Tag Archive | "social"

MagnetU connects you with similar people in your area, because diversity is overrated

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MagnetU connects you with similar people in your area, because diversity is overrated

Posted on 07 December 2011 by Amar Toor

You could make friends the old fashioned way, with casual introductions, eye contact and other intrinsically human social skills; or you could just sit back and let MagnetU do all the heavy lifting for you. The Israeli startup, founded in 2010, has just unveiled what it calls a "proximity networking" device -- a tiny accessory that connects users to other like-minded people within their immediate vicinity. Within this lightweight gadget lies information on a user's "social desires," which can be customized and modified depending on a given situation. If you're at a networking event, for example, you can activate your "business" profile, before switching into the grossly mistitled "social" mode once you walk into a bar. Once activated, the device will automatically scan for other users within your area, comparing your data against theirs. If it finds a match, both misfits will be notified with a text message that provides details on their level of compatibility. At that point, it's up to you to exchange furtive glances and do the whole "Come here often?" Kabuki routine. The tool could also open up new marketing avenues for retailers, though MagnetU plans to begin rolling out its $24 device at college campus events, where more traditional social lubricants are few and far between.

MagnetU connects you with similar people in your area, because diversity is overrated originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 07 Dec 2011 11:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Boost Mobile lets you refill your account on Facebook, allows gifting to and from friends

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Boost Mobile lets you refill your account on Facebook, allows gifting to and from friends

Posted on 07 December 2011 by Brad Molen

So busy playing networking on Facebook that you can't find time to refill your Boost Mobile account? Your little conundrum has been solved, as the prepaid carrier has set up an app on the social network called Re-Boost for this very purpose. It satisfies the obvious need of filling up your own account at your own free will, but it also hasn't neglected the social aspect: you can refill a friend's account as a gift or even scrounge a few bucks off your connections by sending a request to your network. It's definitely a unique take on an otherwise inconsequential task; perhaps those high school buddies you never talk to would be willing to part with a buck or two in exchange for some Farmville animals. Check out the presser below.

Continue reading Boost Mobile lets you refill your account on Facebook, allows gifting to and from friends

Boost Mobile lets you refill your account on Facebook, allows gifting to and from friends originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 07 Dec 2011 09:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Backup And Search All Your Friends’ Tweets In Google Reader

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Backup And Search All Your Friends’ Tweets In Google Reader

Posted on 12 August 2009 by ReadWriteWeb.com

I just set up an automatic backup of all 3000 of my friends’ Twitter messages and became able to search through their Twitter history two years into the past with just five minutes of easy clicking. Only two things are required: Dave Winer’s new Twitter OPML tool and a Google Reader account.

Twitter’s search engine only goes back about a week and a half. Sometimes you want to retrieve a message you saw, or get a feeling for what your circle of friends said about something, from longer ago than that. We wrote yesterday about 10 Ways To Archive Your Tweets. The next step is to archive the Tweets of everyone else you find of interest, and make them searchable.

Last week RSS forefather Dave Winer wrote and posted a little tool for pulling any Twitter user’s friends list out of Twitter and saving it as an OPML file. It’s part of his broader open real-time messaging project called RSS Cloud.

OPML stands for Outline Processor Markup Language and in this case it’s just a bundle of RSS feeds than can be moved around in bulk. It’s a beautiful idea that has a lot more potential than has been realized, but you’ll see how it comes in handy here.

It’s all about pulling down an OPML file of your Twitter friends’ feeds and slapping that file into Google Reader. Then it’s archived and searchable. It’s very easy to do.

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How to Make it Happen

It couldn’t be much simpler. Just put your Twitter username into this link, instead of mine, and load it up in your browser: http://tw.opml.org/get?user=marshallk&folder=1

It may take just a minute, but the end result will be an OPML file. You can either go up to your browser’s File menu and select “save as” or you can View Source and copy and paste the source of the page into a text document. Save it with a memorable name and either .xml or .opml as the file type. It’s really quite easy.

Now if you want to put this puppy into Google Reader just log in, click on “manage subscriptions” and find the import/export button. Import that file into Google Reader and you’re ready to rock and roll!

Update: The combination of interest from this post and the limitations of Twitter’s API has caused a temporary challenge for this service and Winer says he’s had to limit friend extractions to 1,000 per user for now. Give it a go, but bookmark it for later when there’s less of a rush and it can be less of a proof of concept.

What Can You Do With This?

Do you want to read Tweets through Google Reader? Probably not. But do you want to archive, retrieve and search that way? It works remarkably well! Especially because of the social nature of Google Reader. If anyone you’re following has had their RSS feed read by anyone in Google Reader, ever, the system will have an archive of their tweets that goes far beyond what’s immediately available in their RSS feed right now. Thus my ability to pull up tweets from two years ago in a search.

You may want to create a separate Google Reader account for this (I did) so the Tweets don’t clutter up other feeds you like to read.

There are certainly other little things you can do with easy OPML files of Twitter followers as well. You can’t import them directly into Twitter clients (yet) but you can share and trade them into an RSS reader as a preview mechanism before deciding to subscribe in Twitter proper. (My favorite tech analysts on Twitter, informative LGBT activists on Twitter, etc. in OPML format – collect ‘em all!)

These are the kinds of things that make simple protocols for dynamic information delivery, like RSS and OPML, so much fun.

You could create and share OPML files of your favorite twitter users concerning a particular topic. You could build an OPML file of a group of twitter users and have their RSS feeds automatically displayed on a page on your website.

You could assemble different groups of people into different OPML files, saved in different folders in your Google Reader account, and then limit searches to one folder or another in order to get a sampling of what various groups of people have to say about a topic. That would be hot!

The possibilities are endless, but the most basic use cases of archiving and search are already worth doing. We’d love to know how you can imagine using tools like this together.

Caveats

It’s not clear how quickly Google Reader is updating its record of tweets and it is definitely missing a lot. We searched for some specific twitter messages from several months ago from people whose Tweets are being subscribed to in Google Reader, but that it didn’t retrieve. I hope that won’t happen with user feeds I’ve subscribed to myself now, but take it with a grain of salt. Google Reader isn’t really a terribly serious product, anyway. It could come in quite handy, but there is a larger value here in getting your hands on an OPML file of your Twitter friends’ messages.

How can you imagine putting an OPML file like this to use?

You can find ReadWriteWeb on Twitter, as well as the entire RWW Team. Please follow: Marshall Kirkpatrick, Bernard Lunn, Alex Iskold, Sarah Perez, Frederic Lardinois, Jolie Odell, Dana Oshiro, Steven Walling and Lidija Davis.


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How To: Backup And Search All Your Friends’ Tweets In Google Reader

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Pixelpipe Announces 50 New Mobile Apps for Android, iPhone, and Nokia

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Pixelpipe Announces 50 New Mobile Apps for Android, iPhone, and Nokia

Posted on 11 August 2009 by admin

pixelpipe_logo_aug09.pngPixelpipe, a great service that allows its users to distribute documents and media files to over 100 social media services, just released over 50 new single-purpose applications through the Android Market. The company also submitted the same number of apps to the iPhone App Store and the Nokia Ovi Store. Why so many apps? As Pixelpipe’s CEO and founder Brett Butterfield tells us, the company realized that about half of Pixelpipe’s users only used the service to forward files to one service.

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In order to serve this market better and to link its name closer to the brand names of the services it supports, the company decided to release co-branded versions of its mobile app for 50 of the 100 services it currently supports. Pixelpipe will sell these co-branded versions of its app for $0.99 and a pro version with support for all the 100 services that Pixelpipe currently works with will sell for $1.99.

The iPhone apps still have to go through Apple’s approval process, which can take a while, but the Android apps will be available today and the Nokia apps should be available in about one week.

Pixelpipe’s App Factory

As Butterfield told us, the company has automated most of the app development process, so whenever Pixelpipe adds a new service, a new mobile app can also be created with very little effort.

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App Store SEO

Overall, this seems like a very smart move. The company started to experiment with co-branded Android apps for a few services like Facebook, Twitter, and Photobucket a few days ago. As these apps actually include the name of the service in their titles (“Twitter for Pixelpipe”), they are much easier to find for consumers who would otherwise never have heard of Pixelpipe. After all, as we pointed out earlier today, most users rely on Top 10 lists and browsing through categories to find interesting new mobile apps.

As Pixelpipe told us, these apps are already outselling the company’s own app by a significant margin and Pixelpipe has heard from a number of services who would like to partner with the company and promote the apps.

We think this is an interesting story, as it points out some of the problems developers face when trying to market their apps. Also, while social media mavens love the fact that Pixelpipe Pro can send documents, audio, video, and pictures to 100 other social media services, for most users, this is simply overkill and just generates confusion.

Discuss


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Pixelpipe Announces 50 New Mobile Apps for Android, iPhone, and Nokia

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Is a Perfect Storm Forming For Distributed Social Networking?

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Is a Perfect Storm Forming For Distributed Social Networking?

Posted on 11 August 2009 by admin

My Social network by Luc Legay on Flickr.jpgMaybe it’s better to host your own. That’s the thinking coming from a growing number of early technology adopters as service after service goes down, sells out or otherwise frustrates the users who have published their content online only to see the tools they use become broken or less desirable.

The prospect of a distributed, interoperable, self-hosted network of publishing, reading and discussion tools is nothing new – but the idea is gaining a lot more support as more people react to recent news like FriendFeed’s sale to Facebook, Tr.im’s up and down and Twitter’s denial of service attacks. The tide may not be turning, but there’s sure to be some new waves of innovation that come out of this period of frustration.

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Isn’t This What Blogging Does For Us Already?

One of the analogies people are drawing is that we need a WordPress.org-type version of Twitter to put on our own servers as an alternative to the Twitter-hosted version that exists now like WordPress hosts blogs on WordPress.com.

Why do we need self-hosted lifestreaming, microblogging or social networks though when we’ve already got the ability to host our own blogs, own our own data there and set our own rules? Simply because these technologies fill different needs. Blogs are good for longer-form, author-centric communication. Quick, very social conversations around objects like links or media items can best be had in other settings. Thus the interest many people have in both writing a blog and sharing and discussing items on sites like Facebook (social networks), Twitter (microblogging) or FriendFeed (activity streams).

Twitter’s Down Time

twitterdowntimepiczilar.jpgTwitter went down again today, possibly for the second time in two weeks because of a Distributed Denial of Service attack. A swarm of zombified computers, distributed all around the world, is hitting Twitter’s centralized infrastructure over and over again until it can’t stay up.

If we all had a little piece of our microblogging network on our own servers and they spoke to each other, that couldn’t happen.

We’d also own our own data, our archives, our interface design and more. It would be like publishing little messages… like grown ups.

The two systems could co-exist, a hosted service has its advantages and many people wouldn’t use anything else. Realistically, no one is going to build something too much like Twitter if they could build a distributed version of something like FriendFeed or Facebook.

Facebook Eats FriendFeed

ffbetrayal.jpgSocial activity stream discussion network FriendFeed announced that it was selling itself to Facebook yesterday and many of its users were very upset. The acquisition is likely to change Facebook in interesting ways (FriendFeed’s creators were the inventors of GMail and Google Maps) but FriendFeed itself was important to its users.

The feeling of betrayal that comes from a transaction like this makes it hard to trust a hosted social networking company again.

Fortunately, there’s a long and growing list of ways to put all of your activity around the web in one place on your own website. When will those tools begin to include subscription to other peoples’ activity feeds and posting comments from your social lifestream viewing page that will appear back out on everyone else’s?

That’s a big part of the vision articulated by Anil Dash in his recent essay about what he calls The Push Button Web. It’s related as well to RSS pioneer Dave Winer’s recent promotion of a part of RSS called RSS Cloud. Developers are actively building on RSS Cloud and a similar protocol with the humorous name PubSubHubbub.

That’s also part of the vision of the Distributed Social Networking Project (DiSo). We haven’t heard much lately from this project, probably because its founders are busy building the technical standards that will allow the information to flow from one social network to another.

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Tr.im Your Expectations

This weekend link shortening service Tr.im announced that it was shutting its doors. It was too expensive and hopeless to run the service without the funding, hype and official blessing from Twitter that competitor Bit.ly had won.

Big deal, right? It turns out that people freaked out. Tr.im’s biggest users were developers who were hip to the opportunities to do interesting things with the service. They had built on it and they felt a lot of frustration when they heard the news.

A dead URL shortener means dead links, broken content, lost data.

There are a number of different solutions being explored in response to this part of the problem. Developer Brian Hendrickson has already begun working on a service called rp.ly, a “community-owned URL shortener” based on cloning the Tr.im API.

There will, no doubt, be any number of other efforts that rise from the ashes of the trust that’s been burnt over the last week or more.

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Are all of these circumstances and conversations going to push the social web over the edge, toward a more distributed and less centralized model? Probably not in a big way, immediately, but we’re pretty sure that some interesting innovation is going to come out of this. Dissatisfied engineers, working on a problem that a lot of people are interested in, can produce some fun and important work.

Some will hold out for Google Wave, the forthcoming open-source hyper communication head shift. We’re hearing that Wave may be too complicated, though, and we suspect that the most important innovations will come from coders building the kind of software that many, many people can hack on and help evolve.

In the future many of us may be microblogging, lifestreaming and social networking over technology that we control and can customize ourselves, instead of inside the owned networks of major companies like Facebook or Google. Those companies are seeking to branch out as well, trying to colonize the web (in the words of Forrester’s Jeremiah Owyang) with tools like Facebook Connect.

But many of us may decide not to trust them anymore, and to use the tools that are becoming available to build and host our own systems of communication. People who control their own systems of communication can innovate on them outside the boundaries of the financial interests of big communication companies and we can all benefit from those innovations.

This summer is an important period in answering those questions.

Discuss


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Is a Perfect Storm Forming For Distributed Social Networking?

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Nimbizz for Android Launches

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Nimbizz for Android Launches

Posted on 11 August 2009 by Carmi Levy

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Nimbuzz is a multi community mobile social messenger combining Instant Messaging, (geo) presence, and VoIP.

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Best of Smartphone Experts, 9 August 2009

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Best of Smartphone Experts, 9 August 2009

Posted on 09 August 2009 by admin

Who says August is a slow news month?

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Best of Smartphone Experts, 9 August 2009

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Motorola bringing a “webOS” to Android? Called Blur?

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Motorola bringing a “webOS” to Android? Called Blur?

Posted on 07 August 2009 by admin

Where would we be without our trusty Motorola ninjas? We’ve just got the drop on some exciting information about Motorola’s Android plans and how they hope plan to make a splash. Here’s what we’ve been told:

Motorola’s Android offering is definitely a customization of the Android user interface much like HTC has done. It will combine all personal contacts and social networking sites into a clean and easy to use interface. While it’s nice to know Moto is going to be throwing a skin on top of Android, what’s more interesting is the next part.

The skin/OS is named “Blur” by Motorola and will be heavily web-connected. All Android devices will be able to upgrade different sections of the OS and interface all over the air. There’s been something mentioned about a device key that’s attached to your email and passwords for your social networking accounts. What this presumably does is let all the content be pushed right to the device from the web which includes updates and actual upgrades.

That’s all we’ve got for now, but you can bet we’re digging for more information faster than Ed Zander.

UPDATE: Oh well. It seems Fortune reported some of this a couple days ago.

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Exclusive: Motorola bringing a “webOS” to Android? Called Blur?

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AT&T and Nokia Brings the Social Networking Phone – Surge!

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AT&T and Nokia Brings the Social Networking Phone – Surge!

Posted on 13 July 2009 by Scott M. Fulton, III

Nokia is riding on the social networking wave as it teams up AT&T in releasing the new mobile phone called Nokia Surge. Nokia Surge is a 3G-capable mobile device which heavily supports IM, text or email, MMS, video sharing and of course social networking. Debuting on July 19, the Nokia Surge will be available for $79USD and will also come with full HTML browser with Flash support.

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AT&T and Nokia Brings the Social Networking Phone – Surge!

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Sony Announces the Classy T715 Slider Phone

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Sony Announces the Classy T715 Slider Phone

Posted on 25 June 2009 by Carmi Levy

Sony has just announced new mobile phone featuring an ultra-compact design, slider form factor, large keypad and font size which would certainly please those who loves sending SMS, MMS and email. the phone allows you to review conversation history as well

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Sony Announces the Classy T715 Slider Phone

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