Category Archives: Social Media

Allen Stern: Would You Pay $1 For A Feed?

Over on his Center Networks blog, Allen Stern asks a reasonable question: Would You Pay $1 For A Feed?

“What if blogs and journals offered a full feed for $1 per month with no ads, mobile access, etc. Would you subscribe for a buck? What I am proposing is the following forms of monetization: standard Web site with ads, partial feed with no ads, and a full feed with no ads for $1/month.

So many of the people I speak with daily subscribe to a ton of full feeds and never visit a site after picking up the feed. Some say that feeds strengthen the interactivity with a site because when they read the post, they are more likely to come to the site to comment. Sure, it’s easy to jam an advertisement into a feed, but what if there was another way to provide a revenue stream for a blogger to live off of and for the consumer to enjoy the media knowing they are supporting the content they enjoy?”

Allen’s piece and the ensuing comments are well worth a read. It’s a good discussion point… if you are blogging as a living is it unreasonable to expect to people to subscribe to your work?

I’m skeptical, given the zillions of other websites out there… but I’m also certainly personally open to keeping on paying for content if it is valuable enough that I can’t get it anywhere else. For instance, I do pay for a subscription to LWN.net because the crew there continues to provide the best coverage I’ve seen anywhere on Linux issues. (However, I had been reading them – for free – for several years before they asked readers to buy subscriptions… so they were already a known (and valued) entity to me when they moved to a subscription basis.)

In any event, it’s a worthwhile discussion to have… check out Allen’s blog to join in the conversation.

Technorati Tags:
, ,

More on the business benefits of using Twitter…

239F0ED3-565A-4A5B-8B96-F77D463A8AB2.jpgBack in December, I outlined some of the ways in which I found Twitter to be useful in my post “The 10 ways I learned to use Twitter in 2007” and in recent days a few more people have posted their own insight into how it has been helpful to them:

Both are excellent posts that I would highly recommend.

Do you find value in Twitter?

Technorati Tags:
, , ,

And my 600th Twitter follower is…

Yesterday I noticed that my Twitter account was at 599 followers and I got to wondering… who would be the 600th? Would it be someone I knew? Some random stranger? Some “service”?

20A49062-575D-45A5-AAE5-3DCD088D1BA5.jpgSo I was both surprised and delighted to see an email notification come in today that my latest follower was none other than… Betsy Weber! Betsy’s the chief evangelist over at TechSmith and maintains their excellent “Visual Lounge” blog where she writes about TechSmith’s products like Camtasia, SnagIT, Jing, etc. and, of course, shows how to use them in videos and screencasts.

The funny thing is that Betsy and I have come to know each fairly well. She contacted me back in July 2007 after I wrote about screen capture tools and I pointed to a SnagIT plugin for Windows Live Writer (she later blogged about that). Subsequently we both wound up in Robert Sanzalone’s “pacific IT” Skype groupchat where a whole bunch of us “emerging technology” types chat about whatever bright shiny objects we happen to be chasing. She connected a bunch of us with Jing, which we were glad to write about. (And I still use often.) We’re both Northerners (she in Michigan, me in Vermont) so we had that commonality to talk about. We also both travel a good bit and could share our joys and frustrations. We’ve become “friends” in that odd kind of social media way.

Unlike a lot of people I know online, Betsy and I have also actually met in person, which seems like an increasing rarity these days. She does the trade show/conference circuit for TechSmith and I wind up going to (or speaking at) those kind of shows, so we got to meet out at the Podcast/New Media Expo last fall in Ontario, California.

I was “surprised” by the notification because I thought I was already following Betsy on Twitter. (I wasn’t, but am now.) I thought I was before… if I was, I’m not sure how I got disconnected, but I’ve had strange things like that happen a couple of times with Twitter.

Anyway… welcome, Betsy, to my twitterstream! (And for those of you reading this blog, you can check out Betsy on Twitter as well.)

P.S. And welcome to all the others who have joined recently as well… I’m seriously not entirely sure why you all are following me but welcome to the conversation! Let’s see what happens with this grand experiment that we’re all in…

Technorati Tags:
, ,

Yahoo supports OpenID… Yaawwwnnn… when can I *login* to Yahoo! services with OpenID?

BBA831C6-CAD7-498F-9164-AC5BA8FEADD7.jpgThe big news in the blogosphere today is that “Yahoo Implements OpenID; Massive Win For The Project“. Indeed, Yahoo announced that all 248 million Yahoo! accounts would be able to sign in to OpenID-enabled sites using their Yahoo! ID.

Yaawwwwnnnn.

Now don’t get me wrong. I’m a huge fan of OpenID. I’ve written about it both here and on DisruptiveTelephony. I was part of a long podcast about OpenID security. I subscribe to the DataPortablility.org mailing list. My home site is configured to be an OpenID provider. So is my work blog site.

But that’s the point, really…

We don’t really need more OpenID providers – we need sites that will accept OpenID!

Here are all the OpenID providers that I can currently use (at least, the ones I remember):

  • www.danyork.com
  • dyork.livejournal.com
  • claimid.com/danyork
  • danyork.myopenid.com
  • technorati.com/people/technorati/dyork
  • danyork.vox.com
  • danyork.wordpress.com
  • blogs.voxeo.com (and several variants on this URL)
  • openid.aol.com/danyork324 as well as a couple of other AOL screen names (per AOL’s support)
  • and now my Yahoo! account

I obviously have absolutely ZERO problem getting an OpenID.

The problem I have is using one of my OpenIDs. Here’s the companion list of where I can use my OpenID on a regular basis:

  • leave a comment on a Blogger blog (but I already have a Google account that I’m usually logged into)
  • leave a comment on a LiveJournal blog (but I already have a LJ account)
  • login to Plaxo (but I had an account there that pre-dates their OpenID support, and yes, I know I can tie them together)
  • login to Twitterfeed.com to create a RSS-to-Twitter stream
  • leave comments on random other blogs that support OpenID

And… and… and… ???

Now, granted, it’s nice to be able to leave those comments… but that’s not a whole lot of usefulness out of my zillion different OpenIDs. Yes, I know there is are directories of OpenID-enabled site (for example, here and here). If I ever want a quick wiki page, I know there are half a dozen Wiki sites that let you create one with an OpenID. But here’s the thing… I don’t use those sites that are listed. Now, maybe I should, as a way of thanking them for their OpenID support, but I don’t.

On one level, I’m thrilled that Yahoo is becoming an OpenID provider. It is a huge endorsement for the protocol. But I’d be far happier if Yahoo was announcing that I could login to their sites with an OpenID. Let me choose one of my OpenIDs and let me use that as the one to use to login to my Flickr account, and my Yahoo!Messenger and my Yahoo!Mail and del.icio.us and all the other sites that Yahoo! owns. THAT would be something to be incredibly excited about.

As it is, I fear that some % of those 248 million Yahoo! users will investigate what this OpenID site is all about and find that… well.. there aren’t a whole lot of places they can really use it.

That is what we need. (And what sites like SpreadOpenID, which is unfortunately down for maintenance, are all about.)

When will Yahoo! go the next step and let us use our OpenIDs on Yahoo! sites? (I agree with Marshall Kirkpatrick that they probably won’t anytime soon.)

P.S. And yes, I’m trying to do my part and get my work blog site to support OpenID for comments.

Technorati Tags:
, , ,

“For Immediate Release” launches discussion forums… come join the conversation!

fir_100x100.gifIn getting caught up on some listening to “For Immediate Release“, I noted that back at the beginning of the month, Shel & Neville launched the “FIR Forum” as a way to encourage conversations among FIR listeners. They tried this first with the discussion forums over on a Facebook Group, but, like most Facebook Groups I’ve seen, those forums hardly ever got used. So now they are trying it with what seems to be directly-hosted forum software. It’s not behind any walls… anyone can read the posts *without* registration. Anyone can register and join in the conversation. We’ll see how it goes!

If you are interested in issues around PR, communications and social media, please do head on over and check it out. Stick around, if you like, and please do join in to the conversation!

Technorati Tags:
, , , , ,

Don’t understand why we NEED “data portability”? Watch this video…

If you don’t yet understand why the walls need to come down between social networks, here is this great video from Michael Pick of Smashcut Media (first seen on Particls.Blog):

DataPortability – Connect, Control, Share, Remix from Smashcut Media on Vimeo.

Indeed… this kind of portability is exactly what we need. We need to have control over our own information and network. Join the conversation over at DataPortability.org….

Technorati Tags:
, , , , , , , , ,

Don’t Make Me Go To Your Website! – The 5 Ways I Consume Information In The Web 2.0 World

Do you ever go to a website on a frequent basis to see if it has been updated? Do you go to a bookmark you have or click on a toolbar icon or even just type in the URL into your browser address bar?

Do you do that for this website? Do you NOT subscribe to the feed but rather just come here from time to time to see if anything new is here?

If not this site, do you do this for another site? How often do you go and visit the site? Daily? Weekly? Monthly? Randomly?

I had an exchange today with someone I greatly respect and in the course of the conversation I realized that the reality is:

I don’t really go to any websites these days on a regular basis.

I don’t go to friends’ websites. (Sorry!) I don’t go to my employer’s website. I don’t go to any organization’s websites. I don’t go to my city’s website. Every once in a while I might hit CNN’s web page or a weather site, but that’s about it. I do go to Facebook’s page and Google Apps pages, but I think of those more as applications and communications services.

I don’t have time in my daily work or home schedule… even though going up to my Bookmarks menu, choosing a link and then waiting for the page to load isn’t a whole lot of time, it is some time… and if I get there and nothing has changed, it is wasted time. So I don’t do it.

The only reason I visit a web site these days is generally if either:
1. The website turns up in a search result.
2. I get notified that there’s something interesting there that I should look at.
3. Random times when for some reason I decide to go there, perhaps remembering a URL for a site I wanted to check out.

That’s it. (Note that I do get the content of many websites through the ways I mention below, but I don’t actually go to those websites and see their page.)

As I think about it, my consumption of information online really comes down to five ways:

  1. E-mail, although I get too much of it read it all.
  2. Twitter, where I see links from people or services that I follow.
  3. RSS feeds where my reader pulls it in and I quickly scan through the posts.
  4. Skype persistent group chats where I’m connected to several different groups of people on various topics.
  5. Searching for data, typically using Google.

The key thing is that, with the exception of search:

All the data comes to me!

Email is in my inbox, either on my laptop or my Blackberry. Feeds end up in my newsreader. Twitter I usually read in an IM chat window where I can scan it and search it. Skype groupchats I obviously read in Skype. I whip through and scan the info fast, clicking links if I want to see them and potentially firing off replies. I visit web pages only because I’ve seen an email with info and a link, or someone’s twittered the link or posted it in a Skype groupchat… or because of a link in some item in my RSS feeds.

For better or worse (and I can argue philosophically that it might be worse), that’s how I consume data. Funny thing is, I know I’m not alone. This is the “Web 2.0” way. Let me pull your data in some way and I’ll consume it.

Don’t make me go to your website to get updates. I won’t.

So if a website has an RSS feed (or a Twitter feed), I’ll subscribe and see when there are updates. Otherwise, I’ll probably just only go there on random times when I think of it. Which, unfortunately, won’t be often. I’m living in the blur.

Are you?

Technorati Tags:
, , , , , , , ,

May the walls start to come down… Facebook joins with Google and Plaxo in joining Dataportability.org

dataportabilitylogo.pngAs I’ve written about in the past, I continue to remain concerned that social networks are really just “walled gardens” that are isolated from each other. Late last week, Robert Scoble getting temporarily kicked out of Facebook brought the attention of many of us to “DataPortability.org” and its “dataportability-public” Google Group. Now, today brings word that Facebook, who has usually been a holdout in “open” announcements to date (like OpenSocial) will be joining in to the Dataportability.org project. The news can be found here:

The news is outstanding, really, for those of us who want this kind of data portability. To have basically all the major players working together will be excellent. It would, indeed, be great to have the walls start coming down…

The devil, of course, lies in the details… time will tell whether true actions will emerge out of the DataPortability.org initiative.

Still, it’s a great way to start – and I’ve definitely joined the GoogleGroup mailing list to join in the evolution. Let’s see if the walls can shake a bit, eh?

Technorati Tags:
, , , , , , , , ,

Ending the year as I began it… introducing a new blog! (This time, “Behind The Blog” from Voxeo)

BehindTheBlogBanner.jpgThere is a certain delightful symmetry to the fact that I began 2007 rolling out a new blog, Disruptive Telephony (followed shortly thereafter by this Disruptive Conversations blog), and now I end 2007 rolling out another new blog. In today’s case, though, the blog in question is for my employer, Voxeo, and is simply titled “Behind The Blog“. As I explained in the introductory post, the goal of the blog is to tell the ongoing story of what it took us to create the blogs.voxeo.com corporate blog portal and what we do to evolve the site in the time ahead. We’ll write about WordPress plugins, code we have to change and other things we do. The intent is that it will be a fairly technical blog diving into the innards of WordPress MU.

To a large degree, the point of the site is to help others who want to create blog portals using WordPress MU – hopefully they can learn from what we’ve gone through and not necessarily suffer some of the pain that we did. If you are considering running a blog portal on WordPress MU, feel free to join us as we explore the world of running a corporate blog portal using WordPress MU. If you use a feed reader, you can subscribe to the direct feed for the blog or simply get new posts as part of the “all Voxeo blogs” feed. (Behind The Blog posts also appear in our new Twitter feed.)

I’m delighted to bring out this new blog… and am very definitely looking forward to more blogging and podcasting in 2008!

Happy New Year to you all!

Technorati Tags:
, ,