16 November
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Oko: An iPad App That Turns Satellite Photos Into Spinning Puzzles

I’m sure I’m not the only person who finds jigsaw puzzles totally maddening. It seems pretty clear that they’re a holdover from an era when the mean attention span could be measured in minutes, not seconds. Oko, however, is a bit better suited for people accustomed to living life at the speed of their Twitter timeline. The novel puzzle app for the iPad slices NASA satellite shots up into mesmerizing spinning scenes, and all you have to do solve them is wait for everything to line up, and then tap.

The app was conceived by Swiss designer Nadezda Suvorova and created in collaboration with developers Pierre Rossel and Jeremie Forge. Compared to the thousand-piece cardboard endeavors you might undertake on a long weekend, Oko’s puzzles are pretty low-impact–at least for the first five levels or so. Then pieces start spinning faster, and pieces start spinning within pieces, and then–yes, there it is!–you start to feel a bit of that old-school puzzle frustration come creeping back.

You start cursing the craggy peaks of the Burning Mountain in Namibia for looking so damn similar from space and wondering why the dumb old Shiveluch volcano in Kamchatka couldn’t develop a more distinct footprint after several hundred million years of tectonic activity. Yep, there it is, full-blown irrational puzzle rage. Just be glad it doesn’t make you solve to a timer.

The app, available for free, has 20 puzzles in all, and if nothing else, it’s a nice way to kill an hour during a road trip and remind yourself of the splendor of our humble planet. Also: a good reminder to think twice before you bust open that 750-piecer of the Golden Gate Bridge this holiday season.

Via FastCoDesign: http://www.fastcodesign.com/

17 August
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How Twitter Has Talked About the Summer Olympics INFOGRAPHIC

Forget London. Much of the 2012 Summer Olympics action is happening on Twitter. Athletes have used the social network to share photos and status updates that take their followers inside the Games. Fans have used it to revel in Olympic drama and — in the U.S. — tweet result spoilers for viewers stuck waiting for NBC’s tape-delayed primetime coverage.

How did all the Twitter chatter stack up over the event’s first 10 days? Mass Relevance, Twitter’s official social curation and integration partner, tracked the tweets to produce the infographic below, which shows just that.

Through 10 days, there were more than 28.4 million Olympic-themed tweets, according to Mass Relevance, and users worldwide sent an average of 2,000 tweets per minute. Swimming led the charge as the most talked-about sport, followed by gymnastics, basketball, soccer and volleyball.

American swimmer Michael Phelps was the most-discussed athlete, with 574,000 mentions. He was followed by American basketball star LeBron James, British diver Tom Daley, Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt and American hooper Kevin Durant. But look for Bolt and other runners to surge up the rankings over the second half of the Games, when much of the Olympic attention turns from swimming and gymnastics to track and field.

Interesting to note is that Daley was at the center of one of the Olympics’ biggest Twitter-centered stories so far. After a disappointing medal-less performance in the men’s synchronized diving championships, he used Twitter to out a troll who sent a hateful message referencing his late father. The interaction gained widespread attention and the troll was later arrested on suspicion of malicious communications.

Check out the following infographic for the full picture of how tweeters followed the Olympics’s first 10 days, then let us know in the comments — who do you think will dominate the social buzz for the remainder of the Games?

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

10 August
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Finally, a look at the people who use Twitter

The days of “I don’t get Twitter” may soon pass. Tweets are now a form of self-expression among connected consumers and it is this connected generation that continues to grow in size and influence year over year. Much in the same way that TXTing is a natural form of common conversation, even if it’s a norm that’s outside of the world as you know it—Twitter is reflective of how millions of people are connecting and communicating.

Over the years, Twitter has become a human seismograph measuring world events, popular culture, everyday sentiment,while providing a lens into every nuance that captivates our attention. What was once a Twitter paradox is now part of our digital culture. Everyday people who are connected to Twitter become the  nodes and their shared experiences form one of the most efficient information networks in the world.

At the end of 2011, we learned that over 100 million people were active on Twitter and that top top three counties, U.S., Brazil and Japan alone accounted for over 175 million daily Tweets.

But to what extent is Twitter serving as an extension of real world self-expression? How has Twitter truly permeated our society? To answer these questions and more, Pew released a new internet study focused solely on Twitter.

Twitter is literally soaring. Adoption among internet users more than doubled between November 2010 and February 2012. Now more that 20% of all people in the U.S. who use the internet also Tweet or at least roam the Twitterverse. Additionally, 8% of all U.S. internet users are active on Twitter every day.

Pew’s study also explored who uses Twitter to give us a better idea of the people behind the Tweets.

As you can see, Twitter usage according to Pew is almost even among men and women, with women edging slightly ahead. Just over one quarter (26%) of internet users ages 18-29 use Twitter. Most notably, those 18-29  represents nearly double the usage rate for those ages 30-49. Pew also found that among the youngest internet users, those ages 18-24, 31% are active Twitter users.

Pew learned that black internet users continue to use Twitter at remarkably high rates. More than one quarter of online African-Americans (28%) use Twitter with 13% doing so on a typical day. Hispanic users ranked as the second most active race on Twitter at 14%. Interestingly, residents of urban and suburban areas are far more likely to use Twitter than those in rural America.

Pew discovered that Twitter use among those 18-24 year old increased dramatically between May 2011 and February 2012, both overall and on an everyday basis. Usage among slightly older adults, those between the age of25-34, also doubled—from 5% in May 2011 to 11% in February 2012.

Generation-C  is not bound by age, but by connectedness. Either in or within grasp, Twitter users and those who use smart phones are eventually becoming one. As of this survey, Pew discovered that one in five smartphone owners (20%) are Twitter users, with 13% using the service on a typical day.

Millennials are born with digital DNA and smart phones are a physical extension of their being. 18-24 are not only the fastest growing group of Twitter adopters over the last year, they also represent the largest increase in smartphone usage of any demographic group over the same time period.

Additionally, mobile users between 18-24 are more likely than older generations of cell owners to use Twitter. One in five 18-24 year old cell owners (22%) use Twitter on their phones, and 15% do so on a typical day. Following true to typical internet usage, African Americans and Latinos also stand out as heavy mobile Twitter users. Pew also noted that these two demographic groups have high rates of smartphone ownership.

As Twitter becomes part of our digital  lifestyle, we become increasingly elusive. Twitter is a reflection of our society and what captivates online and offline. With everything we share, we contribute to a searchable human index that forms a repository of collective experiences and expressions. We are both patrons of Twitter as well as its architects and librarians. We can learn anything and everything we wish about today’s connected consumer, but everything begins with the desire to learn. Once we do, Twitter’s role in our digital society will help us learn how behavior is evolving. And for those who choose to not just listen, but also analyze Tweets, demographics and psychographics, the ability to compete for relevance will be a proactive rather than a reactive venture.

Via Brian Solis: http://www.briansolis.com

23 July
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6 Ways to Stay on Top of Social Media

Cara Friedman is the president of Likeable Community College, a social media training program for community managers and other social media professionals.

To be successful in social media and community management you need to keep track of the constant changes to that ecosystem. That’s because everything you know about Facebook, Twitter, and other social spaces today will somehow be different in six months. Layouts will be altered, features will be added or removed, and new social networks may pop up.

So how should you keep track of all these moving parts? Here are six tips for staying on top of social media.

1. Blogs

There are hundreds of blogs focused on social media. Keep it simple by signing up to RSS feeds and spend twenty minutes every morning catching up on your social media news. Stick to blogs that are updated daily and focus on providing content in social media and technology.

Consider adding these blogs to your RSS feed to get started: SocialTimes, Social Media Examiner, TechCrunch, and SocialMediaToday.

2. Webinars

Webinars are often offered by agencies and make for good social media resources. You can find webinars by searching on Twitter or registering on directories that list the week’s webinars. You can also attend paid webinars that go beyond the basics. In either case, you can find a good starter list at webinarlistings.com.

3. Trending Topics

Yes, reading your blogs in the morning is effective but information travels fast so pay attention to what’s trending on Twitter, too. First, make sure that you check your Twitter trend settings. Certain settings will spit out tailored trends, which you should probably avoid.

Also, if you don’t understand why a certain word or phrase is trending you can check out whatthetrend.com for explanations.

4. Newsletters

Not all newsletters are spam. Some are actually worth signing up for. If you’re OK with getting a daily newsletter, check out SmartBrief. If you prefer a weekly roundup then take a look at SocialFresh. These newsletters curate the best social media content from the web and create original highly informative articles as well.

5. Meetups and Tweetups

Whether in person at a meetup or virtually at a tweetup, chatting with like-minded individuals will keep you on your toes, help you predict what’s coming next, and teach you new things about how others are behaving in social media. To find a group of social media fanatics near you check out Meetup.com.

6. Training and Certification

If you are serious about educating yourself in the social space you may consider signing up for a training program or certification course. Whether you are looking for a six-week crash course or an ongoing education program, resources are available. To start, you can check out WOMM-COM and HootSuiteU.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

29 May
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Pushing A Hashtag Really Isn’t Going to Work Without Some Preexisting Love and Trust

Wendy's and their #upgradeyourmeal hashtag

I saw a YouTube advertisement for the fast food restaurant, Wendy’s, where they were promoting the use of the Twitter hashtag #upgradeyourmeal (click that for your own real time search). Running over to Twitter to see what they were getting for responses, I saw the sampling above.

Do any of those look like loyal Wendy’s diners to you? Do any of those tweets make the restaurant proud? Will this earn the restaurant any more buyers?

When I see this, I wonder just how it was sold. I wonder what was promised. I wonder what the agency said to the client.

Hey, Sometimes It Works

When I searched on #doritoslocostacos, the new hashtag to accompany the Taco Bell sensation of a Doritos-flavored taco shelled taco, I saw a lot more love and praise.

Why? My gut (pun intended) tells me that Taco Bell has more of a fan base than Wendy’s, and that Taco Bell might be a slightly better natural demographic fit. But what if it isn’t? Maybe Taco Bell’s agency spent more money and got a bunch of people to tweet some nice words. Maybe this is a pay-per-tweet project or another kind of “word of mouth augmentation” campaign (read as “not necessarily trustworthy”).

And Is This Really Moving The Needle?

Wendy’s wants you to “#upgradeyourmeal.” Is a trip to Wendy’s an upgrade? I like their chili a great deal. I like their Frosty. I sometimes eat their other products. No part of my mindset while there is “upgrade.” Is it for you?

I don’t normally write posts that complain about a marketing methodology, but I guess I’m just asking whether this is what we think these tools were built to accomplish. If I’m some VP of marketing at Wendy’s, who sold this to me, and why did I think it was okay? What metrics did I ask to see?

And are you selling this? How’s that working for you?

Are Love and Trust the Missing Ingredients?

I am willing to believe that people love Taco Bell. Not all of us. But I think they have a fan following. I think they have people who choose that brand of fast food over any other type. I’m fairly sure people trust Taco Bell to deliver on a certain kind of experience, however you choose to view that.

Has Wendy’s earned that? And if not, how will they get it back?

Food for thought. Yep. I said it.

Chris Brogan is an eleven year veteran of social media using both web and mobile technologies to build digital relationships for businesses, organizations, and individuals.

15 April
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Stats I Really Want From Twitter and Other Services

Numbers

Numbers are a tricky business. I was just thinking about Twitter, and asking myself what would make it more valuable. I’m curious if you agree on these ideas, so I thought I’d put it out:

Stats I Want from Twitter and Other Services

  • Top 10 people talking about me.
  • Top 10 people talking about my product (or search term).
  • Top 10 people responding and engaging with me (measured via # of replies in a set amount of time).
  • Top 10 people I talk about.
  • Topics I talk about most often.

Why do I want those stats? If I’m MolsonCoors, I now know who’s excited about my beer, or who hates my beer. If I’m the UPS Store, I know who’s talking the most about printing needs, so I can service them. If I’m Dollar Shave Club, I can try to gauge how many people just talk about me versus how many people are bought in.

It seems that the least useful stats are followers and following, don’t you agree? Who cares how many people follow me or how many people I follow? That’s a test of relevance, but it’s also something easy to game, as evidenced by people who show up and three months later have more followers than I’ve amassed in over five years of organic growth.

When Will Stats Grow Up?

When will we start getting useful statistics that let us measure business? If Twitter and Facebook and Google+ and others are touting how great they are for business users, why don’t they provide more ample reporting the way enterprise technology vendors are required to deliver? The last thing I care about is how many thumbs up I got on my YouTube video, but I’d love a report that shows me which URL people chose NEXT after watching my video.

Heck, MOST of us would PAY for this. It would be a revenue stream for these companies.

Am I wrong?

Chris Brogan is an eleven year veteran of social media using both web and mobile technologies to build digital relationships for businesses, organizations, and individuals.

01 April
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Twitter Limits TweetDeck Access After Security Fears

Twitter has shut down access to TweetDeck after a bug appeared to give users access to accounts that are not their own.

The TweetDeck web app is currently offline. If you’re currently logged in to the latest software version, Mashable tests show, you will not be able to get back in after logging out.

A Twitter user named Geoff Evason discovered the bug on Friday, and tweeted a message to TweetDeck and Twitter suggesting they look into the issue.

Hey @Tweetdeck A bug in your software has given me access to hundreds of accounts. #YouShouldLookIntoThat /cc @Twitter twitter.com/gevason/status…

— Geoff Evason (@gevason) March 30, 2012

According to Evason the bug gave him access to “hundreds” of Twitter and Facebook accounts by simply logging into the service using his own account. In order to prove he wasn’t lying he also sent out a test message from one of those accounts.

test

— Tackleberry Showroom (@gotackleberry) March 30, 2012

TweetDeck has confirmed that the service is down via a Twitter post — however, the company has not indicated when the service will be back up and running or the reason behind the outage.

TweetDeck is currently down while we look into an issue. Apologies for the inconvenience.

— TweetDeck (@TweetDeck) March 30, 2012

We reached out to Twitter for more information on the outage, and a representative indicated the company had nothing more to say at this time other than the tweet acknowledging the outage itself.

Twitter recently updated TweetDeck to add better list management, inline media support and improved retweeting support.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

30 March
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Turn Your Tweets Into Toilet Paper — for $35 a Pack

 

Last year Bill Gates announced plans to revolutionize the toilet. Now one startup is attempting to revolutionize toilet paper -– by putting tweets on it.

The service, called Shitter, will take one or more feeds from your Twitter account and print those tweets on toilet paper you can then display and use proudly in your favorite restroom.

The company’s tagline: “Social Media has never been so disposable.”

Shitter allows you to have a roll printed with your own personal tweets, your timeline, favorites, or tweets from a specific list you’ve created or follow on Twitter. If there’s someone on Twitter you think has particularly crappy things to say, you can opt to have his or her feed printed on a few rolls.

Priced for use in high-end powder rooms, Shitter rolls are priced at $35 for a pack of four. That, you may reasonably surmise, is money down the drain. Mashable did the math, and if Shitter’s rolls of TP have the standard 75 sheets you’d be shelling out about 8.5 cents a sheet to drop your latest tweets off at the pool.

Shitter isn’t the first company out there to make custom toilet paper, although they are the first to focus on taking Twitter to the toilet. Another company, simply called Custom Printed Toilet Paper also offers the ability to gift the “world’s crappiest” gift by having a toilet paper printed up with a favorite logo, picture, or phrase.

What do you think about tweeting on TP? Let us know your thoughts in the comments. Please, no typing in the bathroom.

More About: startup, Toilet, Twitter

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

27 March
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This New App Essay Requires Your Attention To Read

The internet is a pretty interesting place, but as we become more and more absorbed in it, it’s also a place that can change how we interact with others, and how much attention we give the world around us.

A new app by writer Robin Sloan attempts to — in a way — break through our now limited attention spans, by requiring your focused attention to get its message.

“I’m a huge fan of the web — I basically live in my browser, with 26 tabs open at any given time — but I’ve become more and more conscious of the price we’re paying in terms of attention and focus.” Sloan told Mashable. “So I wanted to write about that, and also make something that ‘fought back’ against those pressures and sort of insisted on a certain kind of attention.”

Called Fish, Sloan’s app is an interactive essay that require you to tap the screen to read through it. Sloan worked out some of the basic ideas for the essay in a text editor, but then created the app and the essay side-by-side. Each page of the app essay contains just a sentence or a few words, and tapping on the screen advances you along.

“Everything we experience on the web, we experience inside a tab, inside a browser, on a laptop screen, surrounded by a dozen other things. So what happens? You flit from Facebook to Twitter, you click a lot of links, they all line up next to each other, you give up on a few and get absorbed in some others…ad infinitum,” says Sloan. “Slowly you close the tabs you’re done with and the ones you know you’ll never get to, and you never go back. All in all, I don’t think that’s a very fulfilling way to read or watch anything, especially considering the caliber of stuff that’s out there available to us today.”

The entire essay takes about 15 minutes to read in total, the equivalent of a short commute or lunch break. Various pages in the app have a built-in tweet button where you can share particularly memorable lines from the essay with friends on Twitter.

On the last page of the essay, Sloan also gives readers the opportunity to contact him directly on Twitter with thoughts on the essay. “In those tweets, people tend to say ‘thanks,’ and to say that they’ve been feeling some of the same things themselves. It’s nice to get that sense of shared recognition—for reader and writer alike,” says Sloan. “Text is, it turns out, still a pretty powerful technology.”

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

26 March
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Twitter Updates TweetDeck, Allows Users to Edit and Retweet

Still struggling in the wake of its acquisition by Twitter, TweetDeck has just issued an update to its desktop, Chrome and web apps that adds support for better list management, inline media support and improved retweeting support.

The first Twitter-branded version of TweetDeck was released in December, and the reaction was not universally positive. Although Twitter has issued various bug fixes, diehard TweetDeck fans are still missing features that were part of the app pre-Twitter acquisition.

While the latest update doesn’t answer all previous complaints, it does restore some features that never should have gone missing in the first place.

Users can now create, edit and delete lists within the app itself. A “Lists” button is now visible, making it easier to add a list column or edit a list on the fly.

Twitter has also added new columns to list activity and interactions. The interactions column mimics the feature on Twitter.com, showing when users retweet, follow, favorite or add you to a list.

The new activities column shows real-time information on what actions users take. This means you can find out when someone favorites a tweet, starts following someone else or creates a new list.

Twitter has also introduced the inline media previews from Twitter.com and Twitter’s mobile apps to TweetDeck. this mans you can get previews on images and videos underneath a tweet.

The biggest change comes to the way that retweets are handled. The “Quote” option is now gone and replaced with an “Edit and RT” option that allows users to edit a tweet and add the RT distinction.

TweetDeck still has a few niggling issues — such as the way columns are resized — but the latest update is a big step in the right direction.

Are the updates enough to keep you using TweetDeck? Let us know in the comments.

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

Valve Interactive
An online marketing and design agency in Portland Oregon