Twitter then BackType boost hierarchization in web societies

Category: How Products benefit users 3 Comments »

What is Twitter?

Twitter is a free social networking and micro-blogging service that allows its users to send and read other users’ updates, which are text-based posts of up to 140 characters in length.

You can follow and have followers on Twitter. Followers can read updates of the followed. Updates from many people that you follow are aggregated on one page.

Why Twitter?

  • It’s not real time so you can just leave your message and the intended receiver will pick it up when s/he login
  • It’s quick to write small stuffs
  • It’s helpful to update activities you wouldn’t normally blog on
  • It helps you to stay connected more closely to those you care about

See this video for more information:

What is BackType?

BackType banner

BackType = Comment Tracking + Twitter’s Follow

What BackType does

  1. It searches the web for noteworthy comments that might otherwise be lost in the noise
  2. It allows you to follow people who leave those comments. Excuse me, are you interested in Michael Arrington, Darren Rowse or Pete Cashmore and want to know what they comment on other blogs? If yes, BackType is the place for you
  3. You can submit your link so that BackType would aggregate all comments to your account
  4. BackType requires NO installation
  5. You can find discussions on you or your services by searching

BackType is NOT CoComment

If you’re not familiar with CoComment, it is a plugin which tracks comments on discussion threads and emails you when there’s an update.

BackType is not CoComment in the fact that CoComment is discussion-based and BackType is URL-based and commenter-based.

Twitter and BackType enforce classification in web users

Twitter’s usage turned from personal to authority

Foremost on Twitter’s homepage you read this:

Twitter is a service for friends, family, and co–workers to communicate and stay connected through the exchange of quick, frequent answers to one simple question: What are you doing?

The initial intention of Twitter is for people with real relationships to know one another more. And how have power users of Twitter utilized it?

  1. Those who have interesting things/opinions to share use Twitter as a sharing channel
  2. Businesses use Twitter as an announcement board
  3. Service providers use Twitter as a channel to communicate with clients
  4. Those who need updates use Twitter as an information goldmine
  5. Those who seek to expand their networks use Twitter as a networking tool

Twitter Whale

In fact, these usages have been emphasized much more than the initial intention of Twitter. Top bloggers and some service providers have utilized Twitter to strike up or engage in conversations, update their lines of services and express their opinions. Twitter has become a place where power media users extend their influence on the web. That’s exactly where all the buzz is about.

Meanwhile, you or I can still follow our ‘real’ connections’ lives, only more quietly.

BackType further boosts the influence power of power users

When BackType was introduced, the enthusiasm burst out almost immediately. People are talking about how BackType is yet another information goldmine: you have always got information from news, blogs, Twitter - now you have comments served on a plate! There they are, your favorite top bloggers right on the front page! Can’t be sweeter.

However, this is where hierarchization forces its way.

Power media users become even more powerful when, by default, they are on BackType’s front page right from its launch. They had the power of opinions on blogs and the power of audience on Twitter yesterday, now they are having more power of comments on BackType.

Media Influence

So what?

Actually I believe it’s a fair game after all. Power users invest their time and efforts to tie their career with the media they create and it’s worth for the recognition they’re gaining. It’s also fair for BackType to try to win quick endorsement from top users by featuring them on the front page.

Just my observation that hyrarchies and long tails have been formed in the web society. Breakthoughs from starters must be done with more innovation & boldness than ever.




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Last update September 7, 2008

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    Yahoo! 360plus introduced data migration tool from Yahoo! 360. Where is the enthusiasm?

    Category: How Products benefit users 5 Comments »
    1. 360plus started off in April 26, 2008.
    2. Reaction was very weak. None, yes, none, of my 360 friends moved to 360plus. Even the non-tech users lost their confidence in Yahoo! products. When they saw the buggy 360plus, they even backed off farther.
    3. Later on we learned that 360plus Vietnam was the product for Vietnam. What was meant to replace 360 is Yahoo! Universal Profile.
    4. With no old friend on 360plus, I made friends with some a few new people though. However, it was neither an information goldmine nor a communication platform I was looking for. The community there was filled with spams, unthoughtful and inconsiderate bloats from younger users, despite some very nice efforts to guide the new users. I lost my patience after around 500 entries.
    5. I tried to come up with around 20 suggestions for features for the 360plus team before quitting nevertheless.
    6. Not until early September did they introduce a data migration tool from 360 to 360plus. What flabbergasted me was that the tool looks like it bases on public RSS feed from 360 to import to 360plus, which means the 360plus team has limited access to the 360 global database. Where is inter-department collaboration inside Yahoo!?
    7. But I’m sorry it was too late I was not even trying the tool out. I have backed up entries I want to keep to my Window Live Spaces blog, manually.
    8. Many of my friends on 360 have moved to Facebook.
    9. Will 360plus Vietnam hit the 2 million cap that 360 did in Vietnam?

    Addendum

    Yahoo! shut down their “social network experiment” Mash just a few days before. Generally people agreed with this decision, Mash was too weak even for a marginal project to last.




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    Last update September 6, 2008

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    Google Chrome - the Web browser saga continues

    Category: How Products benefit users 4 Comments »

    (to-be-read in reverse-chronicle order)

    3 September 2008

    Positive review: SaigonNezumi, Google Chrome - What a browser should be -> Simple

    A nice coverage: Chip 2.0, Review after the first day launching Chrome

    Not-so-positive review: Google Chrome, it’s not worth the Buzz

    Why Google Chrome is not only a cost-saving basket

    On Finance’s side: GOOG’s Chrome is all about Wall Street.

    TaiTran’s comment: Chrome is only only a cost-saving basket, but a full house for wealth for Google.

    1. OK, the money that Google is saving as depicted in Zdnet’s article is the kitchen.
    2. Chrome knows all your web activities. Google will sell smarter ads and thus their revenue from ads will increase. This is the bedroom.
    3. Chrome is the O/S for the web
      Recall: what’s the 2 most successful properties of Microsoft? Windows and Office
      Has Google got Office? Absolutely. Now Chrome is Google’s Operating System.
      This is the living room.
    4. Chrome being open-source will attract the communities (many from Mozilla) who will work for Chrome (more accurately, GOOG) for credit rather than wages. This is the bath room.
    5. Chrome will be the web platform on which many applications and SaaS will base on: free dependency is never a free lunch. This is the dining room.
    6. Chrome being very light will integrate deeply with Android for penetrating into Mobile market. This is the garden.

    In short, all about making money in the long run, given that Chrome will succeed. How successful do you think Chrome will be?

    Testing Chrome

    1. Is faster than FF3
    2. Failed to import bookmarks from my FF3
    3. Offers more free space by pushing the tab bar to the very top
    4. Doesn’t destroy the layout when zoom in. This is both good and bad.
    5. Doesn’t display XML correctly
    6. Supports built-in 48 languages
    7. Connects to Google services at full speed
    8. Uses same web standard with Firefox
    9. Provides context-sensitive status bar
    10. No RSS auto-detectio
    11. No support for Quick Time
    12. AdBlock will be highly political
    13. Smart start page: recently visited sites
    14. Flickr “Web upload” does not work
    15. The address bar is a search bar
    16. Facebook and Zoho Javascript errors

    Chrome About Pages

    1 September 2008

    Google’s official announcement: we hit “send” a bit early on a comic book

    Tad was skeptical with 7 reasons why Chrome is a bad idea

    Technologizer raised 10 questions

    Agglom scanned the catoon

    Google Blogoscoped threw the first bomb

    Google Chrome Artwork




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    Last update September 2, 2008

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