27 Jun
FaceBook has been slowly updating the Mini-feed displayed on a user’s profile page to look more and more like a FriendFeed-esq lifestreaming application, by allowing you to include actions from other sites, and now allowing comments on the items.
Triston McIntyre has a good post on the details and possible implications of these changes on Profy, especially as to why FriendFeed probably doesn’t have to worry too much about this:
In execution, I seriously doubt Friendfeed has anything to worry about. Though Facebook does have a friends feed on each user’s homepage, and individual mini-feeds on every user’s profile, Facebook’s feeds are structured very differently than FriendFeed. Where on FriendFeed, the feed is pretty much the focus, mini-feeds on Facebook are largely overlooked, except perhaps by those jealous lovers and "interested" others (oh, come on, everyone has them.right?).
Facebook is essentially Social 101 for those looking to get connected to friends. Platforms like FriendFeed and Twitter, at least at this point in time, are just a higher level of social media. Adoption of both platforms is increasing, but I don’t think that FriendFeed needs to worry about losing its user base to Facebook-happy comment heads. Sleep easy, FriendFeed, and enjoy the flattery by imitation.
However, Google Operating System has a post today outlining the features in the new beta of the iGoogle homepage. The new iGoogle will have a lot more ’social’ features in in, including a gtalk chat & gmail directly on the page, but the thing that I noticed was the ‘Updates’ box on the right. This seems to be a feed of all the things you’re doing on Google’s products. The box there has a number of items on it: shared items from Google Reader, photos from Picassa, shared themes for iGoogle, shared gadgets and status from Gtalk. There’s also the ability to add free text (and presumably links) in a box above the list. There doesn’t seem to be any non-google content in there, but I can’t believe that it would be possible to do that. If it’s not a feature now, you know it will be very soon.
So FriendFeed may have some more competition in the not too distant future.
25 Jun
From the SMH:
Apple iTunes users in Australia can now buy television shows - some of which have long been offered for free elsewhere - for the first time at $2.99 each.
After a protracted tussle with local networks and the studios for rights to distribute episodes to Australians via the internet, Apple has secured deals with the ABC and Nine networks in Australia, as well as Disney, ABC and MTV in the US.
Local shows on offer include Summer Heights High, McLeod’s Daughters, Canal Road and Sea Patrol, while US favourites are also available including Lost, Grey’s Anatomy, The Hills, South Park, Pimp My Ride and Scrubs.
Single episodes cost $2.99 but unlike overseas there are no discounts for buying full seasons. In the US, where TV shows have been available through iTunes since 2005, individual episodes cost $US1.99.
‘bout time. Hopefully this is the beginning of some better online entertainment content for Australia
24 Jun
Nick Bradbury announced today that shared news aggregator site ReadBurner has added Newsgator (ie FeedDemon) shared items feeds to their site. This means that us FeedDemon users can join all the cool Google Reader kids over there.
Along with including NewsGator feeds, they’ve added NewsGator as a tab up the top of their site along with Google Reader & Netvibes so you can read your feeds without leaving the ReadBurner site. While that’s not a huge feature to me (FeedDemon FTW!) I’m sure it would be handy if you used the Newsgator web interface.
Here’s the instructions from Nick on how you add you Newsgator clipping feed:
Here’s how it’s done:
- If you haven’t done so already, share one of your clippings folders as an RSS feed (this screencast explains how this is done in FeedDemon).
- Copy the URL of the shared clippings feed to the clipboard (in FeedDemon, you can do this by clicking the “Copy” link from the clippings properties).
- Browse to http://www.readburner.com/
- Go to the "Add Feed" option on the right hand side of the ReadBurner menu bar, then select “NewsGator Clippings” and enter the URL of your clipping feed.
Also, as Nick mentioned, FeedDemon allows you to share web pages as well as feed items. Just drag the url into your clippings folder & it will get added (Just the title, the content of the page won’t be added).
This is great, and a great boost for Newsgator & FeedDemon as they get more visibility in the RSS reader market place. Remember kids, FeedDemon, along with the syncing ability of Newsgator is free! You need to download it now.
Update: Here’s my clippings folder on ReadBurner. It’s just showing up as ‘Link Blog’ despite me putting in my alias. Oh well, I’d prefer to have my name there, but at least it’s working! Drew from ReadBurner responded to my issue & has already fixed it, thanks Drew! (see comments below)
17 Jun
. Of course it’s on US Pacific time, so it doesn’t start until 5PM Australian EST. So don’t forget to get Firefox & be part of the world record.
13 Jun
I just received an SMS from the Jaiku bot saying that their SMS service was back up & operational. I’ve sent a post via the SMS bot and it is working, so it would seem that maybe Google hasn’t completely abandoned the service after all. This would be good. I liked Jaiku when it was first launched, it had a few features that I feel Twitter lacks (channels for one, plus native image posting) without over-complicating the service.
I’ve always thought that with GMail, GTalk, Grand Central & Jaiku, Google had the building blocks for a really comprehensive communications platform. Add into that mix Google Apps & Google Docs and you’ve got a solid business system to work from.
Imagine if Google rolled GTalk, Jaiku and Grand Central into a single app/service. It would suddenly become a serious competitor to Skype if they could get the sound quality and pricing right. Skype was supposed to be the communications platform of the future (if you believed the hype), but due to a number of factors, including the acquisition by eBay and the fact they use a proprietary VOIP protocol, it hasn’t happened. GTalk runs on an open VOIP protocol, so you can talk to non-GTalk VOIP clients. If done right that could be one killer app.
12 Jun
You may think you’re a big user of FriendFeed, you may think you have heaps of followers and everything you submit gets liked & commented on. Sorry, that’s nothing. Google has spoken and the most important FriendFeed members are…
Deepak & Kevin, congratulations. Google says you’re more relevant than the About page, the FAQ or the public feed. That’s pretty impressive!
Additionally, if you go the ‘More results’ page you’ll note that the order goes like this:
Hands up anyone who’s surprised to see Robert at number 4? Anyone, anyone?