Tag Archives: thought

Products Ramblings

Twitter Affiliate Ad Network

I’ve been thinking about this for a couple of days now and what we really need is a Twitter affiliate ad network like service.  I often post tweets about products I like or things that I find interesting.  In most cases that is valuable to those companies.  I’ve done some small tests with my twitter account @futileboy and found that my click through is very high for each post about 7% of my followers click my links.  Which is a much higher number then online ads get.  Of course that’s because my links are not always trying to sell something.  On twitter if you stop being genuine the people see that and stop following you.

Aside from all that, it would be great if there was service for users of twitter to make a little money off of their recommendations.  What I would like to see is a service that’s sort of like Google Adsense, but instead of suggested ads, a user would type in the product they are about to promote and then if available receive a URL with their code and the clients in it. along with a short URL version that’s easy to post to Twitter. 

Companies could go one step further with this, on demand adverting, and even offer discounts to top influencer’s followers.  Which in turn would give the tweeter more street cred.  Just imagine a tweet from someone you follow pointing out a product you’re interested in and a discount if you click the link now.  This may be just enough to push someone in to purchasing.

Would this service get abused? OF course it will.  However the natural filtering process of over advertising will ultimately make authentic influencers stand out.

Sure it’s a little evil, but if someone is willing to pay for it and someone is willing to take that money in the offer then the service should exist.

UXD

Has technology made the crappy tasks better, or even enjoyable?

iphonedrawI find that I can’t clean my own home without my ipod or something playing from iTunes.  It’s not always music either, I’m listing to podcasts, audiobooks and downloadable versions of radio shows.  Because the technology has made is so easy, I’m consuming more media more often. Most of all I’m consuming it at times when I’m doing other less enjoyable things.  Things like cleaning, mowing, or even just sitting in traffic.

Let’s step in to my time machine here and visit my ghosts of crappy jobs past.  One of the worst jobs I had was cleaning a grocery store at night.  First the bakery and then the butcher area.  The bakery wasn’t so bad, but it was hours of scrubbing the same large cooking sheet over and over again, in lots of nasty chemicals.  The butcher room, was like cleaning up after the most violent first person shooter you’ve ever played. Meaty carnage was always everywhere.  The belt saw had a tendency to throw little tiny pieces of meat all over the place and coat the walls and floor. Okay, maybe that’s too much detail here.  The point is that I would have killed myself if I didn’t have tapes of Jimi Hendrix on my Sony Sport Walkman.  It was the big yellow one with the airtight seal.  I had that thing for ages and it traveled all over the place with me.

Sure, audio cassette tape was just about the worst medium there has been for music, but it was the best I had at the time.  I had boxes of homemade mix tapes and purchased tapes.  It was an art form to make the mix tape back then,  I had one of those boom boxes with the dual cassette bays.  I would search around the source tape for the song and then un-pause the carefully paused to record blank tape.  Mistakes would happen all the time and you would have to rewind or fast forward to get to the right spot.  With some of my favorite tapes of the time, like Synchronicity by the Police, I was able to visual find any song by how much tape was on either side of the spool.  You could look in there and next to the markers in the little window, find just the right spot quickly. The worst thing that could happen was when the tape would run out when you knew that last song would have been just an amazing way to end the tape side.  It was tedious at times, but I always put my heart in to it.  Getting it just right meant so much.  There was an art form to filling that amount of time per side just right.

It wasn’t about the tape cassette or the process of making my mix tapes, it was always about the music.  I made those tapes to have the music with me, for those bus rides, long family road trips, train rides, reading or giving away to friends.

Getting back to my original point, today it’s so much easier to bring a vast library of content with you in your pocket.  Gone are the days of having to worry about how much time I have to fill.  Side A and Side B don’t exist anymore.  In my opinion this is a good thing, because it removes the limits of the medium.

The dishwashers, janitors, and butcher room cleaners can escape from the mediocracy of their jobs and bring their own enjoyment.  They can listen to the Audible version of Pride and Prejudice and catching up on the classics.  Instead they could be listening to the Science Friday podcast and learning about the weeks latest news in science.  Maybe, they just want to listen to Slayer, because that’s what they need then.  It doesn’t matter, the point is that inside most everyones pocket these days is a device that can do this.  MP3 players are cheaper and cheaper ever day.  Most cell phones support audio playback.

I’ve just been looking at one aspect of all of this too, just the audio side.  It goes to reason that being more closely connected to your friends and family through devices like the iphone, or any cell phone for that matter, makes the hard difficult times easier to get through.  Nothing is better then getting a text message from a friend, while slogging through some gutter cleaning. It’s so much easier to stay connected. You can tweet out a quick message without a boss noticing and organize a meet up with your friends in much less time.

Eventually, I hope we all have robots to do the work that people don’t want to.  That way, we can all just go back to enjoying life and having more leisure time.   Of course that’s another story for another time.

Pardon me, I’m just going to slip these headphones on for moment while I go take care of that dirty floor.

UXD

UX Titles

UX titles

This tweet from Jeffrey Zeldman really sparked my thinking about this issue.

UX Titles have always been a discussion topic at IA Summits and other UX conferences. I myself have had a laundry list of titles from Information Architect, Digital Strategist, Experience Designer, and even Creative Director. My personal favorite is User Experience Designer, even though it’s a little long I’ve always felt like it required the smallest amount of explanation. That being said, I do believe that the different titles actually do mean different things. The challenge for most UX people is that in the end they always end up wearing a lot of hats.

I think a good list of titles and their primary focus really needs to be created.

Uncategorized

Don Norman on Engineering Design Education

Cool

Did You Know 3.0 -2008 Latest Edition

This is a nice presentation of information. The only thing I disagree with is comparing myspace users to the size of a country. That falls in to the apples to oranges comparison category for me.

Uncategorized

Fairwell to Microsoft from David Stutz

This letter from David Stutz is back from 2003, but still seems to me to be relevant. I found this via a post by Cory on BoingBoing.

Read on and enjoy

Digging in against open source commoditization won’t work – it would be like digging in against the Internet, which Microsoft tried for a while before getting wise. Any move towards cutting off alternatives by limiting interoperability or integration options would be fraught with danger, since it would enrage customers, accelerate the divergence of the open source platform, and have other undesirable results. Despite this, Microsoft is at risk of following this path, due to the corporate delusion that goes by many names: “better together,” “unified platform,” and “integrated software.” There is false hope in Redmond that these outmoded approaches to software integration will attract and keep international markets, governments, academics, and most importantly, innovators, safely within the Microsoft sphere of influence. But they won’t.

Exciting new networked applications are being written. Time is not standing still. Microsoft must survive and prosper by learning from the open source software movement and by borrowing from and improving its techniques. Open source software is as large and powerful a wave as the Internet was, and is rapidly accreting into a legitimate alternative to Windows. It can and should be harnessed. To avoid dire consequences, Microsoft should favor an approach that tolerates and embraces the diversity of the open source approach, especially when network-based integration is involved. There are many clever and motivated people out there, who have many different reasons to avoid buying directly into a Microsoft proprietary stack. Microsoft must employ diplomacy to woo these accounts; stubborn insistence will be both counterproductive and ineffective. Microsoft cannot prosper during the open source wave as an island, with a defenses built out of litigation and proprietary protocols.

I think it’s taken many years, but it does feel like Microsoft is starting to actually do just this.

I have often wondered why they don’t open up their free software to public as open source or shared source. I’d start with the web technologies Internet Explorer, Messenger, and all the Live services applications.

Uncategorized

Non-rectangular LCDs (audio post)

nec_lcd[1]
 

Mobile post sent by futileboy using Utterz. reply-count Repliesmp3

Uncategorized

Live Mesh in use

I managed to convince some of my co-workers to start using Live Mesh as a lightweight collaboration tool.  The experience has been interesting so far.  We’re all  working with one shared folder at the moment.  Since the features are pretty limited in the preview that’s about the best we can do.

One of the first things that really surprised me was how limited it is at understanding what’s going on with a document that is being “shared.”  For example we’re all working on one Excel document.  A real simple list of information.  If two or more of us have it open, then who ever saves it last overwrites the version.  The history in the News section can be a little delayed at times while things sync so it’s not always obvious that someone else is editing the document. 

I was happy to see that the service did notice an issue and gave me a chance to save my version with a different name.  But it seemed to take a couple of minutes before I saw the notification in the right hand Mesh bar.  I’ll see if I can re-create it so I can get some screen caps.

I can’t wait until there is better application integration.  It would have been super nice to let me know that some else had it open still.  And better yet notified me in the app that it had changed.  Most of the office apps have a merge features built in.

I’d also like to see a way to share areas of a document.  For example, in Excel, it would be cool to define a Mesh enabled range of fields and allow for real time sharing of those fields.  So that when someone else updates them, I could except the change and see it in my working document.  Same could be true in Word.  Then it would be like SubEthaEdit only with all the features of Word.

I’d like to talk about the News feature of Mesh next, but I think I’m going to keep that as an entry of it’s own.  I have a lot to say about it.

People

Clay Shirky on Cognitive Surplus

While I was at the Web 2.0 Expo last week I saw Clay Shirky give a talk on Cognitive Surplus. Out of all the things I learned at the event this one has really stuck with me. You can find the the full transcription online as well.

I need to get his new book “Here Comes Everybody” which is about organizing without organizations. You can watch the interview of him discussing the book on the Colbert Report.

Uncategorized


Mobile post sent by futileboy using Utterz Replies.  mp3