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The best and worst thing Twitter did in 2009: RT
It's a mentality that causes media stagnation. There's only so much the public cares about a social networking site or a slick phone. After all, that's all that it is: a website and a phone.
never mind. They're writing about Facebook.
This Q&A and blog post is almost guaranteed to turn your extremities bright red. It ticked me off, and I don't even own an Xbox:
http://blogs.mercurynews.com/aei/2007/06/a_qa_w...
I think a lot of what bloggers call "transparency" is nonsense, but clearly stuff like the above ain't gonna fly on the web any more. Thoughts?
Things I would like to see you talk about in the future is how other companies are responding to the iphone and Facebook.
and it will either IPO or be a bigger acquisition than YouTube ... and is more accessible than MySpace
if only they could sort out the advertising (could Google bring them a solution - and remain independent)
Facebook & iPhone aren't hype. they're AMAZING products with REAL innovation being used by MILLIONS of people (ok, so maybe iPhone hasn't busted into 7 digits yet, but they will soon).
300+ people were in SF for iPhoneDevCamp, organized spontaneously... many of them flew in for the event.
Facebook has had 3 -- count them THREE -- ad networks launch in the past week (Lookery, FB Exchange, Social Media).
what the hell else is going on that is anywhere NEAR this amazing / engrossing?
- dave mcclure
http://500hats.typepad.com/
No problem with Facebook - it is the most happening thing at the moment and in the UK too - I was out taking some photos last night and listening to the 10pm Radio 4 news (heavyweight news station) and low and behold, Facebook got a mention!
If that isn't proof, I don't know what is!
Jon
What, I think, is turning some people off is the fact that very few people you cite are looking at Facebook with a critical eye. Jason Kottke has Facebook pegged for exactly what it is IMNSHO.
And the fact that everyone's talking about Facebook doesn't mean that it "matters."
A couple of weeks ago, every news outlet was talking about Paris Hilton. Does she matter?
Actually, FB and Paris have a lot in common. I think both of them are trying to build hype (not a truly useful product) in order to get a big payday. Very little substance or originality.
And I'm not saying that Mark and team shouldn't cash out. That's their call.
It is just a little disturbing to me to see and hear the people on the "A-list" pretend it isn't the next AOL/MySpace. Why? Because they have little widgets now?
Your justification that FB is relevant because people are talking about is disappointing (If everyone jumped off a bridge...). People expect a little more critical analysis. This FB fawning is anything but and, ultimately, erodes credibilty.
Again, this is your blog. You should post whatever you want. You'll never make everyone happy. But since you asked... :)
This is more exciting
http://www.openmoko.com/
So is this
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ImW0-MgR8I
So is this
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=olWjnfBoY8E
So is this
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QcNwnANrCpw
Pretty much anything on the front page of Digg.com also qualifies.
BTW, DO NOT buy an iPhone, 2nd gen iPhones are coming out in September for half price, $249. It's worth it to wait.
http://www.engadget.com/2007/07/17/second-gener...
I didn't find that out by reading the Scoble blog, but rather by reading digg.com.
iPhone is a phone with a fully fledged, CSS compliant, AJAX capable browser that allows developers to throw together quickly mini-apps that have a very low cost of entry (sound familiar?). Maybe I missed something but the iPhone didn't launch an NTT iMode-like micropayment system where stuff can be bought from your phone and appear on your legacy AT&T phone bill. So right now, the iPhone app field is looking a bit like the facebook API field: a million applets makes for a lot to talk about, and a lot of new logos, but no revenue model to support the activity. In a sense it is less of a disrupter than iMode was in 1999.
only the huge amounts of VC money sloshing around looking for that one mega-winner in 1000 losers keeps both big ideas alive, for now.
Just try something new. Pownce maybe. Slacker maybe. A new blog platform, Terapad or Square Space maybe. Talk about what's best to video blog with. Talk about good software to use.
Are you writing about important things or exciting things? There's a difference between the two. Unfortunately important can often be boring. Maybe Facebook is more exciting to you, but I would argue that the current state of the patent system is more important.
Well said.
"only the huge amounts of VC money sloshing around looking for that one mega-winner in 1000 losers keeps both big ideas alive, for now."
Extremely insightful and well said.
digg++
I do think mobile Web 2.0 is important - possibly broaden out a wee bit beyond the iPhone alone (tons more peeps still have Treos, Crackberries, and I have Nokia; and I suspect that more is coming to compete with iPhone).
Facebook: I haven't had inclination to check out even though I get friend requests on daily basis. It's faceless unless you register. And I'm not registering for yet another social network unless I see it first.
Also, I see hype being thrown around as a single definition, when it is not. There is hype as in exaggeration... but then there's hype as in "excessive publicity and the ensuing commotion."
Facebook is being hyped beyond belief. But its being hyped under the second definition I provided because its successful. No exaggeration there. But, there is plenty of coverage, so it's being given excessive publicity.
I know about Facebook, I know about their open platform, I know millions of people use it, I know Robert Scoble has tons of VC's, billionaires, and other influential people on his friends list... but tell us what we don't know. Find the hidden gem related to Facebook.
Robert:
Try talking about services related to Facebook. Perhaps cover some Facebook applications? What do you personally use on your Facebook account? How does Facebook personally benefit you? How can other companies leverage the social model that Facebook has? That's the type of stuff that interests me...
Write about what pleases you, and remember that when I use the word hype, I'm using it in the second context. I know Facebook (or the iPhone) isn't an exaggeration.
Yep and bloggers know that constantly yammering on about whatever the 'hot site of the moment', is great linkbait and for traffic. The endless Twitter hype that was run into the ground has now been replaced by Facebook-hype. A month or 2 from now the current Facebook hype will be replaced by something else.
As Smorty said, it's your blog so write about whatever you want. But hearing every couple of months that Site/Service X is the 'next big thing!' begins to sound like the boy crying wolf.
But you ask about other exciting and interesting things. Here is one - we are finally headed into our long over due recession.
http://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2007/07/...
Why is that so exciting? Because we need a recession to clear away all the clutter, so we can move on to the next level.
http://luke.gedeon.name/is-it-really-web-30-or-...
If you are having trouble finding more than a couple things to get excited about it might be that we are getting near the end of the cycle. Or it might just be the time of year. Anyone with any sense is at the beach right now... unless it is raining there like it is here.
Tech "influencers" and kids are a pretty fickle audience, and are on pretty much all of these things. Friends of my parents have accounts at linkedin and myspace, are nowhere to be found on facebook.
All of these services have the same people on them, only on myspace does anyone I have not heard from in a while contact me.
http://pipes.yahoo.com/pipes/pipe.info?_id=1ERY...
It's for anyone who enjoys the bizarro-world feeling.