Back To Blogging And Reading Blogs

30/08/2009

I’m travelling about 100km an hour at the moment in a friend’s car and taking a break from cleaning my Google Reader to write this post. I’ve been thinking recently that there is little value added in being online in the real-time conversation tools such as twitter et al. compared to reading more thoughtful pieces of writing or watching properly done videos.

Twitter in its architecture is one that doesn’t attract me too much. Why? It totally lacks the possibility to have proper discussions. Jaiku had that, but as we all know Jaiku didn’t do too well in the jet streams of its founders flying off to work for the big G. Blogs on the other hand are one of the best platforms for good and thoughtful discussion. I’ve come to realise I miss that.

Hence, I’m trying to get back to blogging more and reading blogs. There’s more to the world than 140 characters and you certainly can’t grasp most of the situations you come across in those characters.

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Historic Tweets at Historicaltweets.com

5/01/2009

Thomas Edison's Historical Tweet
More at HistoricalTweets.com.

(via)

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Tweetree = Bad Jaiku

28/12/2008

Tweetree.com

Looking at twitter this morning I noticed people going crazy about this new service that combines Twitter and FriendFeed, called Tweetree. The service is pretty much summed up in the picture above. It’s trying to create a platform for discussions from the way twitter works. I had a conversation with warzabidul on twitter about Tweetree just being a bad Jaiku.

The thing that makes it bad is the sole reason why I believe that twitter is still no comparison for Jaiku, even though I prefer twitter these days for the community. The reason is of course the logic of a social object – there are no threads or logical ways in which to direct your tweet to a certain point. If you look at this from another point of view, it’s like trying to create hyperlinks that can only be applied to the domain and not the actual page where the information you are talking about resides on. You cannot create a healthy conversation around that.

I’ll write about this more today in my prognosis for the year 2009. I’ll also look back at the year 2008 in that post and to the two things I was pondering about that will become big in 2008 being video and lifestreams. There’s a lot around this issue, just look at Facebook what it did with its lifestream as you enter the service, it added comments to the individual updates as well as transformed the wall into your personal lifestream. This has also happened in other services such as LinkedIn. However, more on this later.

Nevertheless, I see US reinventing the wheel continuously with services such as Tweetree. They are incremental innovations and fail to disrupt the market in the way such as Jaiku did. However, acknowledging the community and network of the US West coast, they have a chance at becoming the game changer technology/service. It’s a harsh reality we, the rest of the world, have to live with until we create our own hubs that attract enough venture capital money and talent.

Update: Fred Wilson, from AVC, is commenting on the new UI of Twitter over here.

dave – you are right, tweetree is really excellent. i’ve seen the design work that twitter is doing for the next rev of its web app, and some of these ideas are in it but some are not.

as you know, i think its great that twitter supports third party clients, including web clients, and i’d actually be sort of bummed if they copied all of this because it would make a service like this redundant, and that wouldn’t be good.

thanks for pointing this out, it’s a real improvement and shows the way forward in a bunch of ways

What does this tell? Not much, but unfortunately I’m slightly worried about the development of twitter if they fail to see the importance of the social object in conversations.

Update 2: Michael Arrington picks this up at TechCrunch. I’m beginning to think he’s reading my blog as it’s exactly the same point I’m making here.

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Twitter Elite of Helsinki, Finland

21/12/2008

Twitter elite of Helsinki

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