(no subject)
Thursday, May 6th, 2010 09:53 pmIf you use NoScript, you may be facing some issues with Dreamwidth: http://dw-nifty.dreamwidth.org/7596.html?style=mine
Also, a poll on paid features and some notes about the state of Dreamwidth as a business have been published on dw_biz:
http://dw-biz.dreamwidth.org/4516.html
I was surprised how popular a bound book was among the people answering the poll. I guess I've never really harbored any desire to have a bound copy of any of my journals, as of my posts contain errors or outdated information etc.
I was also surprised that more people clicked that they bought a paid account because they wanted to support DW than that they did because they wanted the features. (On the other hand, the poll is not very representative of DW as a whole because obviously, free users vastly outnumber paid users, and this is not reflected in the results.) For me, it makes sense to click that option because I am not integrating my usage of DW with LJ, and thus many of those features are not useful; also, I only use one icon regularly, so that I have a hundred icons is irrelevant to me. (Actually, this is one thing I dislike about DW's pricing. I know that icons are one of the most expensive things, so I view charging $35 dollars for a package including a hundred of them is a fair price. But I wish I had an option to be a paid user, but buy fewer icons. In that respect, LJ's practice of having icon add-ons makes more sense to me.)
I think in some ways, ever since the advent of Disqus and IntenseDebate, as well as FB Connect and Twitter login, Web 2.0 services are little by little chipping away at some of the advantages of the LJ commenting system. However, no widely used service that I can think of allows a multiple icon system like Livejournal. This, I think, one of LJ's key competitive advantages.
On the last question, a plurality of users picked increased integration with other services as the most attractive feature. This was unsurprising to me, as recent discussions I've had often focused on how important integration was to DW users.
Also, it looks like Mark has created a demo of an image posting system. See it here
Also, a poll on paid features and some notes about the state of Dreamwidth as a business have been published on dw_biz:
http://dw-biz.dreamwidth.org/4516.html
I was surprised how popular a bound book was among the people answering the poll. I guess I've never really harbored any desire to have a bound copy of any of my journals, as of my posts contain errors or outdated information etc.
I was also surprised that more people clicked that they bought a paid account because they wanted to support DW than that they did because they wanted the features. (On the other hand, the poll is not very representative of DW as a whole because obviously, free users vastly outnumber paid users, and this is not reflected in the results.) For me, it makes sense to click that option because I am not integrating my usage of DW with LJ, and thus many of those features are not useful; also, I only use one icon regularly, so that I have a hundred icons is irrelevant to me. (Actually, this is one thing I dislike about DW's pricing. I know that icons are one of the most expensive things, so I view charging $35 dollars for a package including a hundred of them is a fair price. But I wish I had an option to be a paid user, but buy fewer icons. In that respect, LJ's practice of having icon add-ons makes more sense to me.)
I think in some ways, ever since the advent of Disqus and IntenseDebate, as well as FB Connect and Twitter login, Web 2.0 services are little by little chipping away at some of the advantages of the LJ commenting system. However, no widely used service that I can think of allows a multiple icon system like Livejournal. This, I think, one of LJ's key competitive advantages.
On the last question, a plurality of users picked increased integration with other services as the most attractive feature. This was unsurprising to me, as recent discussions I've had often focused on how important integration was to DW users.
Also, it looks like Mark has created a demo of an image posting system. See it here
Poll
Date: 2010-05-07 12:59 pm (UTC)Re: Poll
Date: 2010-05-07 07:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-05-07 05:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-05-07 08:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-05-07 08:26 pm (UTC)Flickr, by holding photos hostage, pretty effectively guarantees I will keep giving them money unless I find a site I like better or decide the drawbacks are worth self-hosting. So they get my money, but it's not a great way to encourage customer loyalty.
no subject
Date: 2010-05-07 09:26 pm (UTC)I've heard people like smugmug? But what do you mean by 'hostage'? (improper business practices?) Do you mean they won't let you export your files?
no subject
Date: 2010-05-07 09:33 pm (UTC)Actually, while I find that skeevy (although with the fact that they're owned by Yahoo, which has very questionable business practices in their web host division), the big reason I keep renewing is so I can have more than three sets of photos and all my photos will remain visible. They have come up with a way to make the free service just useful enough to get people to sign up, but not useful enough to make it viable for a heavy user. Eventually I will probably jump ship for another alternative, although I do really like the community.
The blogging equivalent would probably be to make free users' posts invisible after one year, and not provide a data export tool. Paid users entries would all be visible, but they still wouldn't have a data export tool. I don't know of any blogging service that does this.
no subject
Date: 2010-05-07 09:50 pm (UTC)Probably blogging services don't do this because there is a) competition (from what you say, there doesn't seem to be viable competition to Flickr? They do it because people let them get away with it... ), and b) it costs much less to host text.
no subject
Date: 2010-05-07 10:41 pm (UTC)Oh no, I don't think it's unethical at all! Not providing an export option so that in order to maintain access to your photos (and metadata) you need to a) keep renewing forever, b) manually download everything individually, which quickly becomes impractical, or c) rely on a third party program does bother me, though.
Probably blogging services don't do this because there is a) competition (from what you say, there doesn't seem to be viable competition to Flickr? They do it because people let them get away with it... ), and b) it costs much less to host text.
a), probably. There are other image hosting sites, but I don't think any of them have anywhere near the established community at this point. I haven't seriously looked yet. b), I'm not sure. Flickr keeps all the photos on its servers, it just won't let you or anyone else view older ones if you're a free user. So there's probably saving in bandwidth due to people not viewing those photos, but they're still taking up server space.
I suspect there's also some element of the difference between blogging communities (which can consist of self-hosted blogs, blogs on many different services, etc.) and photo communities, which I think tend to rely more on being on a single site.
no subject
Date: 2010-05-07 10:55 pm (UTC)a) Hmm, if it's for the community that people are staying rather than because of the difficulty in downloading, that's somewhat of a different issue. b) Actually, from what I've heard, server space is not really a problem; the real problem is the bandwidth.
Huh, so why cannot a photo community be distributed, if it is not an issue of private photographs?
no subject
Date: 2010-05-07 11:01 pm (UTC)I have no idea what most people do, but I think partially it's that people may want to preserve metadata. Some people probably use their Flickr account as a backup (I don't, since there are so many ways to circumvent their download protection and so many people who think it's not theft if they credit--I don't upload full-res images anymore).
a) I think it's probably some combination of factors, but I only know why I have issues with Flickr in some respects but stay anyway. b) Not surprising.
Huh, so why cannot a photo community be distributed, if it is not an issue of private photographs?
I think it's some combination of private photographs--communities often have "friends-only" type settings for photos, and Flickr's not unique in that--group stuff like communities and photo pools and favorite sets that are easier to participate in if everyone's using the same service, the ability to add photos to favorites to look at later, etc. Many of these would be much more difficult and possibly impossible in a more distributed photo community.
no subject
Date: 2010-05-07 11:59 pm (UTC)Sounds like the same problem re: social networking. A lack of interoperability and open, widely used formats.
no subject
Date: 2010-05-08 12:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-05-08 12:10 am (UTC)It suggests that they form a much larger percentage of site activity than they do of total number of accounts. And I suspect the same is true of the poll in dw_biz--the most active site users and the users most likely to watch dw_news and dw_biz probably have a greater percentage of paid users than the site as a whole, and probably generate a greater percentage of activity and content than their percentage of accounts would suggest.
Hmmm. This is some data I would really like to see:
-Percentage of paid users
-Percentage of posts made by paid users
-Percentage of comments made by paid users
-Percentage of paid users watching dw_biz
-Percentage of paid users watching dw_news
no subject
Date: 2010-05-08 12:12 am (UTC)http://www.thejuicycow.com/2007/08/29/everything-you-wanted-to-know-about-flickr-but-were-afraid-to-ask/
no subject
Date: 2010-05-08 12:17 pm (UTC)I do think it's true that those tendencies apply, yet it still seems rather odd to me that it's so overwhelmingly paid/seed users answering in that poll. I mean, I would have been surprised if it were over 40% paid, but instead, the respondents are 70% paid!
no subject
Date: 2010-05-08 09:58 pm (UTC)It's really hard to nail down stats, though, since Yahoo/Flickr doesn't release them--so I think all of these estimates are based on people counting samples of recent activity and whatnot.
no subject
Date: 2010-05-08 10:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-05-08 10:09 pm (UTC)Flickr
Date: 2010-05-08 01:20 am (UTC)Re: Flickr
Date: 2010-05-08 06:00 am (UTC)It sounds like you are using Flickr primarily (exclusively?) to host images for your blogs. I don't think that's how most Flickr users, especially those who get into the community aspects of the site, do.
If all I wanted was image hosting for my blogs, I have webspace for that.
Re: Flickr
Date: 2010-05-08 12:08 pm (UTC)Re: Flickr
Date: 2010-05-08 12:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-05-08 09:47 pm (UTC)Might be worth noting, in case you didn't see it, but the scale was such that 1 meant *most* likely, and 5 meant *least* likely.
But maybe you knew that already, and were just commenting. :D The scale does seem backwards and confusing to me, though, so I thought I'd point it out.
no subject
Date: 2010-05-08 10:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-05-08 10:37 pm (UTC)