the Internet isn't a wheel in which all spokes lead to Facebook; its more like a "web" where people and sites interact directly or through various proxies. There's no need to send everything back to a central repository.

Sometimes it seems like some people (and companies) forget that there is an Internet underneath all these social sites. They rush to create their pages and claim space on Facebook's internet, forgetting that they own real URLs and real websites that don't need to hook into Facebook. You could send an email to your friend instead of a FB message. You could use one of hundreds of instant messaging clients instead of Facebook's. You could share your 'status' and 'feed' updates via RSS, or Atom on countless publishing platforms instead of Facebook and Twitter that are dominating media coverage.

In fact, the greatest single impetus for joining Facebook is to interact with the people on Facebook. They've introduced a lot of people to useful communication concepts but kept them in a subset of the real system. A subset where we all have to be on the same site to exchange information with each other and users on a different site are out of the loop. That's great for its users, as long as everyone they want to interact with keeps joining, but its really great for growing Facebook.

This is coming across as awfully anti-Facebook, which I'm not. It is a useful-looking site for a variety of users and aggregates Facebook data very nicely. I am against everyone in the world using, or needing to use Facebook. It seems very reasonable to me that I could use one site on the Internet, where I have a profile and a feed etc, to interact with the profiles of contacts at Facebook, sharing articles, commenting on stati, sending messages and invites, whatever else you kids do on the Facebook.

It seems reasonable because that's how the rest of the internet works. You can send email from yahoo to earthlink or aol or bob'semail.com and it works just fine because they all conform to a public standard. Its not some API that links back to one giant database owned by a single company. Imagine how amazing it would be for Facebook's users if suddenly everyone using a social platform could communicate. It would be as important as connecting together telephone exchanges around the world. But as far as I can see Facebook is not interested in improving their users' experience in a way that would reduce the rate of new inductees funneling in. They're more focused on developing an API that channels social information that's happening on the Internet into their own private system.

So this is a bit of a plea, no you don't have to stop using Facebook if you love it so much. Just be aware of what's really going on behind the scenes. Technology is in the state it is today because of diversity, competition, interoperability and consumer choice. I'm wary of a company who strives for a captive user base. Make no mistake the move to place a Facebook tentacle on every website is a land grab. They acknowledge that their users frequent other sites to read and interact, but they want a way to bring it all back home to their own constantly hungry data collection centers. So far they haven't decided to monetize this information in truly userous ways, but some day they will and you'll discover that data you thought was yours is actually theirs.




Thursday, February 14, 2008

Got Buddy?

This is kinda sweet for me. One of the features on Helio is the buddy beacon. Its a service that uses the GPS receiver in the phone to push your location onto your friends' maps. Kinda a neat idea, but the big downside is that your friends have to have Helios to use the service. And since I can't convince any of you chumps to throw down, my map only has a marker for where I am making it sad and not very useful.

On to the sweet part. Helio sold the Buddy Beacon trademark to a company called uLocate a while ago, and they've just released a 2.0 version of the software. There are various changes but most importantly users of other services can use Buddy beacon on their phones too! Right now the site lists: Alltel, Helio, metroPCS, Sprint, and iPhone. On some phones this just involves pointing to a web page instead of installing the new app like on my phone. Which is why I assume they list iPhone as supported, but not At&t. You just need a good enough web browser to run the mobile page.

On the downside the buddy location symbols seem to be MIA in favor of a buddy circle. So you'll know which block your bud is on, not what part of the bar. I assume this is because most devices (*cough* iPhone) can't locate themselves that accurately and rather than list specious information, they just generalize it all. I think I'd like the option to display my little Helio icon on the map like I used to, and other people would have big ass circles. But maybe they're trying to keep everyone from knowing what kinda cocked-up device other people rock.

Obfustication aside, this is an exciting update that makes this service actually useful. Oh, and there's a Facebook app you can add too that I haven't checked out. But I assume it'll let you find friends that also have the service.


Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Work, Reproduce, Perish.

This is pretty hilarious.

If you don't know about Second Life let me shatter your bliss right now.  Its an online system where people create 3d models of themselves or objects or places.  Its a fictional world where you pay real money for real (fake?) estate, goods and 'services'.  All of which is fictional and at the whim of Linden labs.  There have been quite a few instances where people debate if real laws apply to a make-believe world.  Like when someone cons you out of 'lindens' (the ingame currency) is it fraud or just part of the game?  You can read more on Wikipedia- Second Life.  And TechDirt usually covers the ins and outs of the quasi-legal implications.

Anyway when I first heard about it a long time ago it sounded kinda intriguing.  Making models and creating a virtual world based on the contributions of its users.  Want to add something?  Just make it, or hire someone to make it for you.  But that fancy only lasted about a week, not even long enough for me to download the software or create a trial account.  So yeah, my entire perspective of this thing is from the outside.  But this thing is getting out of hand.  Companies (and even politicians) having press conferences and release statements, arguing who's the first millionaire, gambling, and other services (nudge nudge, wink wink, say no more.)  Seriously?  I'm not just not intrigued any more, I'm getting annoyed.  And I'm not the only one.

Tech Crunch links to a site called First Life.  Get it?  Playing on the fact that the people who participate in this community are seeking a second life when they have yet to encounter a first.  Haha.  Those losers.  The best part of the page is the small text that reads "fornicate using your actual genitals"  There's also a bit about Teen First Life that mocks Teen Second Life that was created to keep underage users from creating fraudulent accounts and participating in the adult grid.  All-in-all a good parody of a well-deserving subject.

TechCrunch: First Life

Friday, December 01, 2006

You Gotta Be Kidding Me.

Well social netoworking has hit a new low. Yes, the armies of friend gathering users have a new tool in convincing people that they really are popular. Courtesy of Fakeyourspace (and your monthly service fee) you can have hot models leave you messages on your profile page. Well, probably not hot models. Probably a bunch of nerds that have hot model pictures on their profile. (notice I'm not saying Myspace whores cause that's just not nice.) But it might be just the thing if you wanted to lure in some hot people to be your friends. Kinda like decoys when you're duck hunting. Pull 'em in with a little eye candy, then BAM, those lookers won't know that hit them, friends with a dork.

Monday, August 21, 2006

I Imply, You Infer.

Don't duck Metadata. Who says social networking and metadata don't get you anything? When investing in a new device, its a good practice to read some reviews or get recomendations from knowledgable friends. A lot of online markets have implemented a review section, but I can't help wondering what people's motives are for posting a review there. Are they a fanboy? A hater? What would be better is harvesting usage data to generate a kind of implicit recommendation. And that's just what Yahoo! did.

  • Top 10 Cameras Used On Flickr - CyberNet News: Hardware, Downloads, Gadgets...Technology Done Right!

  • Pictures on Flickr are generally of pretty good quality, and in some cases are taken by seasoned photographers. So a large collection of high quality digital photography with camera origin metadata should be a pretty sweet source of data. Makes me wonder what other markets this could be applied to. Graphics cards from users of a gaming site, Corporate workorders for window maintience, automobile performance records from emissions testers? Honestly metadata is only going to get more detailed and more ubiquitous and I think we should start thinking of ways to leverage it. While protecting the privacy of the data, obviously.
    Their list:
    1. Nikon D50
    2. Nikon D70
    3. Canon EOS Digital Rebel XT
    4. Canon EOS 20D
    5. Canon EOS 350D Digital
    6. Nikon D70s
    7. Cybershot
    8. Canon Powershot S2 IS
    9. Canon EOS Digital Rebel
    10. Nikon D20

      Wednesday, August 16, 2006

      Oh, You're From The Middle Of Nowhere.

      So if you still Facebook, and you should if only for the free iTunes music, this is kinda cool. Since both Facebook and Google Maps have APIs open, someone hooked together a site that shows where all your friends' hometowns are. Interesting at least.

      Friday, July 28, 2006

      Hands Off The Internet?

      Where the hell is that lame astroturf movement now that government is actually screwing with the Internet? Oh it has nothing to do with hurting broadband providers' proclivity to gouge money from the Internet, so they don't care. This new bill banning social networking from schools and libraries in an effort to "protect" the children from cyber-stalkers is terrible. Its just lip service to the "save the children" bullshit that politicians all stoop to. You know that when some one says "won't someone please think of the children" on the Simpsons they're making fun of you, right? Tech dirt has a good point, that sticking your head in the sand doesn't make the danger go away. The kids are gonna surf the web, whether you want them to or not; hell they probably understand the concepts you're trying to legislate. Like that new goatse law that some embarrassed senator pushed through legislation. (of course that might be false, its hard to do research on that kinda thing) Legislating against practical jokes, yeah you guys are certainly getting worthwhile shite taken care of. Of course there are various interpretations of 'obscene' or 'misleading' and there's also a nice loop hole in just not using a DNS link. Whatever. The real flip flop is that bush apparently agrees that misleading links should be punished with jail terms, but his administration was responsible for ICANN denying the .xxx domain. Way to be consistent. I guess the message these career hillers are all sending is that they'll vote for whatever will get them re-elected.

      Techdirt: House Rushes Through Bill To Make The Web More Dangerous For Kids