Showing posts with label hashtags. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hashtags. Show all posts

Thursday, April 03, 2008

To Succeed: Atomize

In the height of tax season it seems appropriate to revisit a blog post I first wrote while at AOL in July last year. I have been thinking about Application Development, Wikis and the power of 80% solutions. However, before going there I want to go back to that July blog post which addressed Atomization. In a future post I will tie in this subject with Wikis and the Semantic Web. So now a flash back to July 2007
To Succeed - Atomize
This is not a taxation discussion - Instead, I have been thinking about the best way to get traction in adoption of new technologies, services or platforms. I keep coming back to a simple concept - simplicity. KISS - Keep It Simple Stupid! This led me to the concept of atomization. By atomization I mean the deconstruction of sites and services to create discrete services that can be easily combined with other elements.
So, when searching for the next big thing. The next massive run away hit. Don't think big. Think small. Atomize! Break big concepts down in to small, discrete services. Enable them with easily accessible in and outbound interfaces such as email, SMS, RSS or IM. When I look around at successful examples like twitter, ficlets or wiki platforms like Near-Time, I see this rule being followed repeatedly. Ficlets fits this mould because of its strict focus on 1,024 character stories but I would love to see Ficlets expanded to enable email posting of drafts. As it is, I love the way that Ficlets has leveraged other sites and features like OpenID and Flickr. I believe that because Ficlets has a such tight focus it makes it easy to take ficlets content and integrate it into other sites. What a tight focus does is make it possible for creative users to integrate with existing tools, processes and platforms with little or no programming. With these building blocks inventive developers can have free reign and do amazing things to enhance the services. Just look at the ecosystem that has built up around Twitter with sites like hashtags and Quotably - and not to forget foamee!
Given this approach can you think of existing sites, services or features that could be given the atomization workover? Share your ideas! Leave a comment below. You never know , the next big success could be something that at first glance seems small and insignificant!

Friday, January 04, 2008

Sports and A Social Experiment

Over the holiday period I was reading about the attempts by the NCAA to prevent bloggers from reporting at their events. This really is a case of old-style thinking failing to get to grips with the opportunities offered by new technology.
I would like to conduct a social experiment to demonstrate that resistance is futile and the powers that be are better to accept the new order and think about how they can exploit the potential of these new technologies.
Before I detail the experiment let me lay out a few seemingly random thoughts and then pull them all together.
  1. Twitter is on the verge of going mainstream
  2. Hashtags are emerging as a new way of self-organizing on Twitter
  3. Fumbleview is a great iPhone application for play-by-play game coverage
If the NCAA and other groups are seeking to throttle the reporting of bloggers then let's demonstrate that resistance is futile! Here is how we do it.
  1. Go to my Twitter page and follow me: http://twitter.com/ekivemark. Actually that step is optional but it would be neat to know if you were joining in with the experiment!
  2. Use your twitter account to follow the twitter user hashtags.
  3. I have already gone on to twitter and logged tags for #NFL, #NFC #AFC and each Team Name. eg. #redskins
  4. Go to hashtags.org and look up the team tag, conference or NFL tag you want to follow.
  5. Grab the RSS feed for the hashtag you want. eg. For the Redskins it would be feed://www.hashtags.org/feeds/tag/Redskins/ so you can work out what each feed string would be. Add that feed to your preferred reader.
Now all we need is for people (bloggers) at a game, or watching on TV to send scoring tweets. eg. "#NFL #NFC #redskins 21 #mariners 14"
This could be applied to any sports, the NCAA - how ironic that would be, the NBA, the NHL, the MLB. Now we have a day to iron out the syntax. Should we use the city abbreviations such as "#NFL #NFC #WAS 21 at #SEA 14" 
Who wants to get involved? Send me a tweet and let me know.