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It’s not ‘who you share with,’ it’s ‘who you share as’ … Identity is prismatic.

4chan’s Chris Poole: Facebook & Google Are Doing It Wrong

Brief, brilliant points.

Source: readwriteweb.com

    • #identity
    • #Facebook
    • #Google
    • #Twitter
    • #communication
    • #social
    • #anonymity
  • 3 months ago
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LukeW | Gradual Engagement Boosts Twitter Sign-Ups by 29%

Through their user research, Twitter found that while celebrities (and their tweets) were a big reason people came to Twitter, they did not keep them there. Instead, what kept users on Twitter was the things they were passionate about - hobbies, conversations with subject-matter experts, and friends. This was the core essence of the service that a gradual engagement approach needed to deliver.

Excellent shift, Twitter. I was thoroughly offended when I went to register for another Twitter account and found that “Start following these random people!” screen.

Also, I am extremely enticed by the description of sending confirmation emails TripIt to sign up…might have to try that next time I travel.

Source: lukew.com

    • #registration
    • #processes
    • #forms
    • #Twitter
    • #gradual engagement
  • 1 year ago
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Minding the Machine

This is a reflection piece I wrote for one of my grad classes based on E.M. Forster’s “The Machine Stops” (1909) and “The Machine is Us/ing Us” (2007). It’s a little choppy since there are a lot of big issues and it was only supposed to be around two pages…but I got a lot out of writing it and I’d like to expand on some of these points in the future.

Minding the Machine

E.M. Forster’s essay “The Machine Stops” is eerily prophetic for having been written in 1909, as many traits of his Machine mirror the Internet’s role in our lives today. When we have a need for information these days, we rarely have to visit libraries, friends, family, teachers, experts—if someone perceived to have knowledge is not conveniently available, we simply do a quick Google or Wikipedia search. And for the answers we can’t find by searching, we can ask the masses by broadcasting our questions via Twitter or Yahoo! Answers. We can tune into lectures on any number of topics on TED or YouTube, read almost anything from classic literature to blogs, order groceries from down the street and shoes from the other side of the world. Not quite as full-service as the Machine (we still have to pick things up off the floor ourselves), but we’re well on our way.

This term, I have four online classes and one bricks-and-mortar class. Spending weekends in my room alone doing homework, I feel much like Vashti—physically isolated, yet connected to so many people and ideas. For many of my library classes, I tend to prefer the online medium since it fosters deeper reflection through the writing of discussion board posts, and allows everyone to state their piece without the constraints of time or linear conversational flow. In this arena at least, I disagree with Kuno, who is not satisfied by technologically mediated communication: “I see something like you in this plate, but I do not see you. I hear something like you through this telephone, but I do not hear you.” Frequently my thoughts are more clearly expressed if I am typing them, and I would argue that written words convey “me” better than my voice at times.

However, I do not deny the value of real-time, face-to-face interaction. Not only does this sort of discourse in classes frequently spur different topics and ideas, it also fulfills a human need. Seeing classmates when they’re speaking gives me a better impression of their personality; physically going to class puts me in an environment that helps me mentally focus on the course content (and prevents me from going stir-crazy in my room). In Forster’s tale, humans have evolved away from movement and even uniqueness, but we are still governed by these factors.

On the personal side, this web 2.0 world presents us with an enigma of interconnection. We can communicate with and keep track of more people than ever before. But as social networks make it easier for us to stay in touch, they also make it easier for us not to see each other face-to-face. Systems that enable digital ambient intimacy make us feel like we’re connected since we already know our friends’ and families’ statuses—at least to the degree that they broadcast—and they know we know because we “liked” them on Facebook. These channels can serve as surrogates when travel is infeasible, and augment our interactions when we actually do see each other by cluing us in on activities or interests that might not otherwise come up in casual conversation. But it’s important not to let technology supplant natural human interactions in our core relationships, else we lose “nuances of expression” to the Machine and settle for “a general idea of people” just “good enough for all practical purposes.”

Technology also has bandwidth and backlog capacity that we do not—a discord I grapple with every time I return to my computer and open my email, Twitter, Facebook, online courses, etc. Forster describes the sensation brilliantly after Kuno’s first call to his mother: “Vashti’s next move was to turn off the isolation switch, and all the accumulations of the last three minutes burst upon her. The room was filled with the noise of bells, and speaking-tubes. … To most of these questions she replied with irritation—a growing quality in that accelerated age.” We doubtless live in an accelerated age, and there really is no keeping up even with just the things we’re interested in. We just have to pick and choose and prioritize—consciously and with the help of our Machines, by the whims of serendipity and zeitgeist. We patronize favorite websites, pipe content through RSS feeds and email subscriptions, and surf whatever links our social graphs bubble up.

There is so much information out there that I frequently wonder how much is newly generated, and how much is just the same ideas being rehashed over and over. An interesting divergence between our information reality and that described by Forster is the eventual movement away from “original ideas.” This makes sense given the danger of individualistic thought to the Machine’s totalitarian regime (as is illustrated in Kuno). The spin put on it by the Machine faithful even presents a legitimate approach, though their goal is dangerous. They talk of balancing bias and increasing understanding by looking at history through many lenses: “Through the medium of these ten great minds, the blood that was shed at Paris and the windows that were broken at Versailles will be clarified to an idea which you may employ most profitably in your daily lives. But be sure that the intermediates are many and varied, for in history one authority exists to counteract another.” However, in doing this they seek only utility relative to the Machine’s perspective and blot out the facts and human character of history.

Ideally, our neutral Internet facilitates the collection and cross-referencing of all relevant sources—the integrity of the connections made and new knowledge generated subject only to the skills and bias of the individual user. However, we are limited by the commercial and political interests of search engines and information providers alike. We have not evolved to the point where “all unrest [is] concentrated in the soul.”

Perhaps the most powerful entity on the Internet today is Google. As the majority market share holder of search, it could easily manipulate the lives of the millions of people who put their faith in its algorithms to deliver the information they need. We trust it because it seems to work, and “Do no evil” is part of its corporate philosophy. A parody religion called The Church of Google “proves” that Google qualifies as God, as it is nearly omniscient, omnipresent, infinite, and other God-like criteria (at least in the Judeo-Christian sense). While reverence for any technology with such power may be warranted, blind faith is dangerous. In Forster’s story, this faith was humanity’s downfall, as they could no longer take care of themselves or maintain the Machine that enabled their lifestyle. The development of the Machine as a religious deity was also a demonstration of the fundamental need in many people to worship a higher power that looks out for them.

This and other elements of the story point to the resoluteness of human nature, which above all revolves around a craving to connect with each other and our surroundings. Moving forward in this information age, we must balance our reverence for ideas and experiences, as they contribute equally to the development of our souls. I agree with Michael Wesch’s “The Machine is Us/ing Us” in that we need to rethink a number of areas with respect to information and interaction—authorship, ethics, privacy, governance, family, identity. The rate at which our Machine is growing, changing, and learning is alarming, but will the Internet control us someday? I think Forster, Huxley, Clarke, and many other great writers and filmmakers have warned us well against the dangers of letting technology subvert our humanity.

Sources

Forster, E.M. (1909). “The Machine Stops” Oxford and Cambridge Review. Retrieved from http://www.pages.drexel.edu/~mdd37/MDD%20FACULTY%20SITE/Forster/index.htm

(2009). Proof Google is God – The Church of Google. http://www.thechurchofgoogle.org/Scripture/Proof_Google_Is_God.html

Wesch, Michael. (2007). The Machine is Us/ing Us (Final Version). Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NLlGopyXT_g

    • #social networks
    • #information
    • #internet
    • #online classes
    • #face-to-face
    • #communication
    • #experiences
    • #life
    • #religion
    • #power
    • #control
    • #evolution
    • #human nature
    • #Twitter
    • #Google
    • #scifi
  • 1 year ago
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Perhaps there is no for-profit business model for social networking. It’s been nearly twenty years and a lot of impressive money and brainpower hasn’t figured it out. Does social networking need a for-profit business model? Perhaps the world would be better off if social networks were not-for-profit? The mandate of the entrepreneurial community is to find solutions to problems, not just to make money.
Bo Peabody, Facebook And Twitter Will Always Be Crappy Businesses

Source: Business Insider

    • #social networks
    • #twitter
    • #facebook
    • #business
    • #non-profit
  • 1 year ago
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(via @debweb)
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(via @debweb)

    • #quotes
    • #ux
    • #twitter
    • #live and breathe it
  • 2 years ago
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Tim O'Reilly On The Future Of Social Media : NPR

A little old, but still good, just came onto my radar courtesy of the HCI grad class I’m taking this term.

Source: NPR

    • #Tim O'Reilly
    • #social media
    • #Twitter
    • #web 2.0
  • 2 years ago
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Mob Rule! How Users Took Over Twitter | Wired Magazine
“If there are three sentences I’d use to describe Twitter, one of them would be ‘I don’t know.’” - Biz Stone
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Mob Rule! How Users Took Over Twitter | Wired Magazine

“If there are three sentences I’d use to describe Twitter, one of them would be ‘I don’t know.’” - Biz Stone

Source: Wired

    • #Twitter
  • 2 years ago
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The Wave of the Future, Part 1: It’s not a Twitter-killer

I am for some reason having a terrible time trying to formulate a coherent post about Google Wave (perhaps because I want to say so much about it), so I am going to try play the “reversal” game @livlab brought up at RefreshPhilly on Monday — let’s ask, what might *not* be awesome about Google Wave?

Adoption barrier. Since Wave is a thoroughly social technology, a reasonable amount of people have to convert for it to be of any value to anyone. I don’t use Orkut because none of my friends use Orkut — we use Facebook, Twitter, Gmail, AIM, etc. Only time will tell whether Wave will pick up quite the following of these other technologies, and at this point there are 2 factors that can predetermine the rapid adoption necessary for Wave to reach its potential: hype and functionality.

Hype they have no problem getting. The Twittersphere was abuzz last Friday after the Google I/O developer preview, and excitement will surely ebb and flow until Wave finally hits the public.

The hype isn’t just about the technology, of course. It’s also about Google’s position in the realm of social medial. Before Wave was announced, one of the big rampant rumors was that the Google Search Giant would be felled by the ever-growing army of 140-character soldiers that feed into Twitter’s (relatively new) search. I refuse to buy into such a concept, especially when I see things like #robotpickuplines and #3wordsaftersex trending daily…unless they develop some magic spam-filtering algorithm, it’s more a gauge of memes than of…well, what exactly is Twitter search for, anyway?

Seeing what people are talking about, I suppose. It’s a window into Web zeitgeist. The content of Twitter is nothing like the content of the Web. Twitter search only satisfies your information needs if someone has recently (unless you’re willing to scroll through every result) tweeted about what you’re looking for, and managed to squeeze the exact words that you used into their 140 characters. Even if Twitter had a phenomenal algorithm, there’s just not actually that much “real” content, *and* there’s no way to index it well enough to provide the value of a “real” search engine.

One of the things that makes Twitter great for finding current info is getting links that people have posted. However, since people use TinyURL and other services to conserve characters, these links aren’t permanent — they expire after a certain amount of time, at which point many of these tweets become virtually useless. Additionally, I doubt tweets are indexed with the contents of the linked sites (or even the actual URL in most cases)…so if I wanted to search Twitter to find a specific Wired article I remember one of my friends tweeting about, I probably wouldn’t be able to find it unless my friend said “Wired” or something relating to the subject in the tweet…rather than “Check out this great article! [insert shortlink here]”

So Twitter search has its place. After all, Trending Topics was how I heard about Google Wave. But it’s no Google-killer.

And now back to Wave…is it a Twitter-killer? No way in hell. With the Twave application, it’s built in — if you can’t beat the social networks by joining them, build them into your shiny new communication medium. If anything, it might lead to more people finding the value in Twitter. Having it integrated into the “inbox” experience a little more closely might make it easier to get started. 

AIM away messages were a nascent form of Twitter. Having that buddy list on the right side of my screen all the time since 5th grade, people’s status messages were the original ambient intimacy. AOL once had a large hold on how people interacted on the Internet because it was the major ISP, and the average user settled for the built-in browser, e-mail, etc. Nowadays it seems like ISPs and applications rarely go hand-in-hand for the average user — I pay Comcast for the Internet, but Comcast.net definitely isn’t my homepage, and I’ve never even tried their e-mail (granted, I’m not entirely average). Rather, Google is my dominant application provider — I recently switched to using AIM solely through Gmail since I have it open all the time anyway, and I’m starting to use Google Docs more and more for spreadsheets that I need to access anywhere and share with other people. I keep track of my time solely by my Google Calendar, and even use calendar invites to plan social gatherings with a couple of my friends since we’re so busy.

Now wouldn’t it be nice if all my events from Facebook, MeetUp, etc. just Waved themselves into my calendar without me having to enter information manually? That’s the sort of integration Google’s getting at by releasing Wave as an API and a protocol. For once, Google’s letting some of its engineering secrets out of the bag because they know something like this can’t succeed otherwise.

Not only does there need to be interoperability with existing and future streams of communication, but there must be the ability to break the technology out of the Google box so they don’t develop some massive information monopoly. I’m not personally paranoid about Google using my information for any sort of nefariousness (the “Don’t be evil” credo is oddly comforting), but many people are, and many businesses and organizations have confidential information they’d rather not have living on someone else’s servers. In the preview, they start out saying “What would e-mail look like if it was invented today?” That’s what makes Google Wave different Gmail or Apps or the latest iteration of MS Exchange — that approach, if nothing else. Don’t just build another client — build a new service. Everyone uses e-mail, it’s a reliable open standard, but it could be so much more nowadays.

If people don’t build systems that function seamlessly based around Waves, they will remain simply another awesome Google product, and a large part of the hype will be lost — at least on this front. Even if they somehow don’t catch on, the technology is still pretty exciting. There are a ton of other facets to the technology as it was depicted in the preview that I haven’t even gotten to yet…my favorite being *contextual spell check*…but they’re for another time since I’ve already rambled on long enough here!

    • #google
    • #wave
    • #twitter
    • #social media
    • #facebook
    • #search
  • 2 years ago
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Hey, I'm Jamie Thomson, lover of all things UX / IA / IxD / HCI. I live in Cambridge, MA, and work in Boston with the wonderful folks of Mad*Pow. Ramblings here represent my views alone.

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