Archive for August, 2008

Heads Up Tech: FriendFeed vs. SocialThing!

Posted in social media on August 25th, 2008 by Matthew – 2 Comments

With the rise of Social Media, people now have several websites where they track their status and keep in touch with friends, family, and colleagues. Earlier this year saw the rise of the Lifestreams – web sites that serve to aggregate the inputs and outputs of a single person’s myriad social media sites. When I saw these sites begin to take hold, I’ll admit I wasn’t a believer. I watched the Instant Messenger Wars play out years ago, and I was skeptical that companies with established user bases would ever allow a 3rd party to have access to that userbase or the rich data that it held. This walled garden approach is what sunk ICQ. In short, I didn’t believe that social media or microblogging sites would ever have a truly open API.

Glad to say I was wrong on that one. The post children of the Web 2.0 craze are social media sites and their open APIs. For every micro-blogging site like Twitter, there is a 3rd party AIR app like Twhirl that is built on its API. There are applications like Digsby that are mashups of “old” IM and “new” social media. And now there are Lifestreams – services that are successfully built around the goal of aggregating the streams of information from all these social media sites into one simplified view.

The king of the hill in the Lifestream community is FriendFeed, which launched privately in 2007 and opened a public beta in Feb 08 with a $5 million Series A funding. FriendFeed was covered mightily by the l33t bloggers at TechCrunch and ReadWriteWeb. At first, I thought it was mostly because it was more because of the founding team of 4 ex-Google execs. I suppose that’s with good cause. There’s a fraternity of ex-Google employees that have gone on to fortune and glory. Sergey & Larry and Google are the 2000’s version of Jack Welch and General Electric.

The speed with which FriendFeed integrated profiles, statuses, and all other rss feeds it could lay its hands on changed my opinion of the service. Their product development methodology firmly guided by their Google background, FriendFeed put together a very simple design and then focused entirely on the product functionality itself. FriendFeed quickly added the most popular services in the all the major categories – microblogging, video blogging, photos, status, news, and music. They cleverly added RSS feeds from sites that you wouldn’t think of as 2.0 – Amazon’s Wishlist and Netflix’s favorites. That’s a mashup of sorts. In early 2008, FriendFeed had clearly focused on the aggregation of services, ballooning to 43 services at the time of this writing. Functionality exists to post to the aggregated Lifestream through a simple “Comment” feature, but in my opinion that’s not a useful service. Here’s why – if your friend uses Pownce for micro-blogging and you comment on that post in FriendFeed, your comment doesn’t become a Pownce update. After some pressure, FriendFeed did add an option to make FriendFeed comments become tweets, but that’s the limit of integration with other services from an update perspective. Recent feature additions include the concept of “rooms” and the integration of FriendFeed comments as part of blog comments. Like their chatroom namesakes before them, FriendFeed Rooms are essentially a group of people discussing a specific topic – using FriendFeed comments of course. The blog comment mechanism came to be as plug-ins for Wordpress and Movable Type, where you can see FriendFeed discussions as part of your blog commentary.

Upstart SocialThing! launched in beta after securing $300k in “early stage” funding in the Fall of 2007. From the start, SocialThing! has attempted to avoid direct competition with the larger and more popular FriendFeed by claiming that they’re a different breed of Lifestream that’s not competitive at all. There’s a lot of truth to that. Where FriendFeed focused on pulling together all the RSS it could lay its hands on, SocialThing has focused on 2 way integration with the services it supports. SocialThing’s design more closely mimics others in the Web 2.0 space, which stands in contrast to FriendFeed’s mimimalistic user interface. FriendFeed comments require a FriendFeed reader (website or AIR app) to view. SocialThing caught on earlier about that major drawback. When you post a response to someone using SocialThing, it posts directly to the service, not to itself. Additionally, when you make changes to your profile or add/remove friends on other services, these changes automatically occur in your SocialThing account. This makes SocialThing more heavily reliant on 3rd party API, which is risky. But, the risk outweighs the benefits to AOL, who recently decided to acquire SocialThing earlier this August. AOL probably has desire to pair SocialThing  with Meebo, a web-based IM client that it has a significant investment stake in.

In summary, the top 2 Lifestream services both offer RSS and social media stream aggregation. FriendFeed focuses on aggregating as many streams as it can, where SocialThing focuses on a more complete 2-way integration with each of the services it supports. With the acquisition by AOL, SocialThing’s product roadmap is in doubt. The future for FriendFeed seems focused on slowly turning the discussion from Tweets and Pownces to FriendFeed comments.

You can find me on FriendFeed and SocialThing. Add a comment below if you’d like an invite to the SocialThing beta. More importantly – I’d be interested to hear how you’re using either or both of this services.

My Interview at SummerMash Boston

Posted in video 2.0 on August 19th, 2008 by Matthew – 1 Comment

Earlier this month, I attended SummerMash Boston with a few folks from PermissionTV. The folks at Stickam were holding interviews with attendees and streaming live on Mashable. Well, they’ve finally gotten through the backlog and have posted the recorded sessions on their site. Below is the discussion that I and Craig Daniel, my cohort in the PTV engineering team, had regarding our favorite Video 2.0 company – PermissionTV. I  think that the PermissionTV video player is better than Stickam’s, but I guess I’m just a “company man.” What do you think?

Evernote – A scrapbook for your Web 2.0 lifestyle

Posted in web 2.0 on August 18th, 2008 by Matthew – 1 Comment

This guest post is written by Milo Caruso, a full time .NET web developer at Convention Data Services in Bourne and freelance designer and developer. He has worked on a variety of attendee registration sites ranging from small (under 100 regstrants) to large (90k+ registrants) during his time at CDS. His freelance work has ranged from staightforward brochure style sites for small businesses to custom, membership based web application development. Milo and his work have been feature in the Boston Globe.

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SummerMash Boston 08

Posted in social media on August 6th, 2008 by Matthew – 1 Comment

I and a contingent of PermissionTV rabble-rousers attended Mashable.com’s SummerMash Boston event. We wanted to meet some folks and maybe spread the world on what our company has been up to. Here’s what the $21 ticket got us:

  1. A live, streaming interview of us discussing PTV, that was shown on the Mashable.com homepage during the event.
  2. Some crazy photos of the PermissionTV Team with Pete Cashmore, CEO of Mashable, and another one here.
  3. An intro to Chris Brogan, local Social Media hero who’s now following PermissionTV.
  4. An intro to Adam Ostrow, Mashable Editor in Chief, who told us the secret to getting covered in Mashable – “Have an interesting story to tell, that’s not being covered anywhere else.” Eureka!
  5. 5 new followers of PermissionTV.
  6. Coverage from Marcel Moreau (aka Combusting Boy) at Summermash Boston 2008 Roundup.
  7. Free food and two free drink tickets. w00t!
  8. A dancing Owl
  9. The most ridiculous picture of the PermissionTV Crew known to man.
  10. Best Job Title of the Evening – Saul Colt, Head of Magic at FreshBooks.

All in all – it was a good event, I’d say! I met a lot of interesting people and had good fun along the way. For anyone else who was at the event, I’d love for you to share stories and links to pics in the comments below!

Update: Looks like the owner of the Flickr stream turned their pictures private, so some links above might not work properly. You can see all the fun pics here.