Archive | February, 2010

Persistence, apps from anywhere

One of the greatest indicators of whether or not I end up being a long time user of certain piece of software is PERSISTENCE.  Is this piece of software accessible everywhere I want to be?

These are the places I spend my time, and these are the places I need to access my apps

  1. web
  2. mobile (apps & web apps)
  3. desktop
  4. email

Example 1: Evernote

They’ve got a web app, an iphone app, a blackberry app, a bookmarklet to clip content from the browser (firefox & safari), and desktop apps for mac and windows.  They are covered from almost every angle, and for those moments in between I can still send in notes via email.

Example 2: Posterous

For Posterous, publishing directly from their web app was almost an after thought.  They know its a lot to ask to require someone to come to your site just to create content, so their main focus is e-mail.  E-mail is a shortcut to accessibility, and saves them the time and effort of creating apps for different platforms (even though they have a great iphone app for posting pics)

I can create posts from Gmail, or from my mobile phone, and then I have the option to send these posts to any of the services that you see in the list here on the right.  You can set it up to auto post for to every service in your list, or you can choose on the fly by indicating the destination in the email address you use ” flickr+twitter+vimeo@xxxx.posterous.com” or “posterous+flickr@xxxx.posterous.com”.

Not only is Posterous accessible from almost anywhere, but it actually increase your reach by tying into all these extra services.

Example 3: Remember The Milk

RTM ( Remember the Milk) is a todo or task application, and what makes it so great is that I have access from anywhere.  Not only can I view my todos from their iphone app, mobile web app, web app, and even a few 3rd party desktop apps, but I can also add tasks via email.

No matter where I go, I know I can quickly jott (yes, they integrate with jott too, so you can create tasks via voicemail) down reminders to do things, or look at my list of todos, which is what makes RTM so sticky.  If i needed to jot something down, and i wasn’t able to get access to the app, that would be the first step in making me into a non-user.

So how are you making your apps accessible from everywhere?  Is this tough to do with a small team because of the resources required to build for so many platforms?

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Buzz: public invades private

The last thing I needed was another distraction, but google didn’t give me much choice.  They dropped this little buzz bomb right into my inbox.

First off, buzz is a great idea, and I can already tell it’s going to get massive traction just because of it’s location. Gmail may be the only thing I use significantly more than Facebook, so anything you insert into Gmail is going to get some eyeballs.

It’s biggest advantage is also my biggest frustration. Besides being a distraction to my already growing inbox problem, it also presents a clash of my public and private worlds. Up until now gmail has remained a private safe haven. Conversations with any new acquainances take place on Twitter and Facebook, but only progress to gmail once they’ve reached a certain threshold ( yes getting someone email on Facebook or Twitter before moving to gmail can be a barrier). Point being, buzz blows my private gmail world wide open.

The default settings for buzz are SUPER public, and the options for private sharing are confusing at best:

Even if I did want to make a post private, how would I choose who to share it with?  Why isn’t it an option to share with just the people you follow? Am I really going to put in the work of going through my gmail contacts to break them up into subgroups based on location, interests, or each person is a work friend, highschool friend, etc? I’ve been down that road before on Facebook and it’s a mess.

To make matters worse, I can’t seem to separate buzz from my public google profile and I can’t seem to turn the profile off either.  In the end, I would have preferred a buzz that operates much more like the old Facebook, just for the people I accepted as friends. Then they could have given me the option to go public with certain material, a la Twitter.

So who do these 3 stack up? Facebook, buzz, and Twitter?

Facebook is clearly in the lead. As I recently overheard someone say; “Facebook is the new cell phone, you can’t have a social life without it”. Facebook has a strangle hold on users, and they are not leaving for any other services anytime soon… Except buzz.

By catching users at the one place they go before Facebook, Google has a chance to siphon off a bunch of activity, and become an equally critical platform.  The uphill battle both of these services face is whether or not people will trade their privacy to help bring in ad revnues.  Will the new public default scare away more people than they could have gained by keeping the warm and fuzzy “friends only” settings of the early facebook days?

Twitter chose to “go public” from day one, so they don’t face these privacy issues, but I don’t think anyone can make the case that twitter carries the same value to individual users, or is growing nearly as fast.

Will public win or will people find some other refuge to have their social chats in a more private setting?

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Google is really good at UI

The new Buzz mobile app trying to “sneak” it’s way on to your iPhone. Pretty smart!

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The slow content movement

We all know what fast content is, right? Status updates, tweets, and up to the second reporting on blogs like Techcrunch and Huffpo. Content produced so fast that you can barely skim it fast enough to keep up.  Not only can you consume this content, but with todays media you’re expected to participate, it’s a two way street. You need to reblog or retweet the article, and then write something smart in the comments ( if you have time). This is the world of “fast content”.

The problem is time.  We don’t have enough of it, and eventually we get sick of all the low quality crap.  You can conginue to run the rat race, or we can start making the effort to take more than a few minutes to enjoy all the slow content out there.

So who else cares about slow content? Marcos Arment , creator of Instapaper, made a stand when he launched his simple reading tool encouraging people to spend more time consuming long form high quality conent. Check out what he says in the Instapaper FAQ:

What does Instapaper do?

Instapaper facilitates easy reading of long text content.

We discover web content throughout the day, and sometimes, we don’t have time to read long articles right when we find them.

Instapaper allows you to easily save them for later, when you do have time, so you don’t just forget about them or skim through them.

Why?

From a personal perspective, I appreciate great writing, but I’ve become frustrated with the quick-consumption nature of many devoted blog readers. Authors are encouraged to cater to drive-by visitors hurrying through their feed readers by producing lightweight content for quick skimming.

There’s no time to sit and read anything when you’re going through 500 feed items while responding to email, chatting, and watching bad YouTube videos….

This is a great tool in fighting the addiction of multiple tasking and RSS feeds full of posts. Find a few well written articles, click the “read later button” and then set aside some time later in the day just to focus on reading.

Another big player in this apace is the kindle ( which actually plays quite well with instapaper). As I’ve said in the past, the kindle OS really was designed to replace the book. It’s too slow to do much else, making it the device of choice for the slow content consumers. Whether you’re reading a novel or articles you’ve carefully currated via instapaper, the kindle is a refuge from all the distractions.

On the production side we’re also seeing some tools to help slow things down (not that I need tools to write blog posts any slower). Rather than encouraging content farms through hyper speed publishing, writing apps like Focused and WriteRoom strip away everything but the text and encourage publishers to focus more on what they’re writing.

Since leaving San Francisco for Paris, I’ve been enjoying the break from the center of the web world, and I’ve been slowing down my content consumption.  Before I used to just blindly read feed upon feed of news trying to keep up, now I’m spending more time on the good stuff.  Anyone else?

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