some links
Saturday, April 2nd, 2011 04:21 pmhttp://www.tightwind.net/2011/01/android-isnt-about-building-a-mobile-platform/
Article on Google's possible reasons for creating Android.
http://freelish.us/
Open-source bookmarking service (a la Delicious.com). You can also host it on your own server.
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/3-unique-creative-dropbox-accounts/
Uses for dropbox accounts.
http://www.lukew.com/ff/entry.asp?1279 (from Sabina)
"Market maturity is also driving toward an increased focus on experiences and design. As markets mature, overall experience becomes more important than new capabilities and features."
It strikes me that blogging platforms have hit this point: design and user experience have become more interesting to people than features. The high emphasis Tumblr places on design is one of the reasons it's become so popular.
http://denise.dreamwidth.org/57248.html
On technical debt, and how Dreamwidth is paying it down.
Article on Google's possible reasons for creating Android.
http://freelish.us/
Open-source bookmarking service (a la Delicious.com). You can also host it on your own server.
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/3-unique-creative-dropbox-accounts/
Uses for dropbox accounts.
http://www.lukew.com/ff/entry.asp?1279 (from Sabina)
"Market maturity is also driving toward an increased focus on experiences and design. As markets mature, overall experience becomes more important than new capabilities and features."
It strikes me that blogging platforms have hit this point: design and user experience have become more interesting to people than features. The high emphasis Tumblr places on design is one of the reasons it's become so popular.
http://denise.dreamwidth.org/57248.html
On technical debt, and how Dreamwidth is paying it down.
no subject
Date: 2011-04-03 03:36 am (UTC)I think that "features vs. experience" thing is important ... LJ got an early lead in the features race, and stuff like friends lists and privacy filters were revolutionary. But they incurred a huge technical debt in the process, and then kept trying to add on more features in order to stay afloat.
I guess it's just as well that DW is focusing on paying that off. I just wouldn't mind a "5 years from now" picture that had a bigger emphasis on interoperability.
Sorry about the commotion I caused. >.>
no subject
Date: 2011-04-03 03:44 am (UTC)(I'll have a post up about it shortly.)
no subject
Date: 2011-04-03 03:56 am (UTC)The problem with features is that really, anyone can just implement the same feature. So if your competitors have friends lists also, what does that matter? I don't think LJ is that desperate, however; the Russian side is their main business, and all internet businesses always need to be improving to keep up with the competition.
no subject
Date: 2011-04-03 03:58 am (UTC)However, it is really well... ok to just upload the entire database and publicize it, in terms of ethics? I mean, in a way you could say that links and annotations are a form of intellectual copyright of the member who posted them. If that's part of the user agreement, maybe, but I'm not sure what the TOS says.
no subject
Date: 2011-04-03 04:19 am (UTC)In addition, the following statement is at the bottom of every freelish.us page:
"All freelish.us content and data are available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license."
(I think they should change that to specify "public" data, as the privacy policy details specifically what sort of content they consider private.)
They don't have private or friends-only bookmarks; Azz and I were speculating on what a freelish.us specifically implemented into Dreamwidth would look like, and we both agreed that adding privacy controls would probably be the first modification request.
no subject
Date: 2011-04-03 04:44 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-04-03 04:49 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-04-03 05:29 am (UTC)See, reactions to this here and elsewhere bother me a bit. I read the whole article thinking "this is a bit statement-of-obvious, where's the meat" only to find it's just well written "stuff I already know".
Maybe it's just the way I think, always looking at market position and niche opportunities, but to me it's obvious that Google needs to stop Apple et al from dominating the mobile market in a walled garden style.
That their fist casualty appears to be Nokia's Symbian, a different open platform, is regrettable :-(
no subject
Date: 2011-04-03 06:54 am (UTC)I can't really blame people for feeling there's been a bait-n-switch now, IMHO.
no subject
Date: 2011-04-03 08:26 am (UTC)