Archive for December, 2007

December 24th 2007

Two roads diverged on the Social Web

I have been thinking about the Social Web and how I participate in it and my approach has changed over time.  The way I see it there are two ways you can participate in the Social Web. 


(Photo credit: "Young friends" by Gwennypics licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 license.

The first is to focus your activities on one or two social networks and attract your friends to that service.  A good example is Facebook.  There are so many people using Facebook that it is easy to do just about everything on Facebook and use that as the focal point of your social activities on the Web.  In a way, Facebook becomes an aggregator of your life and with the increasing number of Facebook applications this becomes easier and easier.

The problem with this approach, though, is that is the site becomes less interesting than the next big site, you have to re-establish yourself on the new service, wait for all your friends to move across (or perhaps you won’t move across until they do) and then continue building your social presence on the Web.  An alternative to this is to register with a couple social networking sites and make the time to keep them up to date (or not) to cater for your friends who use the other services and not your main service.  This can be pretty tiring and not many people commit to this.

Another way to participate in the Social Web is to set up a series of lifestreams emanating from a core set of feeds.  Your social network becomes a distributed network and all you need to do is plug your feeds into a new service that presumably supports multiple feeds and keep those lifestreams going by posting regularly to the core services.  So what I do is I have my blogs and feeds from a couple services I use (for example, Twitter, Pownce, Digg, Tumblr, a couple video sharing sites as well as services like LinkedIn, ClaimID, Amazon’s wishlists and more) and each of those services plugs into the lifestream services I use like Plaxo Pulse, Jaiku and, more recently, Profilactic.  If you want to keep track of my social activities on the Web then you can plug into one of those lifestream services or follow the individual components (the blogs, video sharing and other services).  This approach gives people who want to connect to me multiple entry points to do that and I don’t have to keep each individual service maintained all the time.  I still stick with the main services I prefer to use and don’t register for every service I come across but the idea is that most people who want to connect to me will use one or more of those services and will still be able to connect to me in a meaningful way.

I see the future of the Social Web becoming even more focused on you and the tools you use every day.  We all use something that has pretty much been our social network long before social networking was a buzzword: our address book.  To grow social networks rely on our address books.  Think about how Facebook, LinkedIn and many other services give you the option of tapping into your address books to find contacts also using the service and connect to them, or even to invite contacts to join you.  Your address book is at the core of your social network and all the other stuff would be useless without it.  Services that realise this will become the primary facilitators as the Social Web evolves further.  At the risk of sounding like a fanboy, one service that is doing this already is Plaxo.  Its core focus has been its address book service and its recent introduction of Pulse has added an almost platform neutral lifestream service.  It is worth taking a good look at.

I wonder if we will still have dedicated social networking sites in the next few years or if we will see more functionality built into our digital address books and light services set up to facilitate our lifestreams?  Trying to predict the future of the Web is a bit like trying to hold water in your hands - you get the basics but the bulk of it escapes you.  Whichever way the Social Web goes, I don’t really see all in one sites like Facebook sticking around in the near future.  They are too far removed from the true focal point of our social space.

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December 23rd 2007

A black Google start screen?

There is a post on the Google blog about how to save energy and it reminded me about something I read/heard a while ago.  The idea is that given how many people visit Google and the fact that the Google landing page is white and uses a fair chunk of energy, if Google turned the landing page to black the energy saving across the board would be pretty significant.

Wouldn’t that be a good way to save energy?  I wonder what a black Google search page would look like?

Update: Jyaif commented that the Google blog has a post about just this issue and it does.  It turns out that turning the Google page black could actually increase energy usage in some monitors.  The blog post then sets out a couple things you can do to reduce the amount of energy you are using by enabling the energy saving features of your computer and monitor.  Thanks for the comment Jyaif!

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December 22nd 2007

Duke Nukem taking Forever

I played the original with a set of potent cheat codes mainly because I didn’t have the patience to do it the right way.  It was a lot of fun so I am looking forward to seeing the long awaited sequel, whenever it arrives.  I wonder if there will be a Mac version …

Here is the trailer for Duke Nukem Forever:

Looks like fun!

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December 21st 2007

Pownce not pouncing anymore?

Tyler linked to a post on TechCrunch about Pownce’s apprently imminent demise.  I took a cue from Arrington and requested a comparison of Twitter’s, Jaiku’s and Pownce’s traffic on Compete.com and got this graph:

I have been using Pownce a bit more lately and while I don’t see it replacing Twitter for me any time soon (mainly because the traffic just doesn’t seem to be there), I am beginning to see Pownce in a different light after my initial thoughts on the service shortly after it launched.  A lot of that is due to the way I now see my social presence on the Web (I have been planning a post about that which I should publish soon).

The recent launch of the mobile site has also shifted my perception of how Pownce could be useful to me.  I can see the link and possibly even event sharing aspects of it come in handy as I go about my day and pick up things here and there.  I do think there needs to be as many easy ways to access Pownce as there can be if it is going to pick up users.  Leah and Kevin are heading in the right direction but it remains to be seen if Pownce can begin to attract traffic from Twitter’s userbase.

The problem with services like this is that you wind up going where all your contacts are and the majority of people are using Twitter, for all its inadequacies.  It is interesting to see that Jaiku’s traffic is also dipping relative to Pownce and Twitter.  In fact, according to that graph, Jaiku’s traffic dipped below Pownce’s after a brief rally in October.

I hope Pownce can find new life and keep going.  It is a fun service to use and has a couple features that Twitter sorely lacks like threaded comments, no 140 character limit on posts and a couple more options for post structures.  Interestingly enough, Plaxo’s Pulse has similar posting features to Pownce and I wonder if that undermines Pownce or not.

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December 21st 2007

Climb a mountain, help Reach for a Dream

I am a little slow this week.  Mike posted an appeal to bloggers a couple days ago to support Richard Mulvey’s bid to raise R100 000 for the Reach for a Dream Foundation through his expedition to climb Mt Kilimanjaro.  The awesome Missing Link and Jo’blog people put this video together about Richard’s plan:

You can keep track of Richard’s, his wife’s, Sheila, and friend’s, John van der Horst, plans to climb Mt Kilimanjaro on their blog.  If you have the means, be sure to pledge a donation.  You can find the pledge form here.  As I write this Richard has managed to raise about R34 000.  None of the money raised will go towards the climb.  It is all going to Reach for a Dream.

Thanks to Mike for publicising this and spreading the word.

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