117 posts tagged “social media”
This post has been published on my new blog: Socializemobilize.com
Please see this post on my new blog, SocializeMobilize.com
Please see this post on my new blog, Socializemobilize.
This is my last post on Vox. Today, I’m excited to launch SocializeMobilize.com.
On it, I’ll be publishing articles about social media, web 2.0, mobile,
and mobile and web convergence. You’ll also find all of the legacy
content from this Vox blog, which I started in 2006, in easily searchable format.
Why did I start a new blog when I already had one? Read about why I started SocializeMobilize and check out the features of my new Wordpress blog here.
Tonight I caught up with a mobile industry colleague who asked me why he should bother with Twitter when he already has a blog and Facebook account. Here's my reply:
Twitter is so easy, fast and rewarding that I've stopped blogging as much in favor of Twittering more. Twitter is is a micro-blogging platform (i.e. 140 characters or less of text). It now feeds all of my Facebook updates. Here are the reasons why I think you'll like it:
- It's fast and easy to get started and update - 10 seconds a crack (max) Twitter is the latest land grab, so I've taken the liberty of signing you up for an account (so that no one claims your name). Email to you forthcoming. Your password is ******. At least you'll have the real estate if you decide to try it.
- Twitter is growing very fast (~2.5M users worldwide), and there's an active community. Here are the stats & demographics from Quantcast: http://www.quantcast.com/twitter.com.
- You get breaking news faster than anywhere else on the web. It's a
great way to keep up with and spread the latest news in tech and mobile.
- You can monitor and mitigate what people think of a particular brand People are talking about brands all the time on Twitter. In the mobile industry, for example, here are the conversations going on about Nokia: http://search.twitter.com/search?q=nokia.
- There's
a great mobile and tech conversations on Twitter... Twitter provides you with a quick and easy way
to start a conversation with people and brands you find interesting and stay in touch with folks you already know offline. Here are a handful of the folks that I'm following in the mobile and tech arena with names you might recognize.
- Tim O'Reilly: Founder of O'Reilly Media: http://twitter.com/timoreilly
- TechCrunch: http://twitter.com/TechCrunch
- Robert Scoble: http://twitter.com/Scobleizer
- MOTODEV (Motorola's developer community): http://twitter.com/motodev
- Kara Swisher (Boomtown blog): http://twitter.com/karaswisher
- Pete Cashmore (Mashable blog): http://twitter.com/mashable
- Jeremiah Owyang (Senior Analyst of Social Computing at Forester Research): http://twitter.com/jowyang
- Facebook: http://twitter.com/facebook
- Dave Morin (Facebook Platform): http://twitter.com/davemorin
- Mario Sundar (Evangelist for LInkedIn): http://twitter.com/mariosundar
- Loic LeMeur (Founder of Seesmic): http://twitter.com/loic
- MG Seigler (Venture Beat): http://twitter.com/parislemon
- TED (updates about the TED conference): http://twitter.com/tedtalks
- Guy Kawasaki: http://twitter.com/guykawasaki
- Jerry Rocha: Social media and mobile guy at Neilsen: http://twitter.com/jerryrocha
- And so many more! If you sign up and want other recommendations, start following "mrtweet" and go to http://www.mrtweet.net/, which will feed you recommendations based on your interests/who you follow.
Give it a try, and follow me on Twitter.
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Here are a handful of my predictions for mobile and social media in 2009, moving into 2010… For the record, I’ve left off everything I know will happen in 2009 and limited this list to things I *think* will happen:
- Smartphones and feature phones will continue to converge in iPhone-esque fashion.
- Mobile Internet will drive usage of smartphones, and with it, more robust experiments with mobile advertising and payments will begin.
- Mobile advertising and payments will gain some momentum in 2009 but won’t really take off until 2010 and beyond.
- A few thoughts on Android:
- Android will struggle to gain momentum until there is infrastructure to distribute paid apps and an iTunes-esque web or client-based interface for PC & Mac.
- Ultimately, Android will do well, but it’s going to take longer than many anticipate.
- Mobile and web convergence will continue heating up…
- Mobile back up and “kill pill” services will gain increased momentum, as those who convert to ‘smarter’ phones start storing more important data on their mobile (i.e. contacts, calendar, email, etc.). Mobile Me, Dashwire and other services will continue to improve, and new players will enter the market, making it easier for users to access data on their phone from the web and reducing the pain associated with a lost or stolen phone.
- Mobile will become more social. ShoZu, Xumii, Pixelpipe, PixSense, and others social media gateways are already making a play in this market. But, in 2009, web-based players (ala FriendFeed) will experiment with mobile. And, we’ll see acquisitions and consolidation in this space.
- Towards the end of the year or early 2010, I think we’ll start seeing converged development platforms that allow developers to create both web and mobile apps/widgets in fewer steps. In late 2009-2010, mobile OS providers and OEMs will start looking beyond SMS, MMS, and email and incorporate social messaging tools like Twitter and maybe FriendFeed into basic functionality of phones. And, mobile address books should become more social, allowing you to input your friends’ social networking details into your address book and interact with them via your chosen medium in 1-2 clicks.
- Both web and mobile development platforms will continue to duke it out for developer attention. Developers will choose the platforms that provide the easiest-to-use, most robust tools and monetization and distribution options.
- I’m hoping Microsoft pulls a rabbit out of a hat… Perhaps, they will finally make computers chewy like cake, but more likely Windows 7 and the next generation of Windows Mobile (which I bet will be called "Windows Mobile 7") will play better together than previous mobile and PC OSes.
- I don't want to predict a rampant mobile virus, but I think it could happen easily, as mobile-web convergence accelerates: A mobile virus has a high probability of emerging in 2009 (though, I won't go as far to say that one will emerge), targetting PIM data (contacts, calendar, etc.). This type of virus would negatively impact both mobile owners and anyone with an email or mobile number listed on an infected mobile phone. A virus like this would be particularly nasty because it could simultaneously spread through Internet enabled mobile apps, SMS/MMS, and email. So, even if it stopped spreading through mobile apps, it could continue to spread through email and SMS/MMS. The most likely phones that would be impacted are smartphones on open development platforms like Android that give 3rd party developers access to PIM data but don’t closely regulate free app content or distribution. The likelihood of this happening will decrease if open mobile OS providers (like Google) implement better checks and balances for apps, though doing so may slow innovation in the 3rd party app space. The other group of users that could be impacted by a mobile virus are those who back-up their PIM data to an un-proven “server in the sky” provider that gets hacked.
- The mobile app store war will heat up… The success of the iTunes app store has blown other smartphone stores out of the water, and bolstered sales of the iPhone. Microsoft, RIM and others will attempt to join or leapfrog the competition.
- Social media and mobile measurement, monitoring, and monetization tools like Radian6, Bango, Mobclix and others (all of which solve pieces of this puzzle) will improve, converge, and become more robust widely used and accessible.
- Social media and mobile marketing will gain validity as measurement tools improve.
- More big brands will embrace mobile and social campaigns rather than running away from them.
- Marketers will be able to target content more appropriately to users based on behavior, location, and handset.
- Developers will be able to more effectively understand consumer behavior and increase app traction.
- There will be increased consolidation in the social media aggregation space. Smaller social networks will die or be acquired into larger networks. Aggregation sites like FriendFeed will become more popular. Turf wars will escalate with larger social networks taking increased action against smaller aggregation networks that violate terms of their API licenses and encroach on their turf (Facebook's lawsuit against Power.com and action against Google Friend connect were just the start).
- Facebook will continue to grow in popularity and eventually find a way to properly monetize its 150,000,000 + users.
- Twitter will make a big move in 2009. Someone smart will acquire Twitter (if the offer is good enough) or Twitter will acquire more of the best companies in its developer community and build out a more robust platform with increased consumer appeal. Twitter will (hopefully) begin to monetize in 2009.
- While “Virtual Gifts” will continue to grow in popularity, “Real Gifts” (like Givereal.com) will gain increased momentum in 2009 and really take off in 2010. Online retailers will make their real products (books, clothes, etc.) easily giftable via social networks. You’ll be able to send gifts to your friends/acquaintances without knowing their real address.
I'd love to hear your thoughts on these predictions. If you're not a vox member, please email your comments to me, and I'll re-post.
Want to Twitter this post? Here's the tiny URL: http://tinyurl.com/7wvyw9
Want to follow me on Twitter?: www.twitter.com/lisawhelan.
For those of you that disconnected during Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, New Year, etc… Welcome back. Here’s a summary of the most interesting social media and mobile news I read in the last few weeks:
Apple:
- 1/6/09: At Macworld….
- Apple announced tiered pricing for songs on iTunes that allows record labels to charge higher amounts for more popular songs… Their new pricing scheme, which will launch in April will offer songs at 69 cents, 99 cents, or $1.29. When I heard this, I couldn’t help but think of the old Taco Bell commercials of the early 1990s… “.59, .79, .99” I know record labels need to make a buck, but I’m more inclined to pay $1.29 for a taco than I am for a new song on iTunes.
- On a happier note, songs will finally be DRM free and 256 Kbps AAC by the end of Q1. Today, iTunes store has 8 million DRM-free songs. By the end of March, they’ll have 10 million.
- And, if you’ve got an iPhone 3G, you’ll be able to download songs directly to your iPhone over the 3G network, and the songs will sync between your computer and your phone….Ahhh… Finally!
- In FY 2008, Apple sold 9.7 million Macs, and Mac sales increased at two times the rate of the overall PC market.
- The new version of iPhoto within iLife will have facial recognition software, which allows you to pick photos of a specific friend from your album without a text tag. And, iPhoto will be Facebook and Flickr compatible!
- 1/5/09: Steve Jobs told the world that his recent rapid weight loss is due to a hormone imbalance and not a return of pancreatic cancer.
Facebook:
- 1/2/09: Facebook sued Brazilian start-up Power.com for trademark and copyright infringement, violation of the computer fraud and abuse act, and unlawful competition. Facebook’s complain states that Power.com “is offering a product that solicits, stores and uses Facebook login information to access information stored on Facebook computers without authorization and to display Facebook copyrighted material without permission.” You can read the NY Times article that describes the suit here.
- 12/31/08: Proving that the “blue screen of death” is alive and well, Microsoft’s 2006 30GB model Zune experienced a massive failure on the last day of 2008, and users were not amused. The bug appears to have been fixed, though users are still unhappy about it.
Twitter:
- 1/5/09: Twitter was hacked over the weekend, and 33 high profile accounts were hijacked. There was also a separate phishing scam through the direct message capability. You can learn more about it on Twitter’s blog.
UIQ:
- 1/5/09: Symbian partner, UIQ filed for bankruptcy.
Verizon:
- 1/5/09: BusinessWeek reports that “The $5.9 billion acquisition of cellular carrier Alltel Corp. by Verizon Wireless will close on Jan. 9”. This will mean that Verizon trumps AT&T as the largest US mobile operator with ~ 78 million subscribers.
Xobni:
1/5/09: Xobni (inbox spelled backwards), the company behind a very cool outlook plug-in that turns your email inbox into a social network, announced $7M in Series B funding from new investor Cisco Systems and Xobni’s existing investors.
Layoffs:
1/6/09: Clearspring, which plays in the widget distribution space laid off 20% of its workforce in early December, and their President/COO, Jay Rappaport is leaving.
Misc. Social Media & Mobile News:
- I just learned about Twtpoll, which lets you poll your Twitter followers. Looks like a great idea if you’re a brand that wants feedback from its community of users.
- 1/1/09: California passed a no-text messaging while driving rule, which became legal on Jan 1. I can’t help but wonder how it can be illegal to text while driving, and yet, it’s perfectly okay to fiddle with your radio, AC, or GPS. Not that I’m advocating texting while driving. It just seems like an inane law, given the many distracting things you could be doing while driving.
- 1/3/09 The 1.0 version of a Firefox add-on called Power Twitter launched, allowing “search, search scoped to a specific user, status history peeking on mouseover, Facebook status updates, inline YouTube, Flickr, and TwitPic, url expansion, url translation to page titles, and open web update (news feed) mapping.” It sounds interesting to me and gets good reviews, but I’ve heard a few complaints from people I follow on Twitter, so I’m waiting until the next release.
- 12/31: TechCrunch did a great piece on the Top Social Media Sites of 2008, which summarizes data from comScore. Top Social Media Sites (ranked by unique worldwide visitors November, 2008; comScore):
- Blogger (222 million)
- Facebook (200 million)
- MySpace (126 million)
- Wordpress (114 million)
- Windows Live Spaces (87 million)
- Yahoo Geocities (69 million)
- Flickr (64 million)
- hi5 (58 million)
- Orkut (46 million)
- Six Apart (46 million)
- Baidu Space (40 million)
- Friendster (31 million)
- 56.com (29 million)
- Webs.com (24 million)
- Bebo (24 million)
- Scribd (23 million)
- Lycos Tripod (23 million)
- Tagged (22 million)
- imeem (22 million)
- Netlog (21 million)
- 12/31/08: TechCrunch has an interesting article on the rise of Y-Combinator, start-up Scribd. Scribd allows users to post and share documents online. TechCrunch reports: “According to the comScore numbers, it has more unique visitors worldwide than imeem and almost as many as Bebo, with 23.5 million visitors in November, 2008. (In the U.S., it had about 4 million visitors).” And, Scribd grew “218 percent from November, 2007. Pretty incredible stats for a company that initially only raised $300,000! “
- 12/31/08 The UK loves watching the TV show “Big Brother,” and rumor has it, they may be forced to live a frightening real-life version of it in the future. The Guardian reports,
“The private sector will be asked to manage and run a communications database that will keep track of everyone's calls, emails, texts and internet use under a key option contained in a consultation paper to be published next month by Jacqui Smith, the home secretary.
A cabinet decision to put the management of the multibillion pound database of all UK communications traffic into private hands would be accompanied by tougher legal safeguards to guarantee against leaks and accidental data losses.”Even though the report hasn’t yet been published, critics of its rumored contents are speaking out against it including Sir Ken Macdonald, the former director of public prosecutions.
- 12/31/08: Obama’s Change.gov site is getting great use. According to TechCrunch, “more than 74,031 people have submitted more than 53,369 questions (and counting) for his administration and voted 3,122,015 times to prioritize the questions in a Digg-like fashion.” You can see the top list of questions here.
- 12/30/08: Hitwise reported 3 interesting holiday social media trends in the UK:
- “Facebook accounts for 1 in 22 UK Internet visits on Christmas Day”
- "Video site YouTube received more UK Internet traffic than Microsoft Windows Live Mail (Hotmail) for the first time during Christmas week 2008.”
- “social networks accounted for 1 in every 10 UK Internet visits during Christmas week.”
- 12/26/08: Amazon.com announced it’s best Christmas season ever with “6.3 million items ordered worldwide on the peak day, Dec. 15, which is a record-breaking 72.9 items per second.”
- 12/15/08: BusinessWeek reports that Palm will launch its new Nova OS at CES. After several layoffs, many ups and downs over the years, I find it amusing that they decided to name it Nova (“no va” means “no go” in Spanish.) Chevrolet learned how disastrous that name could be when it launched the Chevy Nova years ago. I’m not sure if this was lost on Palm’s marketing team, if it was an inside joke, or if they knew about it and decided to buck tradition and go with the name anyway. I love Palm, and I’m keeping fingers crossed they find a way to make this work. I think it’ll be tough in to re-gain developers’ trust after several false starts in recent years.
I took a blogging break for Turkey, so this social media and mobile round-up includes the most interesting news in mobile and social media since November 21:
Apple:
- Apple is changing the App store to show a broader range of top apps in each category and separated free from paid apps. Hopefully this will discourage developers from arbitrarily lowering prices of their apps to make them turn up closer to the top of the listings.
- Apple gives developers the ability to deliver promo codes for their iPhone apps.
- iTunes App store results, 5 months in.
- Bebo launched “Social Inbox” on December 10. It “combines e-mail, social networking and media recommendations in one easy-to-use interface. “
- Facebook is reportedly running A/B tests on its sign-up process. I think this is great. Testing is a very important part of improving customer experience, and more companies should test UI regularly. Here’s more on the test.
- Facebook announced the 5 grand prize recipients of its fbFund of $225,000 each: GroupCard, Kontagent, Mousehunt, by HitGrab, WedSnap created the Weddingbook application, and Wildfire
- TechCrunch interviewed Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg here.
- Facebook Connect is now generally available. TechCrunch reports “Now any third party website that wants to pull personal data about visitors from Facebook - and send back activity reports to their news feeds - can do so by first filling out a self-service application.”
- Good article from NY Times. Facebook Connect attempts 2 turn around dismal performance of social media ads.
- Oodle will power the Facebook Market (classifieds)
- MySpace launched its new MySpace Toolbar for Firefox and Internet Explorer. It enables: auto login, alerts, updates, Myspace Search by Google, quick links and user links from your browser.
- MySpace announced DataPortability Project with new data portability standards.
- MySpace launches streaming mobile video.
- Mobile / Android:
- The Open Handset Alliance announced that the following 14 companies joined the Alliance: AKM Semiconductor Inc., ARM, ASUSTek Computer Inc., Atheros Communications, Borqs, Ericsson, Garmin International Inc., Huawei Technologies, Omron Software Co. Ltd, Softbank Mobile Corporation, Sony Ericsson, Teleca AB, Toshiba Corporation and Vodafone.
- “Google's Android Open Handset Alliance Project unveiled the Android Dev Phone 1. The Android Dev Phone 1 is hardware and sim unlocked G1 in black with a special skin aimed at developers. The Android Dev Phone 1 sells for $399 in 18 international markets. “
- The Phandroid blog speculates that Google will soon introduce Ringtones and Wallpapers to the Android Market.
- Google advertisers can now “show [their] desktop text and image ads on the iPhone, the T-Mobile G1, and other mobile devices with full (HTML) Internet browsers.”
- The Kogan Agora is the latest Android phone. It’s now available for pre-order and will be released Jan 29, 2009.
- Here’s an interesting summary of Android Market performance from MediaLets.
- HTC raised G1 sales forecasts for 2008 to 1 million devices.
- Chrome:
- Google’s new browser, Chrome, exited beta on December 11.
- Gmail:
- Gmail adds to-do list management (“tasks”) to its list of features.
- You can now SMS through Gmail’s new task manager. You can activate it here.
- Search:
- Google released zeitgeist 2008, a summary of the “big events, memorable moments and emerging trends that captivated us in 2008”. The fastest rising global search terms? That’s right folks, it’s the ever frightening, “Sarah Palin” at #1 and “Jonas Brothers” at #10. Obama falls in at #6. In the UK, Google reports: “From BBC's iPlayer to Facebook to YouTube, many of the top searches in Britain this year have been for our favourite websites. We also see three web-savvy politicians come tops in searches”. Check out all the stats here. Very cool stuff.
- FriendConnect is now open for all websites. As TechCrunch reports “Google Friend Connect is OpenSocial’s answer to Facebook Connect. It lets other websites accept a member’s OpenSocial OpenID username and password to log into their sites. More importantly, it also lets websites access users’ social data, which includes friend lists, profile information, feed messages, reviews, ratings and the like.”
- YouTube:
- YouTube launched an enhanced abuse and safety page.
- YouTube is tightening its standards on content.
- CrunchGear speculates that Microsoft may announce a Zune Phone at CES 2009.
- MOTODEV’s Widget Developer Challenge underway. Be one of the first 100 unique submissions received by December 18, 2008, and win a $250 gift card to Amazon.com. Click here to learn more.
- Motorola introduces Rokr EM35 with WebUI widgets & Windows Media support & music player with virtual surround sound.
- Nokia announced the N97, which looks like a very cool phone.
- Nokia announces “Point and Find” mobile image recognition technology. It allows users to point their camera phones at poster or billboard and get more information on what’s being advertised on their phones. I’ve seen technology like this before from companies like Pongr and Kooaba. It’s great to see a big mobile OEM embrace it. Check out a demo of Point and Find here.
- Nokia released a new email platform for Ovi. Check out the beta here.
- Flickr launched a new mobile site, which allows video streaming.
- Recent Layoffs:
- CBS Interactive: CBS Interactive laid off workers at LastFM, but rumor has it that CBS Interactive isn’t reporting the extent of layoffs across CBS Interactive. CBS isn’t confirming the extent of the layoffs, but TechCrunch is speculating: “According to a source inside Cnet, the buzz is that the total number of employees asked to leave today was “275-ish.” A CBS spokesperson wouldn’t confirm that number. So take it as a rough estimate.”
- Microblogging platform, Pownce, closes doors & founders including Digg's Kevin Rose join Six Apart
- Industry News:
- Mobile ad rates drop as inventory increases. Experts say mobile CPMs are ~$15 compared w/ ~$23 earlier this year.
- Blogging platform, Tumblr received $4.5M in series B investment from its Series A investors in a new round of funding this week. They also announced that they’ll be releasing premium services.
- VC firm, Accel Partners, announced two funds worth $1Billion.
- Industry Events:
- LeWeb08 took place in Paris December 9-10.
- While I couldn’t make it to Paris, I enjoyed watching some of it on UStream.
- The interview with Marissa Mayer, Google’s Vice President of Search Product, was particularly good.
- In particular, the closing session on the main stage with the Gillmor Gang was entertaining. I don’t see it up on the Gillmor Gang site yet, but fingers crossed they’ll post it when they’re back from Europe.
- Seesmic founder and organizer of Le Web, Loic LeMeur apologizes for “organizational issues” at LeWeb08.
- Technology announcements:
- Hi5: Announced virtual gifts on December 10.
- Opera: The alpha of the Opera 10 browser is now available for free download.
- TechCrunch reports that “Netvibes Founder Building iPhone-Like Operating System For Netbooks” called Joliweb.
- TechCrunch reports that UStream is entering the race to dominate the live mobile broadcasting market (other players include Qik, Kyte, and FlixWagon). See a video and analysis here.
- New Start-up, “Give Real” encourages people to forget about giving virtual gifts in favor of giving “real drinks redeemable at any bar or restaurant.” Check it out here and as an app on Facebook.
- Misc.
- Itsmy released a mobile social networking study of 15,000 active users. Results here.
- In her November 21 BoomTown blog Kara Swisher summarized the Astia Awards Dinner, which celebrated venture capital firms that support women-led companies. I’m not a fan of awards dinners so I wouldn’t normally mention one, except that for this one, Venture Capitalist, Tim Draper, who couldn’t make it to the event in person, sent in a very funny video of himself taking off a piece of clothing for every woman-led company he’s invested in.
- Vodafone buys European mobile location and navigation services company, Wayfinder.
- Sling.com, which, like Hulu, allows you to watch TV shows online, launched in beta.