Finally the death of Myspace?

2 Sep

Does anybody reading this still use myspace? Really, anyone? I have not logged into my myspace account for years. After the internet’s mass exodus to Facebook Myspace became over ran with spam bots and accounts went dead. No one is really on myspace anymore.

Unless you are in a band.

Go ahead and google a band or musician that you like. Changes are that if they don’t have their own website (and even if they do), that their myspace page will be at the top of the results. A while back Myspace made a conscious effort to rebrand itself as a platform for musicians to get exposure. And it worked. If you have a band or are a musician it’s now really easy to share your songs, add tour dates, share your status and converse with your fans.

ping

As Myspace declined in popularity as a personal social site, it grew in popularity with musicians trying to reach their fans. That all could change with Ping, the new social network recently announced by Apple. Ping allows fans to follow artists, get updates about their events and to also see what their friends (and friends of friends) are listening to.

atrk

Personally, I tend not to visit Myspace pages of bands I like. I can almost always find the information I need on their twitter account or other sites and not have to wade through the confusing UI and spam bots that overrun Myspace. While I’m still finding my way around Ping, I see it as a serious contender and eventual replacement of Myspace for that reason alone

But where Ping really differs from Myspace is their integrated shopping. Ping is connecting the artist, the fan, and the store all together in a seamless experience.
You can’t buy music directly from myspace, clicking on a ‘buy’ link will take you to another site, such as Amazon. And with such a large distribution platform it’s a no brainer that artists would want to be here.

(On an unrelated, does anyone else think that the Ping logo looks like the Gist logo?)

Social Bicycles

18 Aug

The Social Bicycle System from Ryan Rzepecki on Vimeo.

Lately I’ve been riding my bike to work. While NYC has already done a lot in the short time I’ve been riding to make the city more bicycle friendly, it still certainly has a long way to go. One sure-fire way to make the city more bike friendly is to increase the numbers of cyclists on the streets and to increase awareness about city cycling.

The Social Bicycle System (SoBi) is a public bike share system that uses GPS, mobile communications, and a secure lock that can attach to almost any bicycle and lock to any regular bike rack.

SoBi

SoBi takes its inspiration from the bicycle shares that have grown in popularity in Europe. What makes SoBi unique is the technology involved. Each SoBi bicycle is equipped with a built-in bicycle lock, a GPS tracking device, and is synced with a server that users can checkin in via their smart phones.

SoBi

The system does not require separate infrastructure and can be deployed at approximately one-third the cost of existing systems. Administrators will be given powerful tools to manage demand and map patterns of use. Users will enjoy door-to-door transportation and an interactive cycling experience that can track miles traveled, calories burned, CO2 emissions offset, and connections to other Social Cyclists.

They will be doing a trail launch in New York City this fall.

Vote for them in the Pepsi Good Idea Challenge

Active Vs. Passive Checkin

13 Aug


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I was among the first of my friends to hop on the Foursquare wagon. I battled with coworkers to win the office mayorship, I created locations for my favorite falafel cart, my favorite dive bars and cool spots in the park. I was an active and eager participant. But then it just got old. Once you get the mayorship of a place, so what? Has anyone ever really used foursquare tro find out where their friends are and join them?

Wanting something new I switched to Gowalla and went through the same motions – create new spots, check in, collect items, and that too grew old. Neither of these systems have good enough game design to make them addictive (SCVNGR seems to be doing some fun stuff) and the promise of a free cup of coffee, or whatever, isn’t worth the level of effort required to obtain it.

Checking in becomes a chore. I have to stop whatever it is I’m doing, load up my app and hope that it finds the correct location. It becomes counter productive when people are stopping mid conversation to check into a social application. To really make geolocation platforms work they way they are intended the checkin process needs to be automated.

What Sucks About Foursquare Today
View more presentations from JESS3.

JESS3 makes a good case for why location based checkins should be automated in his slideshow, and it seems that the demand is already here.

The primary argument against passive checkins is privacy. What are the repercussions of automatically alerting other to my exact whereabouts? Sites like Please Rob Me and this Daily Beast article illustrate the real-world consequences of oversharing.

I think, in general, the concept of passive checkins is the best solutiopn for geolocation platforms, but it needs boundaries. Different levels of sharing for different groups of contacts, one for friends another for colleagues, etc.. I dont quite think that the age of privacy is over, but I think that the demand for location sharing is there but that the current implementation is flawed.

The Stuyvesants

8 Jul

The Stuyvesants

The Stuyvesants is a hip-hop album made up of 25 instrumental that are free to download. It is a collaborative effort between music producer Allan Cole (Algorythm), and record collector Darien Victor Birks (Flwrpt). Both reside in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, NY.

The two wanted to work together on a project where they could incorporate several of their talents, related to music and design. They wanted to do this under a moniker that would pay homage to the ’70s. The collaboration allowed them to do four major things, design, beat dig, produce amazing music, and simply have fun.

Tracklist:

1) Brooklyn’s Finest
2) The Stuyvesant Swing
3) Keep Dreamin’
4) Bring The Horns
5) Roosevelt Projects Jam Session
6) Nyeemah’s Pocket Groove
7) There’s So Many
8.) Soul & Tell
9) Do Anything
10) W.O.M.A.N.
11) Liquid Love (A Sophisticated Meeting Place)
12) Panty Dropper
13) Took Her Curls Out
14) Seldom Seen
15) Greene Ave. Anthem
16) The Fire (Untrue)
17) Oooh Baby
18) Coming Around
19) Hustlers
20) Jefferson Ave. Theme
21) After The Rain
22) Softer Side
23) Breakfast
24) Sunrise In The Stuy
25) Pookie’s Gone

You can download it and learn more about the duo on their site: http://thestuyvesants.com/

Temporary Ties and the rise of social “Like”

24 Jun

A few months ago the Facebook ‘Become a Fan” button died a quiet death. Its replacement was the “Like” button. Overall this doesn’t seem like much of a big deal but because of the level of perceived commitment the new ‘Like’ button took off.

Like is the New Fan

Recently I read a great article about how entertainment brands were seeing a surge in popularity on Facebook.

The bar was lowered in terms of commitment for people, Facebook thought they’d get a better conversion, while believing people would be more in favor of following a page if it was simply a ‘like thing’ rather than a ‘fan thing.’ And they were totally right.

Reading this article reminded me of the concept of temporary ties, as written about by Paul Adams here.

Temporary ties have always existed, but the web is bringing them to the fore. Think about some people you’ve only interacted with once. You don’t actually know who they are. A store assistant, a call center employee, the person you bought from on eBay. These are examples of your temporary ties. Temporary ties are much more common online than offline.

I think that the recent changes in Facebook have only added to the momentum of temporary ties’ popularity. We may not realize it but we use these temporary ties to influence our behavior constantly – I buy product that have highest reviews, I watch videos that have lots of “likes’, I look at similar items that others have also viewed, I read stories that have lots of votes, etc…

In almost every case I do not know the other people, but they have helped influence my actions. Because of the low level of commitment required, often just a click (a vote, a rating, a like, etc..) users are not cautious about engagement. I think in the future we will start to see many more site designers and architects bubble up these temporary ties and more users taking advantage of the benefits.

If you are interested, here are some great articles on the subject:

http://www.clickz.com/3640706
http://boxesandarrows.com/view/designing-for-social
http://www.slideshare.net/padday/bridging-the-gap-between-our-online-and-offline-social-network

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Microsoft Pivot

22 Jun

Pivot is a new project coming out of Microsoft Labs that attempts to make sorting though massive amount of data online fun, intuitive, and fast.

As technology advances, the amount of information that we all have to sort though will only increase and as this amount of information increases, our existing sorting mechanisms fall short and often become unusable. I don’t think that Pivot is quite there yet, but it seems like am interesting step in the right direction.

From the site: When we use the Web today we treat the most fundamental scenarios as separate activities. Search takes us from many things to one, browsing moves us from one thing to another, and recommendations expose affinities that enable us to explore related topics. Can we do better by combining these scenarios into a more unified experience?

Pivot focuses on this intersection, enabling us to learn key lessons while attempting to broadly apply this philosophy to the Web. We hope that Pivot will inspire and fuel transformative experiences across the Web.

http://www.getpivot.com/

Real Life Tron

18 Jun

ENVISION: Step into the sensory box. Under this name hides the immersive experience offered by Alcatel-Lucent to its customers at the last Mobile World Congress. An experience-based video mapping designed by the agency and the Department SUPERBIEN New Media Agency \ Auditorium. The public was invited into a cube and discover an artistic vision of the tagline of the event: Transforming the mobile experience.

ENVISION : Step into the sensory box from SUPERBIEN on Vimeo.

There seems to be quite a bit of speculation as to how exactly it was done. But, by any method, the outcome is absolutely stunning.

http://vimeo.com/10692284

Un Verano En Nueva York

15 Jun

This is a Fools Gold mix by @Neal Santos that is his take on Summertime in NYC. It’s mostly classic salsa that you’ll be sure to hear in all of the bodegas and handball courts in the city. Listen to this mix a couple times and you’ll certainly start to recognize the sounds you hear when you’re out & about. It’s perfect timing for me as I have recently started taking formal spanish classes and need to get my vocabulary up!

Tracklist:

1. Bobby Valentin – El Caiman
2. Tommy Olivencia – Trucutu
3. Joe Cuba – El Pito
4. Cortijo Y Su Combo – Tuntuneco
5. Africando – Yayboy
6. Kako Y Cortijo – Que Le Paso
7. Kako – Ala Berdeque
8. Ismael Rivera – Quitate De La Via Perico
9. Ismael Rivera – Ahi Na Ma
10. Cortijo – Severa
11. Celina Y Reutilio- El Carretero
12. Ismael Rivera – Deja Lo Que Suba
13. Johnny Ventura – Patacon Pisao
14. Fernandito Villalona – Felix Cumbe
15. Fernandito Villalona – El Negro Esta Rabioso
16. Fernandito Villlalona – Taboco Y Ron
17. Johnny Ventura – Abusadora
18. Julio Voltio – El Mellao
19. Julio Voltio – Julito Maraña
20. Khriz Y Angel – La Vecina
21. Oscar De Leon f. Tego Calderon – Lloras
22. Jerry Rivera – Amores Como El Nuestro
23. Eddie Santiago – Lluvia
24. Los Adolecentes – Me Tengo Que Ir
25. El Gran Combo – Si Dios Fuera Negro
26. El Gran Combo – Un Verano En Nueva York
27. Hector Lavoe – Aguanile

you can download the mix here.

James Roper

11 Jun

James Roper is an artist & illustrator from Manchester, English who showed in New York last summer. Unfortunately I missed his show, but have ever since been enamored by his work. After doing a bit of google kung-fu I was able to find his website and more examples of his work: http://jroper.co.uk/

Artist and Illustrator James Roper

Artist and Illustrator James Roper

Accelerator

Autosarcophagy

negator

http://jroper.co.uk/

A Moment in Time – New York Times

11 May

 A Moment in Time

On Sunday May 2nd, 2010 at exactly 15:00 U.T.C the New York Times asked their LENS readers to take a photo, wherever they were located and doing whatever they were doing, and submit it to their site.

The result is a 3D globe with images stacked accordingly to their geographic vacation. Although the locations and subject matter changes, the time does not.

 A Moment in Time

It’s a really cool experience browsing around the world and checking out the mix of pro and amateur shots, and as the article implies, an enormous time vacuum.

You can read the article here, and view the results here