Results tagged “social” from karlo.org

SNIFtags: Social Networking and Exercise Logging for Your Dog

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Niko_with_SNIF_Tag_Download_original.jpg
Marissa and I came across a what seemed to be a really nifty product on the web yesterday: SNIF tags. These tags, developed by a startup founded by a number of MIT Media Lab grads, both monitor your dog's activity level and upload the data to the web (acting essentially like a networked canine pedometer) and, more interestingly, will detect when your dog has met another dog wearing a SNIF tag and connect them as "friends" on the company's web site, in theory allowing your dog to have is own social network - a doggie Facebook, if you will.

It seems great (Marissa did point out that in our dog Mochi's case, it might be embarassing to have an online record of the fact he probably spends 20 hrs a day immobile and asleep.) But there are some pretty major issues, and while I don't think they're the fault of the designers, I do think they're endemic to this kind of product and need a better solution.

FB Group: Click and Clack for Car Czar - Now!

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"The Magliozzi Brothers are qualified. They both went to MIT, and Tom has an MBA and Doctorate of Business Administration from Boston University. They have long railed against SUVs and called for increased fuel efficiency. Tom doesn't even own a car, and Ray drives a 1987 Dodge Colt Vista, which he bought for $100. These guys are not automotive industry insiders and will be on our side."

- John McGrath in the Facebook Group "Click and Clack for Car Czar"

If we're going to blow $15 billion on Detroit, we might as well at least get a laugh or two out of it. One things for sure - they can't do any worse than the current guys in charge. As someone who worked with these guys many years ago (on the original version of CarTalk.com), I wholeheartedly endorse the nomination.

All Roads Lead to Rome

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2008-08-15_1441.png

I've finally gotten around to the long-overdue task of properly linking to the sprawling reaches of my little Web 2.0 empire from the main page on Karlo.Org. From now on, if you're looking for my Flickr page, or my Facebook profile, or whatever, you can find it in the link of lists on the Karlo.Org home page. If you run into any problem using the new links, let me know -- they seem to work for me, but some services can be a little funny about profile links (I'm looking at you, Facebook.)

Facebook's New Profile Layout (Coming Soon)

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new_fb_profile.pngIf you have a Facebook account you can go here to see the new profile page design. I understand what they're trying to do with it - focus folks on user activity rather than static profile boxes - but I think they're going to take a lot of flack for it.

It's very much like FriendFeed or Tumblr - which is great for people who spend all day posting little tidbits for everyone, etc. But a lot of Facebook users are much more casual net users who are using it as a substitute homepage. By removing all of the application boxes that users had been employing to customize their profile, Facebook is disrupting one of the reasons why it's become so popular.

I've always thought of FB as "blog light" - the next step in the evolution from HTML to MoveableType/Wordpress to Typepad and finally to Tumblr/Twitter. Each has respectively reduced the barriers to entry for users. FB takes it even further by basically bringing your real world friends right to your "blog", which is what most private individuals want anyway (you're not posting photos of kids for random Internet readers, you're posting them for Aunt Ida.)

Application developers are going to feel particularly slighted as well... their profile boxes, which users used to be able to place wherever they wanted on their profile page, have now been relegated to the "boxes" tab, a virtual interface ghetto. Facebook says this is because they wanted to isolate the sometimes unruly interfaces of 3rd party apps, but that's kind of a weak excuse -- after all, it was users choosing to put these applications into their profiles and use them, so obviously the interface issues weren't causing that many problems.

(Part of the lesson here is how difficult it is to remodel a product once it's released to the public. The people who have adopted it were the ones that liked how it was laid out, even if it wasn't optimal. Going to a new, better layout isn't always going to get the response you might expect, although sometimes it does.)

Update: It seems like different people see slightly different layouts in the new system, but there are similar comments regardless... as seen on another blog talking about the new UI.

Something's Happening in HD Video

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Alone in Tokyo HD from Philip Bloom on Vimeo.

There's something really remarkable going on right now around the ability of consumers to create truly remarkable HD content and distribute it via the Internet. We've reach a moment where the production gear costs have dropped low enough, a fairly "average" computer like a MacBook Pro can edit in HD, and there are ready channels to distribute to the world, both in terms of technology (sites like Vimeo,  which hosts the above video) and the bandwidth and capabilities of end users.

HD video is leaps and bounds ahead of standard video in terms of how "film like" it can get, and the tools are now arriving that let individuals record very high quality HD video for as less than $2000 - cameras run $600-800, and a $1000 adapter called the Letus Mini lets you connect SLR lenses for "film like" depth of field and fous effects, and a $2000 laptop with iMovieHD (free with new Macs) is all you need to edit, output and upload.

Right now this is leading to a lot of playing around on sites like Vimeo's HD Channel, but it won't be long before folks are producing their own documentaries, etc. using this. It's going to lead to an explosion of niche HD content, plus I'm sure a lot of more widespread hits as well. And it's going to have a real impact on traditional broadcast media - when a home user can produce niche content with quality twice that of a DVD, you're going to see a lot of competition for all those low-budget cable shows trying to survive out there right now.

It's very exciting, and I'm looking forward to see how it plays out over the next year or two. One thing I know for sure - this means I'd rather have a full on computer, like a Mac Mini, attached to my HDTV rather than something like the AppleTV where I'm locked into only a few distribution channels.

Action Streams for MT, and Meta-social sites

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One of the big issues for blogs these days is that most authors also generate a lot of online activity away from their weblog (this wasn't true in the pre-Facebook/Flickr/YouTube days). A great option I've found for Moveable Type users is Action Streams, which I'm using to power the "Elsewhere" section at the right side of my home page. The items aren't posted into the weblog, however, as per my old "link for date" posts from de.licio.us. At first I considered that a shortcoming (I wouldn't mind Twitter comments showing up in my blog) but for the moment I'm in favor of it, as I've realized that the combined activity on other sites would overwhelm the edited content in the weblog.

One problem I'm starting to encounter is that when you use meta-social sites like FriendFeed, which aggregate activity from the social sites, you can start seeing some circularities in your feeds... my FriendFeed feed follows my twitter and Facebook profiiles, but it's also able to post events into my Facebook profile via a plugin, and... uh... problems start to arise.

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