Digitised Culture

Dan Lazarides and the internet 
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Seesmic for Windows - first thoughts

I'll keep it short and sweet rather than bore y'all with an in-depth review:

Pros:

  • Cleaner interface than Tweetdeck
  • Efficient synching with the Twitter API (doesn't max out your limited API calls)
  • Great in-line "post update" text field - link shortening and photo uploading are seamless
  • Search function works well
  • Native Twitter list support
Cons:
  • Often has issues identifying exactly what Tweet it is you are clicking on (selects the wrong one on right click sometimes - wierd!)
  • No "reply to all" function
  • Not able to directly select Tweet text content for copy-and-paste
  • No notifications
  • No "follow/unfollow user" option
All in all, I prefer it to Tweetdeck.

This application's a welcome break from the typical Tweetdeck-assault-on-the-eyes and has actually encouraged me to read more than one list of Tweets at a time.

Lack of notifications and "follow/unfollow user" functionality is a bit of a kick in the teeth for the time being, but hey, it is a very early beta build after all!

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Filed under  //   Cool stuff   cool things   digital communications   seesmic   Social Media   Social networks   tweetdeck   twitter  

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On trial today: Seesmic for Windows

Seemingly each day a new Twitter client blots out of the stable door to the world of social media nuts, most of which I ignore/disregard/can't be bothered to download. But having had great experiences with Seesmic's Twhirl Twitter app, I've decided to give the new Seesmic for Windows a while - so far it looks good!

I'll continue playing around with it today and share my thoughts in a follow-up post. No direct download link is provided on the official website yet (as you have to sign up) so visit http://d.seesmic.com/swin/setup.exe to grab a copy for yourself.

Also, take a look at my impressions of the Android version at retroid.com "Seesmic: The best Android Twitter client?"

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Filed under  //   client   seesmic   silverlight   Social Media   Social networks   tweetdeck   twitter   windows  

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The PR Week award sitting happily on Edelman's round table

via tweetie

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Filed under  //   Award   Edelman   Photo   PR Week   print   Social Media  

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The Jan Moir word cloud

A word cloud I created using a combination of Google Blogs RSS and Wordle (with inane words removed) to see which are the most used words to describe Daily Mail journalist Jan Moir after her much criticised article on Stephen Gately's death published on Friday. I'm actually surprised that the negative words aren't larger in size!

But then again there are a lot of different negative words instead, so the volume (?!) of negativity is still high!

If we did the same thing on Twitter, however... ;-)

P.s - Just removed Stephen Gately from it; I want this to be specifically focused on the 'loathsome' Jan Moir!

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Filed under  //   Daily Mail   Google   Google Blogs   Jan Moir   Social Media   Social networks   Stephen Gately   Traditional Media   word cloud   Wordle  

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The ancient art of 'social' communication

Quoted in November's issue of Wired UK, Zeynep Tufekci a sociologist at the University of Maryland, makes an increasingly relevant statement:

"As we leave behind the 20th century, it is almost as if we have come full circle back to the village where everyone potentially knows your business."

This is something that we've been talking about for quite a while in the office, in fact it's one of the first things we say when we introduce social media newbies to the art of digital communication - the media we are using to communicate may be 'new' but the actual way we communicating is pretty age-old. The Wired UK article states that social networks hark back to the days of village life, but I would argue that other aspects of social media, such as crowdsourcing and memes (as we now know them) could be much older still.

To illustrate this, let's go way back to the times of the ancient Greeks. Scholars of the ancient Greek oral tradition have long asserted that one of the most important pieces of literature in history started as a 'crowdsourced story'. Though attributed to 'Homer', The Iliad (or the story of the Trojan War) was shaped by the people who told it before it was finally scribed in hard copy format; the most popular additions to the story survived the test of time, less popular ones are now forgotten.

Although we aren't creating epics en-masse in today's world, what we are doing is shaping cultural trends and brands. mystarbucksidea.com (client) is a great example of this - those who have an interest in shaping Starbucks to their own designs can do so by participating. Like with The Iliad, the most popular ideas survive and are built into the company's strategy and those that are less popular do not usually see the light of day.

The Iliad was a meme of its time - numerous different storytellers in different places telling a very similar tale repeatedly over a period of time. In its day, one person heard the story from someone else and then went and told it to their own friends, who then told their other friends etc. It became the story everyone was telling and talking about and, as such, became viral.

This sounds remarkably similar to what we call memes in today's digital world, doesn't it? Remember when Rickrolling appeared everywhere? Or when LOLcats was at its height of popularity? Friends tell friends who tell more friends, just like how stories were relayed in the ancient oral tradition. These 'stories' tend to be shorter in length and longevity these days, but the way they are communicated are fundamentally the same.

What I'm trying to say here is that we shouldn't be claiming that digital communication provides us with a 'new way to communicate', but that recent technology developments enable us to return to an older - and probably more natural - way of communicating.

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Filed under  //   ancient Greece   ancient Rome   Classics   crowdsourcing   digital communications   homer   LOLcats   memes   old   oral tradition   Rickrolling   Social Media   Social networks   Starbucks   the iliad   traditional communications   Wired  

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A place for filesharing - Hexagon.cc

A place to share with friends

Share torrents and videos in public or private groups that you can easily create and moderate.

Cool spin on torrent sharing in light of the recent on-off closure of The Pirate Bay - social filesharing. I haven't had a proper play around with it yet, but it looks promising.

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Filed under  //   Filesharing   P2P   Social Media   Social networks  

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Asi Sharabi's take on social media monitoring technologies

Posted last week and didn't get around to putting it up here, but this post (http://bit.ly/3y1mvi) by Asi Sharabi on the problems associated with social media monitoring technologies is bang-on.

Many thanks to @geetarchurchy (http://geetarchurchy.wordpress.com/) for flagging this via Twitter last week.

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Filed under  //   metrics   monitoring   radian6   Social Media  

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What the f**k is social media? One year later...

Brand communications agency Espresso has just issued the sequel to their ever-popular "What the f**k is social media" presentation, with a second look a year after the first.

Some interesting stats in there along with some good statements about how social media is not only a marketing channel, but one for PR, customer service, loyalty-building, collaboration, networking, thought leadership and customer acquisition.
What the F**K is Social Media: One Year Later

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Filed under  //   Social Media  

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Want a head-start with Google Wave?

If, like me, you are ridiculously impatient about the next big technology coming from the tech behemoth that is Google, here's some good news - you can get flying head-start with Google Wave's core features before the company releases it to beta on 30 September.

Thanks to Mashable's Ben Parr and a team of developers in Germany, a few of us early adopters have been playing around with PyGoWave - a barebones version of the Google Wave platform. As you can see in the images above the differences between the two's graphical UI is quite stark (PyGoWave being the first, Google Wave being the second - check following post), but the platform does give a great insight into how the system works and it even lets users play around with the (much raved about) widget system.

If you want to play around on either the Mashable or my own Digitised Culture wave, register with PyGoWave, leave a comment with your name below and I'll add you to both. 


However, please be aware that is is not even beta, it's a very early alpha build.

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Filed under  //   Communications   Google   Google Wave   PyGoWave   Social Media   Web 2.0  

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