All about social software and networks
13 Aug
Up-to-now I have been looking for a way to share my lifestream and at the same time find an easy way to subscribe to lifestreams of those I find interesting. I have found plenty of software in this space. All of it does one of these two things really well. I can nicely share my lifestream or I can easily subscribe to the lifestream of others. None of the software I have looked at does both well.
This has me thinking it’s time to go outside the box or jumping back in the box. I guess this is a matter of perspective. I believe that the blog is the center of someone’s lifestream. It all starts right there, the real meat of someone’s lifestream is the blog. Everything else is just a connection back to the blog.
With that in mind let’s look at two services that might help us out. They are both similar to each other in that the allow you to merge a list of feeds together. The first is from my favorite, yet lacking direction, company Yahoo! with their Pipes product. The other is Feed Digest. Both basically allow you to roll a list of feeds into one feed that you can then distribute to anyone interested right from your blog or an e-mail for that matter.
Both of these services allow you to create a single RSS feed from multiple feeds, I find Feed Digest to be the easiest to work with. It took me a few minutes to create an account and create my lifestream (Subscribe to Elroy’s Lifestream). Feed Digest also supports several ways of exporting and displaying your streams.
Each of these services has their place. Try both and you decide.
Once you have a consolidated lifestream its a simple enough task to list it right on your blog for your friends to locate. Thus moving you to the focal point of your network instead of the application being that focal point (think Facebook and MySpace)
11 Aug
I stumbled across Stowe Boyd’s write up on a service called Lijit. It’s a fantastic application that, given just your blog url, does a fantastic job of finding all the services that you belong to. It then provides a widget that you can place in your site with some various configuration options for display to show all the services you use.
The auto-discovery as part of the sign-up process is just remarkable.
This is a tool that makes it simple to aggregate your online identity. Place it on your blog and now it is simple to share with anyone that wants to stay connected to you.
This is a fantastic service I urge everyone to give it a try.
11 Aug
Fred Oliveira of the Webreakstuff blog decided to talk about the elephant in the room earlier this month. There’s a new social network going online every day and its a big elephant that everyone wants to ignore. This wouldn’t be such a problem, except for some reason people like to join them all. It’s gotten to the point that individuals are spending so much time managing their friends and different accounts that they tend to be a lot less social.
There several model’s for dealing with this out there right now:
None of these models as they exist today are really great. Some, like Spokeo, show great promise. Others, like Ning, seem just plain crazy (but really well funded).
Oliveira suggests an alternative that I feel shows promise. The OpenId/Microformats alternative. The specs exist. How to process and use the data is easy for applications. The fatal flaw right now is that it shoots right over the average persons head. OpenId is a mystery to most people. No one understands how to use it or even why. Microformats have yet to be adopted seriously by the blog software creators or other sites for that matter. Do you really expect every user to learn XFN?
If this model is to gain traction it needs wide spread adoption and it needs to be easy enough for the average person to use. It needs better marketing. People need to believe they can’t live without it. Somehow adoption of things like OpenId will make our lives easier but right now it just makes signing up to services harder and unclear.
This model needs an evangelist to rise up and champion the battle like we had for web standards. But at this point is it to late?
9 Aug
If you haven’t heard about Profile Builder you may want to check it out. Profile Builder is, simply put, a place to aggregate your profile information. I can add photo’s, a short bio, host a resume, link to my blog or other “networks” and it aggregates them all together in one spot with one url.
I love the concept but the current Beta is much rougher than you would expect an application to be. About all I was able to do is create an account and it took a while before that was even working. It may use Internet Explorer only features, but I didn’t take the time to check and I won’t. I use a Mac. I checked it in both Safari and Firefox with the same results.
I recommend checking it out because the concept is great. But don’t get your hopes up that it is a place to aggregate your profile, because most of it just doesn’t work.
The idea of aggregating your profile information is great. What I don’t understand is why companies like this don’t give me a way to locate my contacts profile’s. They know who they are so make it easy for me to find them. Spokeo is another company that let’s me enter in your information but then doesn’t tell me if you have any other RSS feeds that I would like to subscribe to. The information is there, why not let me use and make my life easier.
Now this is the ultimate application. Combine Profile Builder with Spokeo, add in a way for me to discover my contacts profile and feeds, since you have it if they have an account. Polish it up. Now that would be a fantastic service that provides real value without all the clutter of MySpace and Facebook.
7 Aug
The network is the computer.
You may have heard this mantra once before. If you are in the tech industry and have a few miles under your saddle you should be intimately familiar with it. Scott McNealy of Sun Microsystems has been stating this for as along as I can remember. The rest of the tech field ignored it at best, made fun of it at worst.
Eric Schmidt and Google are going to make Sun’s dream a reality. The only truly innovative products that have had wide spread impact in the last three or so years have come from Google. I don’t see this letting up anytime soon so when the CEO of Google defines what the next generation of computing software is going to look like it stands to reason we should listen.
Don’t take my word for it, get it right from the industry leaders mouth (link).
Found via Read/Write Web
3 Aug
Maybe I have been thinking about the killer application the wrong way.
Consider this Jeff Croft’s lifestream:
To borrow a phrase I first heard from the Scobelizer, its like a river of data. Most recent activity at the top and then the rest in a descending list.
What we really need is a service that allows an individual to create their lifestream. Add the important part missing from Jeff Croft’s life stream, RSS.
Update: Jeff Croft’s lifestream does have an RSS feed. (link)
So you have a service that will let you collect your life stream data into one space. For instance, I use del.icio.us for bookmarks, Flickr for photo’s, and Wordpress for blogging. I would add those three services into my lifestream.
You can send your lifestream out for friends to subscribe to. Since its formatted as RSS, they can import it into any reader the like. If they want a little more value added then you provide an interface similar to Spokeo for ingesting the lifestreams and aggregating them together.
Simplicity with value added services is what people want.
2 Aug
A ZDNet blog called Between the Lines reported today about the AlwaysOn Stanford Summit 07, specifically the Social Networking 3.0 panel. It always amazes me that “startups” can afford the time and resources to send people to these panels, but its worse when they are quoted saying things that are so off the mark. Gina Bianchini, CEO of Ning, is quoted:
“In ten years we’ll see millions of social networks for every niche, need, language, location and passion. I disagree that people want a single profile-they want to have identities for different social networks.”
What planet is she on?
What a perversion of the meaning of a social network. Social networks are connections of people. Not collections of software to process assets that people collect. I do think we will have software applications for “every niche, need, language, location and passion.” These applications will facilitate the sharing of collected assets, like photo’s. People will migrate to each niche that is best suited for their needs say Flickr for photo’s and YouTube for video. But no one wants to subscribe to a slew of social networks just so they have some middleware application to facilitate their contact management and connect to the few assets people share in that particular network.
What people really want is a way to manage contacts that allow them to aggregate everyone “lifestream” information in a simple way. If I want to know when you put photo’s online I will subscribe to your photos RSS feed. I don’t want to join Flickr just to see your photo’s. People just want it simple. Social networks like Ning are not simple.
Give me a system that is so simple that when I add your photo feed the system says, I know who that person is and they also have a blog, would you like to receive updates when this person posts a new blog entry? Most blogs already facilitate conversation through the use of comments and trackbacks. Someone just needs to make that easier. Not build a new social network to handle conversations.
Facebook is a great example of a software application that does a lot of stuff, but doesn’t do any of it very well. Right now people use it because it’s easier to subscribe to Facebook to connect to their network and use a weak service than it is to manually aggregate everyones streams from better designed niche applications.
Tags: Lifestreams | Facebook | Ning