Posts Tagged ‘Social Media’

New powerful filters in the new beta Friendfeed

April 6th, 2009

The new beta design of Friendfeed adds some really nice advanced filters. I’m really excited about the addition of ‘popularity filters’ as I call them. They allow you to search for conversations or posts, that have received x number of likes or comments.

Just imagine how you can put this to use in your own field. You can search everybody’s posts (or just your friends’) for keywords, and filter them in terms of popularity. You have a unique ability to catch content way before it makes it to the mainstream online media.

Full res. on flickr.

Sideline gives you advanced twitter search, but that’s about it!

April 1st, 2009

Just stumbled across Yahoo’s new twitter client called Sideline. At first it seems like it offers nothing over TweetDeck or Thwirl, but one thing that caught my eye was the advanced search capabilities.

Sideline from Yahoo gives you advanced Twitter search in desktop client

You can have multiple tabs open with several advanced searches going on. This seems like an improvement over something like Twitterfall, which is browser based, and doesn’t have the same advanced search functions.

Here are Yahoo’s goals for the app:

  • Create a desktop application that allows for the creation, grouping, and auto-execution of advanced search queries against Twitter
  • Leverage existing skill-sets and tools
  • Target the Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux operating systems and minimize the amount of platform specific code that must be written
  • Open source the code so that others can learn from, contribute to, and/or extend the product as they see fit

But to be fair, it does also seem like the ONLY advantage is the advanced search. Sideline offers very little in terms of interaction, you can’t reply or DM anyone, you can’t even log in. You can mark tweets as favourites, but as you are not logged in, these will only be saved locally and won’t be viewable in your Twitter favourites.

Except for being a desktop client and featuring tabs, it doesn’t offer much more than the official twitter search. It only updates every minute, you can set this to be less frequent. But you can’t have it update every two seconds or so, meaning if you monitor popular search terms, you will be bombareded with 100’s of results to go through every minute.

Hopefully Yahoo will improve this Twitter client in the future to include some of the features that you have in TweetDeck and Twitterfall, but at the moment it doesn’t seem very usefull. I will stick to Twiterfall for my Twitter searches. But as mentioned on mashable:

Sideline seems to be more of a research project for Yahoo rather than building a new major new product or division.

There hasn’t been many reactions as of yet in the blogosphere, but there has been a few on Twitter:

mahadewa@avianto That’s cool :) re:sideline from TweetDeck in reply to avianto

alicam: Not sure if we need another Twitter search app but it works nicely – http://sideline.yahoo.com/ from TweetDeck

frumpa: trying out Yahoo’s Sideline but the links are NOT active hyperlinks http://sideline.yahoo.com from TweetDeck

e_D_D_y: Is Yahoo! SideLine an April Fools joke ? Can’t get any result, it’s just… empty :( from DestroyTwitter

Simple guide to maintaining your reputation online

March 27th, 2009

Just came across this brilliant flowchart made by Michael Grimes. A simple outline of how you should approach the task, of responding to good or bad information posted about you online.

As Gavin Wray says in the comments on Michael’s post:

“Thanks for making this guide. You make clear sense out of what can seem a daunting task.”

You see it time and time again. Organisations showing terrible timing and understanding, responding to bad feedback by alienating people and ignoring the community.

If you can answer these questions by a yes or no, you have come a long way in your aproach to bad feedback. The golden nugget being: listen first, then react.

My panel at WxWM: Social media! A professional tool or personal pleasure

March 18th, 2009

The audio of my Social Media presentation at WxWM (mp3) (courtesy of Rhubarb Radio).

Is there a difference between using social media profesionally or personally by kasperbs

The slides that accompanied my talk:

A list of all the other presentations (with audio) can be found at Rhubarb Radio

Jon Hickman: MA in Social Media

March 15th, 2009

I went to the WxWM yesterday. A brilliant idea that managed to gather 30 people from around the West Midlands to learn the guys at SxSW how you really do it. The only video I managed to shoot was Jon Hickman‘s talk about an MA in Social Media they are planning to start in September at the Birmingham City University. Jon is a lecturer and degree leader at BCU and really knows his stuff.