- OK/Cancel comments on the new argument that ugly design is attractive to users Reminds me of a talk at SXSW about humans poorly evaluating odds/stats. Don’t forget the ugly sites that don’t succeed! You’d need to compare the proportion of ugly sites that succeed with the proportion of pretty ones to have a leg to stand on.
- Tom Baker apparently singing various songs in a sort-of Wiliam Shatner stylee… If you thought you coudln’t bear to go to your grave without hearing Doctor Who ‘singing’ The Smiths’ “How Soon is Now” then feel free to rest at last. Extraordinary.
- Americans are starting to think that maybe Mexican Coca-Cola is the real thing (given that it’s made with sugar rather than corn syrup) They say there’s no perceptable taste difference?! Balls! Without an enormous amount of ice, I find American Coke completely repulsive. Coke in Europe tastes less syrupy and congealing. I always seek out Mexican Coke when I’m in the US.
- “The Great Mosque of Djenn√© is the largest mud brick building in the world and is considered by many architects to be the greatest achievement of the Sudano-Sahelian architectural style” Absolutely extraordinary – I’ve been watching images of this programme on TV and it’s quite extraordinary how it fits in with the environment around it, and how well suited to purpose it is. Craftsmanship and design together…
- Flickr has some beautiful Creative Commons Attribution-only pictures of Djenn√©’s Great Mosque I’m increasibly stunned by the breadth and beauty of some of the images that Flickr contains. Really almost whatever you can think about is represented in there. There are more of Djenn√© under less open licenses…
- George Clooney and Brad Pitt are moving forward with Ocean’s 13 Can I just say that I thought Ocean’s Twelve was absolute rubbish and I got quite angry during the whole Julia Roberts metanarrative arsery.
- World of Warcraft announce the second race from their upcoming expansion pack and it is… Wisps?! So we’re all basically assuming that this is an April Fools joke right? Specifically the bit about turning into trees in the middle of combat and taking a massive hit in defence against axes…
- A terrifying story from a Minnesotan newspaper – Americans trust atheists less than recent immigrants and even poofs! “Americans rate atheists below Muslims, recent immigrants, homosexuals and other groups as ‘sharing their vision of American society.’ Americans are also least willing to let their children marry atheists.”
- “Norah Vincent spent 18 months disguised as a man. She relives the boys nights out, the bad dates – and what happened when she ended up in bed with another woman” Watching straight men and women from a distance is always valuable, and reminds us that no matter how unbalanced the power relationship, men are just as trapped in their roles as women. Maybe more so.
- PortForward.com is an extraordinary site explaining how to use routers and firewalls and stuff It didn’t quite answer my question, but I can’t help but think that I’m in the minority.
- Digital Web Magazine has an article on creating dynamic websites that adjust to widescreen monitors I honestly don’t get this stuff though. I know that PC users have browsers that fill the entire screen and I get that people are used to sites that do that, but still – it’s dumb!
- The Top 10 weirdest keyboards ever is a list of the top ten weirdest keyboards ever. Duh. Some of these keyboards are totally fucking weird, already. And there are eleven really, because they include the ZX Spectrum.
Author: Tom Coates
I try to be pretty reasonable with the comments on my site – other than spam it’s a rare day when I delete a comment that someone has posted. But recently, I’ve been getting some stuff posted anonymously that want to take issue in the stongest terms with decisions I’ve been making in my life and which are full of the most aggressive insults and frankly I’ve had enough of it. I have astonished myself by deciding not to delete the vast majority of them, and I have decided that I’m actually quite comfortable to have conversations with these people (although maybe not in public) to try and break their impression of me as a cartoon villain, even though I suspect the perpetrators to be less interested in persuading me of their position than to use any ammunition at their disposal to take a swing at me. So from now on, if you’re going to abuse me and you wish to do so anonymously and without allowing me a way to respond to you, then I’m afraid you may find your comments deleted without any warning. Insulting people anonymously is just cowardly and I don’t have to put up with it.
I’m a nervous public speaker, and so when I was asked to talk at the Guardian Changing Media Summit, I started to scratch out some notes about specifically what I’d say about Social Media. When I’m talking, I never really use these notes verbatim, but it’s nice to have them should I get lost, and at least I know that the argument or arc actually makes some sense and that halfway through the talk I’m not going to suddenly realise that point x doesn’t actually so much lead into point y, but actually completely undermines it. Anyone who has ever written a university essay remembers that feeling, when the argument you’d sketched in your head is suddenly obviously untrue when you come to write it down. Now imagine if you were writing the damn thing as a performance piece in front of a few hundred people. How embarrassing.
Anyway, given that – as I mentioned a few days ago – some people got the wrong end of the stick when I said I didn’t know what Social Media was, I thought I’d post what I meant to say. So here it is – ludicrously extended and webified to make me sound more pompous, which can’t help but be a good thing:
Now I suppose I’ve been invited to talk at this event today because I’ve worked with and played around a great many of the areas that we’re talking about today. I’ve been writing my weblog – plasticbag.org – for nearly seven years now and I’ve been running an online community at barbelith.com for even longer. I’ve worked (briefly) as a journalist, represented magazines online with Time Out, ran or developed online communities for emap and UpMyStreet and spent the last two or three years working for BBC Radio and Music looking after a little team (with Matt Webb) exploring media annotation, social media navigation and consumption, wikis and recommendations.
I’m now lucky enough to work for Yahoo alongside some of the most successful and important of the new wave of social media sites – sites like Flickr, del.icio.us and upcoming. And yet – and I suppose this may be a relief to some of you – for the life of me I don’t know what people are referring to when they talk about ‘social media’. It’s not that I don’t understand the individual words – I know social stuff, I know media stuff. And it’s not like I’m unfamiliar with the things they’re talking about. I get weblogs and personal publishing, I get online communities and I remember the appearance of social software (and my fairly reasonable attempt to define it). But I don’t entirely get how social media has come to sit alongside these terms, or what specifically is different about it from the other social terminologies that we’ve had before. And when I hear people use it I get even more confused. For some people it seems to mean a subset of social software, for some people it seems to mean the same as social software. Worse still, for some people it seems to directly correlate to the web-based representation of social networks and nothing else. And for some others, who I cannot fathom at all, it seems to mean nothing but making your magazine or TV show or radio show slightly more interactive (potentially through the means of a web forum or e-mail).
Now I don’t claim to have the answer to this question and fundamentally language is a fickle creature and tends to mean no more or less than how people employ it, but in trying to work out precisely what I was supposed to be talking about today, I’ve made a stab at figuring this stuff out and putting a bit of a brief historical context around it. Maybe it makes sense. Maybe it doesn’t. I’ll let you decide.
Back before the last boom, the internet was fundamentally a communicative medium – a many-to-many conversational space of e-mail, mailing lists, Usenet and bulletin boards. This kind of activity was pretty much an early-adopter thing because it was a new form of communication. It’s worth remembering that while for many of you the idea of the social internet is a new thing, this isn’t a weird new growth on top of the internet, but something fundamental to its DNA – a connected many-to-many environment profoundly different from broadcast or publishing.
It was the popular arrival of the web that started the shift towards thinking of the internet as a publishing medium, and it was propelled in part by large companies using their enormous resources to put huge swathes of content online. Interestingly, this move was the thing that pushed the internet over the tipping point – publishing is something that people understand and can engage with. So the popularisation of the internet is probably directly related to this one particular and relatively constrained subsection of what it’s most useful for.
The age of social media then is probably about a fusing of these two ways of thinking – the communicative and the publishing/creative parts of the internet – into something new and powerful. It’s an environment in which every user is potentially a creator, a publisher and a collaborator with (and to) all of the other creative people on the internet.
Well so far, so User Generated Content. So what makes Social Media different? Well, one of the reasons is that the things that people are making aren’t just dumped into the world. Instead people are encouraged to use the content they’re creating – they own it and can employ it for renown or for social purposes within their interest communities or their social network. On Flickr many people upload photos from their cameras and mobile phones not just to put them on the internet, but as a form of presence that shows their friends what they’re up to and where in the world they are. Their content is a social glue. Meanwhile, other users are busy competing with each other, getting support and advice from other users, or are collecting photos, tagging photos or using them in new creative ways due to the benefits of Creative Commons licenses. Somewhere at the back of all of this is a concept of publishing, but it’s a one that’s been elaborated on and extended extensively.
There’s another different though, and I think it’s probably even more important. It seems to me that the other main feature of social media is that they’re looking at how each individual contribution can become part of something that’s greater than the sum of its parts, and to feed that back to the individuals using the service so that – fundamentally – everyone gets back more than they’re putting in.
These new services are about creating frameworks and spaces, containers and supports that help users create and publish and use all kinds of data from the smallest comment to the best produced video clip which in aggregate create something of fascinating utility to all. And if you want to know more about that, I’d recommend exploring del.icio.us or Flickr or Wikipedia. You’ll pick it all up quickly enough.
So social media then hasn’t really arrived as much as it’s always been there, waiting for the right set of circumstances to make it really blossom. These circumstances probably include boring things like web penetration, the new generation of users who have grown up with the internet, the widespread take-up of always-on broadband, standards-compliant browsers, a better understanding of addressability and links and search and more sophisticated approaches to handling media and interactions with the server.
And they’ve probably also been waiting for business models, which brings us back to the panel in question which is supposed to be about social media on the one hand and business models on the other. As I’ve said, social media is about helping individuals creating value for all. I’ll give you an example from a recent talk that my boss gave in ETech. He described how Yahoo is using Social Media with sites like MyWeb to aim at ‘better search through people’. Yahoo believes that we can make search better for users – and more financially rewarding for the company – by helping people collect, publish and share information, answers to questions, bookmarks and the like through Yahoo Answers, del.icio.us, Flickr and the like.
And of course social media generates an enormous amount of content, and content is content and can act as a platform for advertising. Traditionally media organisations are suspicious about placing ads around what can often be ‘bad’ user-generated content, but then the question is surely just how you can help surface the good stuff – and the best way you can do that is to work with your community. On Flickr, great pictures are seen by enormously more people than small personal or bad pictures – they have a concept of interestingness that surfaces pictures every day that are of extraordinary quality. Blog posts on average are pretty terrible, but the best blog posts are as good or better than anything you’ll find in the mainstream press.
And that’s just the beginning of the business models. People increasingly are comfortable paying for interesting services online. Get people using social media and hold back the functionality that costs the most to deliver (in terms of server load or storage or whatever) and a proportion of your users will put their money where their mouth is to go for the full experience completely and immediately. All they need is to feel that the service they’re paying for is worth the money. And of course if you’re building an environment in which people can do things with their content, some of the things they may wish to do with them open up other potential revenue streams – getting things printed, published, turned into books, projected onto the moon. Open that stuff up to them and I have no doubt they’ll run at it like a herd of bison.
Anyway, that’s me done. I’m sure I’ve bored you all more than enough, so I’ll just end up with another quick example of user-generated value that’s on the edge of social media. The other day I was rewatching a talk by Will Wright, the creator of The Sims talking about Spore, his new game and he was talking about how increasingly creating a new game required the production of more and more ‘content’, and that this was pushing up the costs of each new game and would eventually be unsustainable. He then talked a bit about The Sims 2 and how users were given the tools to create their own content for the Sims environment – actual objects that they could share with their friends and distribute through the ecosystem. And he mentioned that one of the sites that had manifested in this community of amateur creators had just recently celebrated its hundred thousandth user-created object. Imagine that! A hundred thousand bits of content created by a portion of the user-base, providing value to the game generators, fun to the normal users and prestige and satisfaction for the amateur creators. It’s a rare sweet-spot that makes everyone happy, and when you find them you know that they’re just at the start of something extraordinary. Virtuous circles like these have a tendency to expand and expand quickly. There’s a beautiful creative future ahead for everyone involved, but you have to be involved to experience it. So step forward, media owners! How can you fail!?
Links for 2006-03-31
- Have any television or radio presenters died while they were in the middle of a live broadcast? I don’t know the answer to this question, but I want to, so I decided to ask Yahoo Answers. All inspired by Simon asking whther they’d cancel Eurovision if Terry Wogan died unexpectedly.
- OS X Satisfaction Chart is a humourous look at how people get their head arounds the plusses and minuses in translating over to Mac usage Absence of games = big deal, although there is really only one game in existence for any computer and that’s World of Warcraft and Macs have that.
- The new patch for World of Warcraft includes radically better Flightpath functionality Like about three of you will care about this, but it’s really sweet and will save an enormous amount of time – if only because you can now go and make a cup of tea while traversing a continent…
- Hugh’s helpful card for excitable people Jet-lag makes Tom grumpy. Not sleeping makes Tom grumpy. Excitable people make Tom grumpy. You tell ’em Hugh.
- The BBC reports on BT’s attempts to enforce its monthly download limits… “BT is targeting customers who it says are regularly breaking their monthly broadband download limits.”
- A grid explaining the various characters of the International Phonetic Alphabet This is actually sort of beautiful if you’re nerdy – a one page representation of all the noises that people use in speech, quite well typographically laid-out. From Wikipedia…
- “The Pope has a special hat. Rabbis have special hats. Rastafarians have special hats. Why not Pastafarians?” Venganza presents a crochetted hat depicting the Flying Spaghetti Monster in entirely too much detail. Stunning.
Phew! And I’m back in London and this is basically the first opportunity I’ve had to put my head above water since. I’m ploughing through a backlog of e-mail from stuff I’ve not had much of a chance to deal with over the last month or so, finishing off scraps of work so I can close their respective GTD loops (I never finished the book, too busy) and looking at the wastelands of my nearly finished weblog posts and ever expanding to do list and thinking about how much of it I can hope to get done over the weekend. So much of my life at the moment is about getting back to zero. Other people seem to get much more done across a much wider range of territories without getting so swamped. Or they hide it better. Or they lie.
So what’s happened since I’ve last been online? Er. Good question. My one hour of sleep was followed by several hours in Newark, a seven hour flight getting back to my flat around 10pm on Sunday evening. And then a few scant hours later I was on stage at the Guardian Changing Media Summit in London’s fashionable Victoria. As Ben Hammersley’s utterly charmless portrait of me indicates, I had the jetlag sweats and grumps and could only concentrate due to the significant amount of adrenalin in my system. Here’s a more flattering Mirror Project-alike photo that I took later in the day in the excitingly lit lifts:
I’m generally having a bit of trouble getting my head around what happened at the Guardian Sumit, but I get the impression that it was a strange event – it felt a lot like the people who had prophesized the dot-com crash last time around (and were secretly delighted that their more traditional media had won through against this weird interloper) had been brought to the event a little against their will – having finally realised that a boom and a bust doesn’t conceal the more general, solid and underlying push in the same direction. The day seem strangely retro and a little bit grudging – or maybe that was just the audience. As I say, I have a pretty bad sense of what actually happened, so I could have got the whole thing completely wrong.
One thing I said during the Social Media panel that seems to have confused a few people was that I mostly have no idea what on earth people are talking about when they use the term social media. This may seem like a terrible confession (and I think some have decided to take it in that way), but I think they’ve slightly missed the point a bit. I’ll write more about that later, but my main issue was simply that the term seems to be being used as a badge for pretty much anything that someone wants to talk about and make sound contemporary. Online community as a term has disappeared, social software seems out of vogue (is media the natural progression) and social networks are quite 2004, but social media as a term is everywhere. And depending on who is using it, it seems to mean everything from mainstream media owners adding new ways of engaging with their consumers, through to standards like community and social networks, all the way through to You Tube, Flickr and weblogs. It felt like there was a pretty weird diversity of opinion on the panel as well. Very confusing.
I don’t think I’ve seen a term so indiscriminately used – I think it’s even more bastardised than social software was at its worst. But I’ll write more about that another time – I have the basic transcript of what I was planning to say at the conference written down somewhere, and I’m sure I can drag the whole thing into some kind of order over the next couple of days.
Otherwise the conference was most notable for me as an excuse to catch up with some of my favoruite people – Hammersley, Neil, Suw, Paula Le Dieu, Sasha, Hugh and a whole slew of old BBC R&Mi types like Sarah Prag, Dan Taylor and Chris Kimber. And I got to see Simon Waldman (unusually grumpy, I thought) and Adam Curry‘s hair – which was totally Smashy (and Nicey). And I had Vietnamese food. And then couldn’t sleep until nearly 3am.
Cut. Cut. That’s enough for now. Too much to do. Roaming off for a bit. I’ll leave you with the most terrifying part of the last few days – working out why my phone had stopped working while I was in New York. Apparently roaming data is even more expensive than I thought it was. That’s five hundred pounds I’m not going to get back in a hurry (mostly spent on a month of trans-Atlantic Flickring). Not good. Very scary. Not doing that again.
I'm so tired, I haven't slept a wink…
Well that’s not strictly true – I got an hour of sleep between coming back from the party and having to leave for the airport. Twenty hours awake and one hour of sleep, and currently in Newark airport an hour and a half away from the final six hour flight that takes me back to London (where British Summer Time is just about to really rub in the jet-lag). If I was fried before, now I’m deep-fried – possibly breadcrumbed and potentially smothered in some form of thick hallucinogenic sauce.
My visit to New York was pretty much infinitesimally short. I got to my hotel on Friday afternoon around 4.15pm, showered and changed to be out by 5pm, crashed back at the hotel before midnight, had about three hours roaming around Soho on Saturday early afternoon before the next series of events began. Which brings us back to the end of the party and getting to the airport and thick hallucinogenic sauce.
Links for 2006-03-25
- Henry Porter talks in the Guardian about new legislature that would give MPs greater power with less parliamentary oversight “The Prime Minister claims to be defending liberty but a barely noticed Bill will rip the heart out of parliamentary democracy” – the authoritarian streak of the Labour party I voted for is becoming increasingly obvious as time passes…
- I’ve finally watched the damn Will Wright video for Spore and frankly it’s astonishing It’s half an hour long so I suppose it’s forgiveable that I didn’t make the time, but I absolutely totally bloody should have done. Incredible and amazing. I want to get me this game right about now, thanks very much.
I’m coming to the end of my month in the US and to be honest I’m absolutely bloody exhausted. I only have one major US leg to go and then Dear God I’ll be done and I can sleep in my own bed and spend a weekend alone and play a lot of World of Warcraft and speak to absolutely no one. This has been a pretty astonishing trip in many ways – I feel like I’ve learned a lot and experienced more and have reconnected with my larger community – but it’ll be nice to have a break from working out travel logistics and hotels every twenty-four hours. Speaking of which, I still haven’t actually booked the bloody flight from San Franciso to New York, and I have nowhere to stay there yet. Very bad! Too much to do! Concentrate Tom, concentrate!
On this illustration, knocked up on the train back from work this evening (by way of an attempt to get my brain to unclench), I would be currently just trying to work out flight number six for Friday, and worrying about getting to the airport in time for flight seven (Sunday morning). Fried!
Links for 2006-03-23
- Today’s awesome minimalist meditative game of choice is “Don‚Äôt Shoot the Puppy” Hint – the way to win is to very very patiently do absolutely nothing at all. It’s kind of zen.
- Roger Ebert publishes a letter from Kerry Bailey which pretty much summarises my opinions on the Crash Oscar victory Kerry’s a friend who lives in LA. I think both of us felt that Crash was the worst possible film to beat Brokeback Mountain at the Academy Awards. He’s just expressed it better than I have…
- Apple have attacked the proposed French law to force interoperability I don’t know the specifics of the law, but personally I’m in favour of any move towards making it possible for people to buy from one place and play elsewhere. It may not be practical, but it should be a goal…
- The Cisco VPN Client has gone Universal Binary with 4.9.00.0050 Ever since buying my Intel iMac a while back, I’ve been surprised by how many things need to be updated to work properly – and how quickly the binaries are appearing. It’s quite exciting, actually.
- Ben Edwards report on the ETech Warewolf gaming experience… I think ETech’s Warewolfing was some of the best I’ve ever played – even more enjoyable (if less well-played) than the stuff from FOOCamp last year. Brains! BRAINS!
- Wikipedia’s article on Jam is simply fascinating. I particularly like the information on the EU jam directive (Council Directive 79/693/EEC, 24 July 1979) “Fruit” is considered to include many things that are not ordinarily classified as fruits: “tomatoes, the edible parts of rhubarb stalks, carrots, sweet potatoes, cucumbers, pumpkins, melons and water-melons”…
- Beebo’s Metalog posts his Technorati 100-like list of the most-linked to weblogs in September 2000 I remember the Beebo lists incredibly well – back when the community probably no more than few thousand weblogs. I’d taken a hit by moving from barbelith to plasticbag.org and no one really cared about what we did. Happy days…
- After a thread on Holocaust Denial appeared on Barbelith, I went and read this fascinating page examining the claims of the revisionists on Wikipedia It’s really good stuff, thorough and interesting. It’s not going to convince anyone determined to believe that there’s a huge Jewish conspiracy at work, of course, but then they have other issues.
- A 2,500 year old sarcophagus has been found in Cyprus, covered with paintings representing scenes from Homer… Sometimes it’s easy to forget that the history you read about in books actually bloody happened to real people. Moreover, how awesome is it that over two millennia since the time of the Greeks we’re still finding more stuff and gaining more insight?!
Visualising my del.icio.us tags…
I got an e-mail the other day from a guy called Kunal Anand who writes a weblog over at whatspop.com. He’d been doing some nice simple visualisations with Python and (I think) Processing of the connections within his del.icio.us tags. Here’s a bit of his work:
Anyway, he asked me if he could get a dump of my del.icio.us XML to have a play with – I think he’s trying to see if there are any obviously different styles of tagging that you could see with visualisations of different people’s tag clouds – and I said yes. And having done so I thought that someone else out there might also get some value from playing with this data, so if you want it here it is: delicious.xml.