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December 10, 2007

Roundup : TweetChannel, PlusPlusBot, Tweetl, @locals, Twitter @replies update

Filed under: tools, roundup

Another Twitter roundup special…

TweetChannel - A 3rd party service that offers channels for Twitter, pretty much the same concept as Jaiku, just add a hash before a word and it will display in a channel.
Next would be to follow a channel on Twitter…each channel has a feed, so I guess you could make a new Twitter account for a channel using Twitterfeed, and then follow that user.
A while ago I used my own method to create a Twitter channel for the word “electronica“, not so much a channel, it’s more a keyword thing…a channel is more purpose based where people are using a preceding symbol intentionally to get a tweet to display on a topic page. My channel is more keyword appearances, the good thing about it is you can follow the channel like a regular user, and my user channel does not require a hash symbol (this is good in a way as not all people are aware of TweetChannel).

Follow TweetChannel for the latest news…coming soon is private channels, and posting from TweetChannel.

PlusPlusbot - rate your tweets at the time of tweeting, just add a ++ (plusplus) or — (minus minus) after a word
eg. juanamolina++ is some cool folk electronica

Tweetl - a URL shortner for Twitter

@locals - like TweetChannels but based on location, get all Tweets from people in your location on one page (as long as they are all registered).
Firstly follow the user ‘locals’ in Twitter, then send your tweets to @locals. (they will go to the location you have in your Twiiter profile settings).

Subscribe to the RSS feed for your location to keep up with local tweets.

Twitter @replies update - your @reply stream contains all the tweets where people are explicitly tweeting you.
These people don’t have to be connected to you (follow/following), even if you don’t follow each other the tweet will appear in your @stream, but not your main stream.

Your main stream contains @reply tweets from people you follow, so if a person you follow is @replying to someone else it will also appear in your main stream.
Now there is a way to limit this where if someone you follow is @replying to someone you don’t follow, you can set the notifications so you ignore these tweets.

BONUS LINK:
The Twitter Toolset: 50+ Guides, Hacks, and Scripts

Social filtering and network dashboard

The other day I posted on knowledge diffusion and how effective knowledge management is more based on conversation rather than content. Now that we have the tools to effortlessly publish thoughts and discussion and be able to connect and subscribe to each other (people you trust as well as others) in a social network, we have a knowledge flow, where information comes to you, instead of you looking for it all the time…and it’s information you understand.

Blogs give us a way to participate and generate content, the message to the masses is no longer in a few hands (so to speak), in fact this is a social revolution of the media and perhaps the enterprise to follow…I consider video sites, podcasts, ideas and presence blogging in the same way.

Then we have sites we collect like social bookmarks, podcasts, video’s, documents, how-to’s, ideas, etc…

A way to consolidate the experience is to subscribe to the RSS feeds of all these sites in your RSS Reader.
You subscribe to your favourite blogger, favourite bookmarker, or perhaps you subscribe to a person’s lifestream (which includes all their blog posts, bookmarks, etc…)

Now the web comes to us, but this brings up a new issue of information overload

…I like that I no longer have to surf the web for this purpose, but now there’s too much stuff to keep up.

There are approaches like subscribing to category feeds, search feeds, only seeing content from your feeds based on past click behaviour (this kind of kills the serendipity factor, but at the same time these services usually recommend stuff outside of your feeds)…in saying this you can still choose to read all content, only ranked (based on your past clicks).

These are good methods (for more see my RSS Reader productivity post), but no matter how much you do this, there are always more feeds to subscribe to, you may feel you are missing out on stuff because your filters are too narrow, etc…

Social Filtering

The answer is social filtering, and it’s what you are doing anyway when you subscribe to blogs.
If we think about it, the author of every blog we subscribe to subscribes to lots of feeds, and in turn, those people subscribe to lots of feeds.
Then you move on to the next person in your RSS reader…..see my post, Blog network as your social filter.
When I choose to subscribe to a blog, I’m getting their view of the world based on their own insights and the blogs they subscribe to, so I’m trusting not only someone’s interpretation/understanding of what they read, but I’m also trusting their sources…who in turn have their own source filter, etc…

In my post, The many aspects of attention, the aim is to drop lots of feeds as other blogs will pick up stuff from these feeds, stuff that matters will surface.

But how can the RSS reader experience be more a social filtering flow experience.

Social Networks

Blogs are a way to share what’s on our mind, they also act as discussion and a social filter.
Blog communities or networks are distributed in nature and very blurry, they are based blogs I read, comment and link to…it’s my individual centric view of the blogosphere. Other blogs I read, comment, link to also have their own view, we may find overlap in these circles where a number of blogs read, comment and link to the same core blogs, some sort of ethereal blog community.

The way we read blogs is via an RSS Reader, and trackbacks/comments are tracked and saved via other tools, this is very disjointed, what is even more isolated is that we are only connected to content, not people.

This is where an RSS Reader social network would come in to play, the experience is more enhanced as I could subscribe to the blog, and also add the author as a friend.
Now I’m not only getting a view of the authors world via their blog, but now I can connect to them, I can share links, we can talk, I can see what they read, who they are connected to, what they talk about with their friends, what their friends read, what their status is, ask them questions, etc…

As we can see this is much easy to keep tabs on if our RSS Readers were public and joined in a social network…it totally augments the social filter scenario.

The extra beauty of an RSS Reader social network, like FeedEachOther, is that you can be recommended feeds, see another person’s feed collection, and explicitly send people links in to their reading stream. So not only are you relying on what people you trust blog and collect, but they can also send you stuff they think you will like.

Example

Not long ago Jack Vinson and Luis Suarez shared some of their Reading List, blogrolls are a good source as well.

All 3 of us read a lot of the same blogs, some of these have consistently quality posts and have great authors, these are my essential subscriptions.
But I have chosen to drop feeds that only have the occassional quality post (according to me), in the confidence that Jack and Luis are still subscribed to them, and that the occassional quality post from these feeds will surface in one of Jack’s or Luis’s blog posts or bookmark links.

So I’m relying and trust my social filter for quality content, firstly I like what they blog, and I have a high abstraction relationship where I am confident stuff that I don’t read that I like will “come to me”.

What else I found is that these guys are also my social filter for sources, just when trusting my social filter helps me relieve information overload, it also may occassionaly turn the tables, I may find and subscribe to new blogs my filter are posting about. Then these blogs have their own Reading List/blogrolls and their archive of content, may point to other quality blogs…
Anyway, this is usually a good thing, it’s recommendation to sources via your social filter, how much more relevant can you get!

What about for topics that are not your focus of interest.
I have a mild interest in the mobile web, I have chosen 3 or 4 blogs to subscribe to, a few of these are group blogs and do a great job of covering the blogosphere.
I find it so easy that even if I have a mild interest in something it doesn’t take me much to get updated on the latest, I don’t need to get too involved to find content and sources, all I do is find a few quality blogs, and the “web comes to me”, people are our filter to the web.

Putting this all together, let’s see how much smoother the experience would be if my blog subscriptions were also my friends in a social network.

I subscribe to and read my favourite blogs…here’s where a network does more…
If the authors of these blogs used the same RSS Reader I could add them as friends.
This means I could visit their profile and connect to their profile:
- see their friends (mutual friends)…recommendation
- see their feeds (mutual feeds)…recommendation
- I can private/public message them
- I can share links with them directly
- I can see their status or presence
- I can comment on the posts in the network and on the original post
- I can see their bookmarks
- activity or newsfeed will update me on what my friends are doing

I can also add friends that may not author blogs but enjoy reading, now I have a way to show off my reading list, exchange links, and communicate…they can see my history of interactions and content.

Coming full-circle this starts to become an expert network, each person/blog could have expert tags.

Most people use Google Reader these days, imagine if this was a social network, I could add friends (especially blog authors), we could read each others content, share links, see saved link stream (not quite social bookmarks), send messages, be recommended to feeds and people (make lots of weak ties).

This moves from a social filter to a social network or circle.

Social Dashboard

RSS Readers and bookmarks are not the only type of content, other places we can network and share are; presentations like Slideshare, presence blogging like Twitter, Lifestreams like Mugshot, the list goes on for videos, podcasts, documents, idea’s, link sharing, etc…

The next question, is that it’s great that we can have knowledge flow based on different networks that deal with different content types, but what about a central place to manage it all?

This is where startpages come into the equation, from one dashboard like Facebook or Netvibes you can see all your content, plus this startpage is within a social network itself.

But, although you can interact with people in your startpage network, this model lacks interaction with people in all your other networks, the idea is not just a place to manage your content, but also one place to interact with content and people from all your networks.

eg. from this central dashboard how do I share a link with my friend in my RSS Reader social network, or share a bookmark with my del.icio.us friends (linkforyou).

An alternative to a startpage is a Lifestream service like Ziki (also a social network itself), these services consolidate content from your various profiles into a stream rather than widgets. The difference is that Startpages allow the user more control to add lots of other types of widgets like email, games, IM, etc…so a startpage is a productivity space as well. In saying this we do see lifestream services like Plaxo Pulse, that are also an address book, notes, tasks, etc…

The one thing a Lifestream service usually has incorporated is a friendstream, so now you have all your friends content in one stream. The difference here compared to an RSS Reader network is that when you add a friend to your lifestream you are adding them as well as their content at the same time, and it’s not usually just their blog content, you are updated on all sorts of profile activity (their bookmarks, video’s, documents, etc…).

What I see lacking in a lifestream network is the ability to mark/unmark items in your friendstream, ie. RSS Reader type features. Most allow you to sort the stream content by person, or content type, or even inhouse groups to organise people…kind of like tag folders, I haven’t really seen a way to organise people in topic tags.
A service called Spokeo enables you to subscribe to just content type by friends eg. only your friends Flickr photo’s and nothing else, if your friends also have a Spokeo account, you can subscribe to their actual account as a subscription in your Spokeo reader.

Both lifestream and RSS Reader networks enable group creation as a communal place to share a set of subscriptions (usually the lifestreams of the members and some external feeds), and to be able to explictly add internal/external items into the stream…see Onaswarm and Mugshot groups.

The next step is the read/write lifestream where you can interact with all your friends from your various networks, and where you can upload and post content, all from the one spot…a digital dashboard for your personal and social life.

Let’s hope that Google’s Socialstream project enables you to do all your activities within the one spot and also connect with your friends, and be updated about your friends…also see Lifestrea.ms.

Our social network environment is key for knowledge flow; social filtering, activity updates, sharing, communicating, requests, etc…our new issue is interoperability so we can unify all our social network activities.

[ADDED 13/12/07: Knowledge network filter and sources]

December 7, 2007

More on the new knowledge diffusion

Filed under: blogs, km, conversation, network

My recent post on knowledge sharing in the new organic KM talked about the impact of social computing in the enterprise. This new enterprise model differs to current knowledge capture models, especially in the effectiveness of transferring or diffusing knowledge successfully. The new model isn’t necessarily tied to KM and isn’t explicitly seen as knowledge sharing, it’s just basic social computing like blogging and networking, the important concept is that it is an ecology for knowledge flow.

Many of us, especially Luis Suarez, have been posting about the benefits of social computing on the open web and how they could be applied to the enterprise with the same success.
The main premise is the “come to me web” (via the new read/write and subscription phenomena), which sounds a lot like the idea of “knowledge flow” to me.
What has given this some recent traction are the writings and keynotes by Dave Snowden. He is not just talking highly of social computing, but has been identifying since the mid to late ’90’s the deficiency in the KM model and culture.
We are people and not widgets, so rather than applying manufacturing processes to deal with knowledge distribution, the answer has come to learn more about human nature and apply principles from disciplines like the natural sciences and anthropology.
As a result we have come to learn that the old KM processes (and tools) are not human friendly, and not in synch with our cognitive process (how we operate).

A few papers by Dave Snowden from the late ninties draw on new methods of codification such as narrative, and new processes of mapping and audits such as the ASCHEN model, “…helping organisations identify what they know and to move directly to action as a result of the meaning provided by the framework”.
Since then “web 2.0″ has fallen into our lap, and the nature of it’s ecology and tools fit in perfectly with the evolved concept of organic KM.

This post is not trying to encompass the whole gamut of the new KM, but moreso a different approach to; capture, transfer, share, and diffuse knowledge. This is in contrast with previous methods such as codification, which may be OK for some information, but is not effective in extracting tacit knowledge, which is seen to be the most valuable, as it’s how we actually get things done using our know-how.

A brilliant paper by Anecdote captures the essence of the tacit concept (this paper is in the context of Communities of Practice CoP).

Some quotes:

“The problem is that much of this ‘know how’ is not amenable to this [codification] treatment. It cannot be captured or converted easily. Much of it is unspoken and unrecorded.”

“…knowledge provides the only sustainable market differentiator”…tacit knowledge makes up a substantial portion of this vital knowledge-perhaps as much as 80%.”

“Tacit knowledge is personal knowledge. It is difficult to discern and difficult to express” (intuition, hunches, heuristics, talent, etc…)

“It is not ‘book knowledge’; rather, it is knowledge developed through experience”

Three types of tacit knowledge are identified:

1. stuff people understand, but take for granted
2. stuff nobody understands
3. stuff that is hard to explain or articulate (even though you understand it)

The paper identifies CoP’s as a way to manage tacit knowledge; groups share experiences, share a context (common ground), reflect, ask questions, listen…all these are ways that elicit and nuture personal know-how.

CoP’s essentially are not about achieving an outcome, they are about sharing and discussing for the sake of it…well, a common interest.
Later on you may find yourself with the aptitude to perform or apply a skill to a task even though you aren’t officially qualified (didn’t read the manual or take the course), reason being is that you may have internalised your CoP sessions, the group know-how has become a part of you. This is very organic, as you don’t even notice that you became proficient, plus these skills could apply elsewhere.

Before I start on my never ending rant, I’ll re-publish some heuristics from my last post:

1. Knowledge can only be volunteered, it can never be conscripted
2. We only know what we know when we need to know it
3. We always know more than we can tell and we will always tell more than we can write down

More:

1. If people need knowledge in the “context” of need it will always be shared
2. People don’t share knowledge in the anticipation that you need it

Here I go…

Traditional KM is making sure (even mandating) tacit knowledge is codified, then when you need to do something you go find content to see if anyone has done it before, or their thoughts on the matter.
The two problems identified were findability and usablility:
- having search skills, and being able to sort the relevant documents frmo the rest (this may be time intensive)
- is codified information useful without the knowledge holder present to help explain the context
- have they forgotten things to document at the time of codification
- what is the quality of seizing the moment and experience, it’s hard to get a feeling across when it’s passed (codification is often done in hindsight, it’s not a as it happens thing).

The new model presents an informal network connected model based on knowledge being about conversations rather than content.
Firstly you connect to people in an informal network, this already has something over the old model in many ways; and has proven itself on the open web.

1. effortless to share “thoughts” and “what’s in your head” (you normally wouldn’t share stuff with clunky tools)
2. the fact that you do share thoughts as they happen in a fragmented way, rather than an overall document later on (which may include some notes you scratched on a piece of paper, but you may not even remember what these notes mean)
3. you get your own profile, you can become an expert website ( a goto place)
4. live discussion…people leave comments and posts linking to you, as opposed to static codified documents (which never have the opportunity to grow and evolve)

You are publishing what you learn and thoughts, even sometimes questions; to help you through your day (notes, insights, feedback), this is raw and anecdotal stuff…this is a record of stuff you may have forgotten, if not published.
The bonus is this provides value to not just you, but also others (whether they are connected to you, or find your content via a search). It’s a two way thing, you publish and you read from others…discussion may add value to what you published which is beneficial for all, this is working the social capital.

You express your notes close to the time stuff happened, and it’s not an overview (a paragraph in a structured report), it’s raw and each moment is it’s own thing.

Codification is usually a structured report, from hindsight trying to encompass all that you know, it’s less about clear experiences, and more about delivering on a planned outcome…the experiences may be included, but they are not focused on.
Whereas shared fragments are just that, you are sharing an anecdote for the sake of sharing it, in codification if they are included, they are just a glance, the body of the document is more explaining how you delivered what was planned.

Codified documents are very contextual, and all encompassing, whereas blogs are smaller fragments and alive with conversation…of which later on may be distilled into a document or a wiki.

Perhaps documents should be tagged with blog posts that talk about them, these posts can sometimes be published before the document, so they act as information around the document, extra context and value that the structured document may not offer…as its purpose and content, as mentioned, is about achieving a deliverable outcome.

When I say deliverable outcome, this is not just project reports, and what happened on projects, it could also be “please deliver a report on what you learnt, share your knowledge of how you did things on this project”…I guess this is a best practice or lessons learnt.
This is a classic codification request…I’d say to my boss, “just read my last 2 months of blog posts, view the tag cloud and get an idea of what’s on my mind, what happened, etc…”

Tag clouds deliver so much insight, from the weight of a tag in a cloud, you can get an idea of a situation without reading any content.

Transferring knowledge

A. read a report of the project
B. read a document of what I learnt (written at the end of the project)
C. fill in a questionnaire/interviews
D. share experiences and anecdotes in a circle
E. you hear anecdotes in the coffee room (during or long after the event)
F. you were present on the project observing and learning
G. you read blog posts actually about anecdotes and experiences (close to the event), these are not part of a bigger document, the blog post or fragment is not trying to achieve something based on an outcome, there is no directive, it’s just plain and simple sharing a story for no particular reason other than socialising

If you are asking what’s the use of doing this if it’s for no purpose (I don’t have time to waste on stuff that doesn’t contribute to a task) , well that’s the point, when there is no purpose, you share a true essence of something, just like you do when you chat in the coffee room.
Later these stories can be scanned for patterns and we can weave together what’s happening instead of reading a report telling us what happened

The data and tag cloud is available for all to interpret. The data could trigger different things to people, it would reveal things not covered in a report…so it is a great supplement to a codified report, if not the other way around.

A codified report will lead you down an intended path, whereas a visual tag cloud of stories may stimulate your brain onto unintended paths…this is a more organic, more an ecology than a machine.

I’m not saying formal reports are of no use, rather a formal document on “tell me what you learnt”, compared to blogs and informal networks sharing fragments as they happen.

What would be great to see is a codified document on what people learnt and compare it do a tag cloud of blog fragments (not what we learnt, but what we experienced, stuff that happened).

What would help a person looking for information, or what would they rather be bothered reading, a codified best practice, or scan a tag cloud of blog fragments.
The blog fragments are not necessarily trying too hard to tell you what was learnt and why it’s good, instead you form an idea your self when reading this stuff in aggregate.

More benefits…

5. you are connecting to people (having conversation with a person, rather than looking for a document to read…plus that person can point you to a good document, so they are a filter as well as a source of unique information)
- the higher the abstraction (people on common ground, people who know each other), the more the shared context.

6. sometimes you already know where to look as you are updated daily of information in your network. You may have a task to look for any work already done (or supplementary work) on a topic like, “solar panels”. Instead of searching documents, you may already know someone in your network, perhaps a weak tie that is an expert as you read their stuff everyday…or they could point you to one of their connections.

Here we have a system that is not explicitly sharing stuff, it is just publishing stuff, and you choose to subscribe, or tune in to people, so you are reading stuff everyday, just like the news (only filtered through people you trust).

On the open web we no longer leave the trust factor in the hands of a publishing house, newspaper or broadcaster…we are getting news filtered through our social trust network.

The beauty of this is that an expert on “solar panels” shares their insights that are gold to you, and this happened before you even needed this stuff…they didn’t anticipate you would need this information, they didn’t necessarily publish this information because it was part of a deliverable, they just did what we do every day, have thoughts, insights, read news, and talk about it or perhaps just think about. Well what a blog and network does is try to get this written, discussed and connect you to the people that matter to you.
All this tacit stuff is available for the world at large, an unexpressed idea may be an opportunity lost.

NOTE: I often have an idea and start blogging, and the stream of consciousness starts flowing, unintended stuff pours out, (it’s not just the stuff in my head, it’s the articulation), tha path manifests itself, this is not just pure tacit knowledge, it’s knowledge in the making.

Anecdote has a white paper on people and connections with RSS and blogs, they mention the ease of publishing content and being updated with stuff that’s happening (in the loop).
An even greater value is that you get to know a person via their blog and you may decide to ask them a question on something they haven’t blogged about specifically, but you know they may be of assistance as they have blogged about experiences in this topic area.
This is similar to reading blog posts or speaking to someone on issues that relate to a document, stuff that happened that doesn’t come across in the document.

Here’s an excerpt from the paper:

“…a salesman might need to know whether a product can be implemented in a specific configuration. If he has noticed that Kelly has often mentioned this product in her blogs, but has never said anything about configurations, the salesman can call Kelly and ask her about his requirement. The real power of this solution is generated when Kelly responds to his enquiry by asking him questions—so a more relevant answer or a better contact can be provided. In fact, Kelly might also provide a direct link to a document directly relevant to the salesman’s need. We could call this process, ‘social indexing’.”

“The value of this approach can be appreciated if it is contrasted with a typical best-practice database. A salesperson who searches the knowledge base will identify either nothing or a huge number of documents. Most of them […] with no meaningful context; […] or perhaps 30-page reports that the salesperson has neither the time nor inclination to read. Faced with this mountain of useless information, the salesperson is likely to ‘wing-it’…”

In the case that your strong ties and weak ties are not experts on the topic you are looking for, maybe their connections are, or perhaps you can search the internal blogs tags or people tags.

We have all these benefits, but the main one is that there is a profile for each person, you can discover people by tags, by their content.

At the moment we can’t discover people or even connect with people…IM and email do nothing for discovery and social capital.

Communities of Practice (CoPs) are a good step, but they are not individual centric, we need an online version of the individual in different environments…me in the meeting room, me in the coffee room, me in the hallway…where I converse with people.
Blogs distill the chats and keep it going, and the network is a global online way of bumping into people, even better, profile pages are like we are wearing a name tag with our interests and an archive of everything I’ve ever said and worked on.

7. informal sharing enables you the confidence to discuss stuff with people you trust…this is nothing new as email does this, only now we have the right tools for the right job.

8. you can explicitly share links…this is nothing new as email does this, only now we have the right tools for the right job.

9. communicate via public/private messages, ask questions, etc…this is nothing new as email does this, only now we have the right tools for the right job.

10. recommended stuff from your social graph, and serendipity via browsing tags and profiles

11. self rewarding as people connect to you, you become an expert based on your content and the buzz around you.
You don’t need a direct monetary reward for the sharing itself, this is self rewarding as you may get a reputation (comments, links, etc…feel worthy and something to say).

The monetary reward may be a result from the impact of your knowledge publishing…your publishing may have led to a discussion, all this in vein of having interest in your industry. Six months later this re-emerges or a manager has a task that already seems to be answered from the discussion six months ago. They would say thank god we have tools and the attitude so people can socialise and document current things on their mind and reaction to others and the news.

12. cross-disciplinary networking and all people having an outlet may lead to innovation (all can be heard)

13. emergent patterns (self organising, self assembling)

14. transparency in decision making and innovation

15. autonomous behaviours…more on this in a future post.

16. agile

17. inexpensive

December 5, 2007

Chat at a location

Filed under: conversation

I’ve spoken before about being able to chat with people that are viewing the same web page as you. You may be on the front page of TechMeme and decide to launch a URL chat service like Gabbly to be able to chat to other people on the same page who also use Gabbly. For this to work there has to be lots of Gabbly users, otherwise the odds are going to be slim that someone on the same page uses Gabbly.
Other URL chat tools like Gabbly are, Yaplet, Chatsum, OthersOnline, Weblin, yakalike, dai.sy, Itzle, Zpeech (also acts as a asynchronous discussion board)…

Now what would be good is a meta-URL chat tool, just like what Meebo, ebuddy and others do for IM.
This way when you launch your URL chat tool you have several services (communities) that may be available for a chat.

Serendipity is not the only way to use URL chat, you can speak to a friend earlier in the day and decide to meet at a URL at a certain time for a chat.

Rather than plan a chat it would be even easier if you could go to the Gabbly website, click on your friends profile, and be able to see what website they are on now, then click and join.

This is exactly what you can do on me.dium, this tool is a little different, it’s a browser add on, and it’s more than chat, you can actually co-browse the web with others, ie. you can move around the web together chatting, just like walking in the park, in the street, in the house, etc…

me.dium also recommends webpages for you to browse, based on how similar your activity is to other users, for more check out their FAQ.

If your friends or strangers are not exciting enough to chat with and co-browse they have special sessions called RockMe where at an organised time you can jump in and join a musician on the web, chat and browse with them…I’m sure they will be going to lots of music sites to listen to music and watch video’s, so grab a beer. They schedule lots of other events as well.

medi.um have a widget for your blog so you can see who’s visited your site, and enable you and your site visitors to check out the sites that other Me.dium users are visiting.

I mentioned the other day why don’t MyBlogLog add chatting to the Recent Readers widget, so many bloggers have got this widget, why not be able to talk to each other. 3bubbles was trying to achieve this at the post level, but what I’m thinking is that you visit a blog post and the Recent Readers widget tells you who is on that blog, not just the post page. So you get a list of people like on the widget, but it tells you which post they are on, and you can chat with them even if you are not on the exact post.

What about chatting to friends that are watching the same TV channel or program as you on the web, this is exactly what you can do with Joost and Meebo. If you are watching a program on Joost, you and your friends can join the meebo room to chat about the program as your are watching it.

Another chat tool Userplane has teamed up with some online TV channels to provide the same functionality, I like how mashable put it:

” Do you ever chat on the phone with your friend while you both watch your favorite program? That’s kind of old school, because now you can chat online.”

Next we need this kind of activity on our regular TV sets, maybe a social network with your friends via a set top box…doesn’t Xbox do this sort of thing.

Imagine this on regular TV, I could chat to my mum if we are watching the same show, maybe I could even interact with the TV show as well for features like voting, or polling people at home…hang on, TV shows aren’t going to give up the money they make from SMS.

ADDED: you can also chat to others watching the same streamed internet TV event as you…see Operator 11, mogulus, blogTV, ustream, justin.tv, etc…

For location aware chat services see here.

[ADDED 7/12/07: See comment below about Others Online, this is not URL chatting, but rather matching people online on-the-fly with current interests
eg. if one person is reading a blog post about “IBM” and another is actually at the IBM website, then that is a match and these people will be visible to each other to chat. This is a more distributed version of Chat ‘N Search]

Read/Write Lifestrea.ms

Filed under: network

This post is a comparison of the different features of lifestream services, it’s not a complete picture, I’m taking a few examples to outline the obvious differences.

I have tackled this in two past posts already, but it’s time to see what’s new:
Centre of my web 2.0 universe
Streams, content centrality and social graphing

A straight forward lifestream service is Profilactic, very simple, yet very effective, it gets the job done nice and cleanly:

- an aggregated stream of your content called a mashup (even as a widget)
- links to all your profile pages (even as a widget)
- a list of all your profilactic friends (where you can msg them)
- an aggregated stream of the content from all your profilactic friends called a friend mashup.
- you can even link blog in a section called clippings (a bookmarklet is offered)…and of course clippings appear in your mashup

It’s a very effective lifestream social network where you have a list of your profiles and stream, and same goes with your friends view.
But these are your profilactic friends, what about friends that are not registered.

Another thing is that it is only a profile aggregator, it’s not a two way thing where you can post to your different profiles.

You can’t re-share items to your friends or comment on items

And you don’t get an activity stream like the Facebook Newsfeed, meaning you don’t know what friends have been up to in the network (I guess this is not as essential as it’s more about what you do outside the network than in the network).
More so the activity stream would be better if it tracked activity from the actual networks you are aggregating.

I have outlined 10 essentials to lifestreaming:
- profile links
- stream
- friends in the network (break into sections)
- friends stream (break into sections)
- external friends (and comment, msg their profiles from the one spot)
- post and notifications to other profiles
- re-share and comment items
- activity stream
- msg friends
- output (widgets, RSS and OPML)

What other services add to the mix

Plaxo Pulse does all of the above, and also has:
- calendar
- notes
- tasks
- calendar
- groups
- address book (your contacts not registered with Plaxo can still be kept as a list)
- add link, video, message to your stream
- break up your contacts stream into different streams
- activity
- RSS feeds

Only thing is I can’t see my lifestream or my friendstream by content type.

Ziki does all that Profilactic does and more:
- blog posts into your stream (not just links)
- tag cloud from all your aggregated content
- search your content
- people tags (this makes it an expert locator)
- groups
- reading list
- activity stream
- sidebar links and widgets

What Ziki doesn’t have is an internal friendstream, it has links to my internal friends, but not a mashedup content stream.
It also doesn’t let you re-share and comment on items.
And yikes, no widget of your profile links, or stream!

I’ve chosen the 3 services above as random examples of lifestream services, see my list for lots more lifestream services, I also have posts on those lifestream services with friendstream and groupstream features.

The main thing we see missing is a two way channel, ie. being able to post to your profiles from within your lifestream, and to receive notifications from stuff that’s happening in your profiles.

1. NOTIFICATIONS - I’d like to see new comments to my blog, private messages from friends in various profiles, links people send to me in my social bookmarks, replies to my presence posts, etc…

2. POST - I’d like to post to my blog and other profiles, or add an item from my friendstream to my bookmarking profile, presence stream, my social network.
And also send a message or comment to my friends various social networks.

3. ACTIVITY - I’d like an activitystream to see who did what to who from all my networks

External Friendstream

Just before we take a look at who provides these features, it is essential that we mention sites that allow you to add contacts/friends even though they are not registered with your lifestream service…this way you can still get an external friendstream.

FriendFeed and Tabber have a friendstream, but if your friends aren’t registered you can also make profiles on their behalf, if they decide to join later you can replace the profile with their one.
Spokeo, Blueswarm and Lijit will attempt to fetch all your friends profiles when you enter their name and email.
MyLifeBrand, Fidg’t, upscoop, Profile Linker, Loopster and Plaxo Pulse add external friends as contact links only.

Interactive Groupstream

For a lifestream service, that has an internal friendstream and an interactive community group stream see Mugshot groups…eg cooking, Australia.

Plaxo Pulse groups is a grouplifestream of all the members, so if you make a group about the product Jajah, you’d have to get some sort of way for a machine to scan the group member lifestreams for terms like jajah, voip…in fact the Jajah group page has some tags that describe the group. At the moment you are just seeing a mashup of lifestreams of all the members, this is similar to a friendstream…the idea is for a topicstream isn’t it.

Mugshot groups are similar, but each group is divided into 2 sections “Group activity” and “Updates from group members and feeds”
The “Group activity” part seems to be explicitly shared links found on Mugshot that are related to the topic…outside links can also be added…and blog posts made within Mugshot.
The other section is simply a combined lifestream.
Other features are, add external RSS feeds, and group chat (even on items).

Still I’d like to slightly alter my lifestream profile per group, instead of using my general del.icio.us RSS feed, I would like it to use a del.icio.us tag RSS feed, same goes with tagged blog posts.
Or as mentioned above, get a machine to scan the items from the “Updates from group members and feeds” stream and whack them into the “Group activity” stream. That way one stream is very item from the lifestreams of all members, and the other stream is only those items from the lifestreams of all members that are related to the topic, plus items that are explicitly placed there eg. sharing a link, writing an inhouse post.

UPDATE: See Onaswarm lifesteram groups below.

1. NOTIFICATIONS

(Inboxstream) Notification > Read content > Post (Outboxstream)

Other streams are Clickstreams, Commentstreams, Replystreams, but what’s relevant here is the Inboxstream, basically the notification stream, where you get all your email notifications in the one spot, so you know who is interacting with all your profiles in the one spot. This is usually your email account, but a service like Fuser can be your dashboard for not only your email accounts, but all your social networks, this is not about lifestreams, this is about productivity, a way to receive notifications, read content, and even post back.
They have a way to import all your friends and even get summaries of who you interact with the most.

2. POST

So far I only see this functionality in Fuser, some footer buttons like ShareThis enable you to post to various profiles.
As mentioned above posting is also being able to post to your blog, sharing an item on a friends profile, maybe even messaging a friend.
ProfileLinker may have some light weight features to this effect.

3. ACTIVITY

In Ziki and Plaxo Pulse we have an activitystream of what your Ziki friends or Pulse friends have been doing, but it doesn’t tell me what my Ziki friends have been doing with people at their other profiles…the idea is one centralised activitystream.

Socialstream

Socialstream may very well be the solution to what I’m asking in this post. It will be more than lifestreams, it will be read/write, a central spot to interact, but it will be even more than that, since it could be a Google product in the making, it may be our web dashboard, our productivity centre…but in the meantime what else do we have…

Lifestrea.ms

In comes Lifestrea.ms, straight off the bat, the wonderful post by Michael Pick tells us that we can publish to all our profiles from within lifestrea.ms. eg. if you upload a photo to Lifestrea.ms is can be sent to Flickr at the same time.
We see presence network services like Utterz and mobypicture among others offering posting to multiple sites, but we haven’t yet seen a lifestream service doing this.

More from Michael Pick:

“The same goes for videos that will can be uploaded to YouTube, blog posts that can be sent to your Wordpress blog, Twitter, Jaiku and Pownce updates, and a lot more besides.

The net result is less an aggregation service than it is a “nerve center”, a single location that you can both gather and author the vast majority of your social media from without having to visit multiple websites.”

All I need now is one bookmarklet, click on it and send it to your blog, Twitter, Facebook, del.icio.us, Flickr, YouTube, etc…or you can cross post to all these sites from your Lifestrea.ms account…this is the first robust read/write lifestream.

The other added value is we can make several profiles, one for a particular audience eg. my family profile may not have my del.icio.us links included as I collect tech stuff, and my family isn’t interested in that.
afeeda enables you to create 3 stream profiles, at this point I’m not sure if you are actually creating multiple profiles at Lifestrea.ms, rather variations based on a profile set.
eg. enter a whole load of feeds from my profiles and then choose which of my Lifestrea.ms profiles can stream these feeds.
So I have several Lifestrea.ms profiles based on a backend feed set.

Not sure, like Plaxo Pulse, if it enables us to organise our Friends into separate streams for managing purposes.

Another feature is that it will fetch inlink feeds to all your profiles, this way you can keep up with sites that talk about you and link to you, generally called an “ego feed”.

What else…you can read your Gmail, access your Gcalendar, so rather than Plaxo having inhouse productivity tools, you are using 3rd party tools via Lifestrea.ms…all this is starting to blur with startpage social networks.

Not going to go into details…it does everything good lifestream services do, aggregate your profiles, comment, rate, tag, share items, msg friends.

Get Facebook notifications, and post to Posted Items, get friends status messages…will I get del.icio.us links for you, will I get blog comments to moderate, will I get Twitter @replies, will I get and send a private Facebook message, will I get my YouTube comments.

I haven’t used Lifestrea.ms yet, but from the post linked to above we have a thorough tour of all their features, what I still can’t do:
- I can post to all my services, but can I post to my friends comment wall from one of my networks or private msg a friend from one of my networks
- will I get notifications and the content of the notification from any interaction people have with me from all my profiles
- I can add friends from Facebook, and my email contacts, but what about friends from YouTube, Flickr, Twitter..and next to my contact list be able to send each friend a message or comment on any service we mutually use.
- can I make lifestreams for my contacts not registered with Lifestrea.ms, and will it make it easy like some of the other services by entering my friends name and then presenting me with various profiles around the web from this friend.
- can I get an activity stream to see what my Facbook friends are doing to each other, what my SlideShare friends are doing to each other, etc…ie a meta-news feed.

While we are on the topic of lifestreams, coming soon are AllofMe and OnaSwarm (I see it has groups like Mugshot, here’s an example…also brings across tags from the RSS feeds, just like Ziki).

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