Social Networks
Playing Apples to Apples with a Spotify Soundtrack
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 07/16/2011 - 20:22This evening, I installed Spotify on my wife’s computer. For those who have missed it, Spotify is the latest music streaming fad. You can select songs from just about any genre and stream them on your computer. They have a Freemium model. With a free account, you can listen to songs on the computer, with the occasional interruption of advertisements. With the paid, premium account, you don’t have the ads, and you can also listen on your cellphone.
Currently, you need to get an invitation to it. I use Klout, a website that ranks influence on different social media websites. Klout has a new program called ‘perks’. For people who are influential enough, they give you freebies. The first freebie I got was a year’s supply of Secret Deodorant. That will go to Kim. The second one I got was an invitation to Spotify, so I started using it yesterday. If you want to get an invite to Spotify, sign up for Klout at this address, and if you’re in time you’ll get an invite. (I think I only have two remaining invites. Also, if two more people sign up, I get an upgrade to premium).
Anyway, while I wanted to listen to music, Fiona wanted to play Apples to Apples. This is a card game where you get seven red cards which typically contains nouns or phrases. Taking turns, each person turns over a green card, which typically has an adjective, and the other players chose from their red cards a card that they think the person whose turn it is will most closely associate with the green card. (There are several variations on this as well).
So, as we played, one of the red cards was ‘Crazy Horse’, so I selected Rust Never Sleeps on Spotify. We spent a bit of time listening to that album, until Rocky Mountain came up. Then, I cued up John Denver, doing Rocky Mountain High. Another red card had “YMCA”. I cued up the Village People, and the other Red Card that got played at the same time was Construction Worker. We explained to Fiona that one of the Village People was a construction worker.
It brought a new dimension to the game, and also made Spotify more fun to play with. So, do you have any interesting Spotify mashups?
#FF @shesosocial @kanter @jcnork @khynes2000 @kevindarst @jrlogan @alizasherman @jeff1132 @lnreynolds @hynesyte
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 07/15/2011 - 17:25Okay, so, for Follow Friday this week, I used Google+. I started off by going to my Circles page, and clicking on people in my circles. I sorted it by relevance, and went to the profiles of the people that Google+ said were most relevant. From that, I grabbed their Twitter id, and here they are.
Following with the Google+ theme, instead of talking about each person and why they might be relevant, how well I know them, etc., I’m going to take a look at an over view of who they are, sort of like the analysis I might do in deciding which circles to put them in.
I do not have gender based circles, but there has been a bit of talk recently about how Google+ is dominated by males. First, I question the methodology used. How did they come up with their samples? I find it interesting that of the ten people chosen it is an equal split between mail and female.
So, let’s start with @shesosocial. I’ve got her in circles for people that live nearby. In fact, four of the people fit into circles like that. @kanter is one of the best known social media and non-profit people and at least half of the people in this list are involved in one way or another with nonprofits. There is also a strong health care component, and although I only have three family members in my circles, two of them show up as most relevant.
I hope to explore some of the social dynamics of my circles in a later post, but for now, that’s my Google+ inspired #ff.
Now, for a quick, different comment. Klout has a new thing called ‘Perks’. People who are viewed as influential on Klout can get various freebees. The idea is that they want people who are influential to post about the perks, generating viral advertising. Today, I receive my first Perk.
Certain Klout users could receive invitations to Spotify, the new (at least in the U.S.) video streaming service. I received my invitation and set up Spotify. Spotify is working on a Freemium model. There is a certain amount that you can do on Spotify for free, supported by advertising. If you upgrade to a premium account, you get additional features and no ads.
Klout will provide Premium upgrades to people who get at least five other people to sign up for Klout. Those people also get invitations to Spotify. So, if you’re not on Klout, please sign up on Klout/Spotify link. Thanks.
Google+ and the Technology Adoption Lifecycle
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 07/10/2011 - 17:23In 1957, Joe Bohlen, George Beal and Everett Rogers published The Diffusion Process for the Agriculture Extension Service of Iowa State College. It focused on which farmers were buying hybrid corn. The work was later generalized into Diffusion of Innovations by Everett Rogers. Typically, adopters of innovations are organized into five groups, the innovators, the early adopters, the early majority, the late majority and the laggards. It seems to be a useful way of looking at even the innovations in online social networks of today, somewhat.
The caveat is that when a new innovation comes out from Google, everyone tries to jump on board right away and this messes up the whole process. So, for example, Google+ reportedly already has 4.5 million users. Facebook reported has 750 million users. So, Google has just over one half of one percent of the users that Facebook has. This would seem to suggest that the vast majority of users should be ‘innovators’, since in the typical diffusion model, the first 2.5% are innovators.
However, from all that I am seeing, I question whether that is really the case. It seems as if there are others who are kicking the tires, and perhaps even saying negative stuff about Google+ because they are non-innovators using a tool that is still really only ready for innovators.
This came to mind in a tweet chat, where people were complaining that they didn’t know what problem Google+ was trying to solve. I would suggest this is a non-innovators way of looking at a recent innovation. In that discussion, I quote Robert F Kennedy’s famous line "Some men see things as they are and ask 'Why?' I dream things that never were and ask, 'Why not?'" I would suggest that this characterizes the innovators approach. The innovator doesn’t look at an innovation and ask what problem it was created to solve. The innovator revels in exploring the innovation for its own sake, for the joy of exploration and innovation. The innovator comes up with ideas about how the innovation could be used.
To me, that is the state that Google+ is in right now. There are a lot of interesting aspects about how it could be used waiting to be explored. One friend, who self-identifies as an innovator described one of the things he is enjoying about the Google+ experience right now, is the feeling of “we’re all figuring this out together”. That is an innovator’s perspective, and I join with him in enjoying this phase of the innovati8on.
Another friend wrote, “After playing with Google+ a bit and contemplating several applications to community building, I could feel my brain frying”. She talked about feeling the need to disconnect. While I am glad she is on Google+, it may not yet be her time. My innovator friends and I will explore what can be done with Google+. Then, my early adopter friend will see one of those things that clicks for her, and she will run with it. She will do some fantastic community building using the innovation along with the ideas that innovators have come up with how to use it. Either that, or my innovator friends and I will not come up with ideas that resonate for her and other early adopters, and Google+ will need to go through more changes before it is ready for early adopters. Perhaps, even, the innovators won’t find anything at all, in the time frame that Google is looking at, and they will pull the plug, prematurely in the eyes of various innovators, like they have with Google Wave or Google Health.
Of course, once an early adopter finds the application of the innovation that resonates, and starts using it, that is when things take off. This is what the early majority sees and what draws them in; not only the innovation, but the community of practice and the best practices they have established, and most importantly a simple way that they can see how it makes their lives better.
One problem is that the late majority and the laggards, who generally don’t like change, will spend their time complaining about how the change really isn’t all the beneficial. In previous days, they might not start their griping until the innovation has already started being picked up by the early majority, and by then it is too late. However, today, with everything happening instantaneously, the laggards are managing to read enough about innovations like Goolge+ to start attacking it right away. As an innovator, I can only wonder how many innovations die because of this.
So, are you on Google+? Do you consider yourself an innovator? An Early adopter? Part of the Early Majority, the Late Majority, or a laggard? How does your approach to the diffusion of innovations relate to your reaction to Google+?
Birthdays in the Age of Online Social Networks
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 07/09/2011 - 09:41Last night, I left an optimizing program running on the five year old computer (with the ten year old display), in hopes that the computer might run a little more quickly today. I got up early and came down to see if there were any speed improvements and to start working on a blog post. There are some interesting topics I want to explore around Casey Alexander, Nancy Grace and Melanie Klein, as well as the debt ceiling and unemployment.
Unfortunately, the computer isn’t really running that much more quickly. On top of that, I had over 100 messages on my Facebook wall. You see, today is my birthday, and many friends have been sharing birthday greetings on my wall. A while ago, I started making it a practice to wish most of my friends happy birthday on their walls. I don’t know how much that has influenced the great outpouring of birthday wishes to me, today, but they have been great.
I decided to take a bit of time and respond to as many as possible. I’ll probably stop responding as much when I go offline for various events around the state, but the past couple hours have been great.
It made me think about how wonderful it is to have many people saying, “I hope you have a great day.” While sharing a birthday greeting is a great way to stay connected with people, especially if you have lots of friends on Facebook, expressing hope that the people around you have a great day seems even more powerful.
So, I’ll return to talking with friends on social media sites for a little while before heading off on my great adventure today, and with that,
I hope you have a great day.
Empire Avenue Strategy
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 07/07/2011 - 21:30Okay. So, I’ve been active on Empire Avenue for almost a month now, and I thought it might be a good time to stop and review some of my reactions and explain my strategy.
I’ll start off by saying that for other reasons, I try to put up at least one blog post a day. It has become more difficult since I started a full time job that trains a lot of my writing energy. In fact, if I had more energy, I would be writing about something political or artistic. Instead, I’m tired, so I’m just writing about a game.
That may be an important part of the strategy for me. It’s just a game; just another way of keeping score. It doesn’t really mean that much. Some friends are playing ti, so I started playing. I’ve met some other interesting people, so all in all its worth it.
When I started, I didn’t have a sense for the game, so I simply bought a lot of shares of a few people that I knew fairly well online. This led me to the first discovery. For some people, it is all about reciprocity. I’ll buy your shares, if you buy mine. As a general rule, I try to buy shares of people that have bought my shares. In some cases, I buy more. In most cases, I try to match on a share by share basis, whether or not their share price is higher or lower than my own.
I also try to keep a bunch of cash on hand so that if something special comes up, like a friend joining, or some interesting challenge, I can participate. For me, I’ve decided to keep around 8,000 Eaves available at any point. If someone buys shares in me, I often buy at least the same cash value of shares, if not the same number of shares. Over time, I try to balance out to the same number of shares.
Right now, I am getting around 1,000 Eaves of dividends and earnings each day. I typically invest that. So, my portfolio value has been growing more than 1,000 eaves a day. There have been a few days that I haven’t grown at least that much. As an average it has been growing by over 2,500 Eaves a day.
I’m still trying to balance out my holdings, with several people owning more of my shares than I own of theirs. So, on a typical day, I look at the people I have shares in and see who has the highest dividends that own more shares of me than I own of them. Typically, I pick up 1,000 Eaves worth of which ever one has the best return. Also, I typically buy and hold. There is one person who had bought me early on and I bought a bunch of shares of them. Then they sold their shares in me, and their stock started to plummet, so I sold out of them.
There was also one person who bought shares in me and when I didn’t immediately buy shares in them, they sold the shares and left a message on my wall complaining. I won’t be buying any shares from them. I buy shares first and foremost because I believe they will provide good solid dividend return.
I’ve also started participating in the communities a bit more. I find all the Please Buy me comments annoying, and generally disregard them. Since I work in health care, I’m starting to post things in the health care community to try and get some discussions going. I’ve also joined a local community, which really doesn’t have much going on, and a few other interest communities. I’ve had some good discussions about Google+ and met some interesting new people through that.
So, if you’re on Empire Avenue, what is your trading approach?