Social Networks

Entries related to social networks, group psychology, anthropology, and really any of the social sciences.

#PCCT - PodCamp Connecticut, Planning Stages

Last night a dozen or so social media enthusiasts gathered in Rocky Hill to share ideas about organizing an unconference about social media in Connecticut. Many of the participants had been to various Podcamps and some had been to other forms of unconferences. Just about everyone already knew each other from CT Tweet Crawls and other social media gatherings. We discussed several issues; should this be a ‘PodCamp’, which is a well known brand trademarked by the PodCamp Foundation? Should it be a Social Media Camp, or some other form of BarCamp? How strictly should it follow the ‘unconference’ format? What, in the end, are we trying to get out of this?

One of the issues is that many of the people already heavily involved in social media have been to PodCamps, BarCamps or related events. There are PodCamps in Boston, Western Mass., New York City and beyond. What would make PodCamp Connecticut special?

Suzi Craig came up with a great suggestion, focusing on, “Work, Live, Play, Connecticut”. How does social media affect our lives here in Connecticut?

For the news industry, the affect is profound. People are now getting their news online. They are sharing information, both that they have gathered, and pointers to interesting stories they have found via social media. The news industry is still struggling with how best to respond to the affects of social media.

Yet other companies need to think about this as well. Word of mouth has always been the best advertising, and now word of mouth is taking place online. How do businesses effectively join in on the conversation in a way that it helps their business?

This leads us nicely to the ‘Play’ aspect of Suzi’s suggestion. People use social media to decide what bar, restaurant, or events to go to. They organize Tweetcrawls to gather with friends at preselected venues. Wise businesses will try to get on the Tweetcrawler’s radar and become a desired destination. People planning other events are wise to try and use social media in a similar manner to draw people to their events.

Another profession, very closely tied to where we live that has always relied on personal networks is realtors. More and more realtors are recognizing the power of social media as a tool to grow their personal networks.

The goal of PodCamp Connecticut is to draw together around three hundred people from all walks of life to share their thoughts, ideas and experiences of social media and how it affects where we work, play and live.

This then comes to the format. I often comment about being an unconference purist. Every session should be a discussion with a facilitator and note taker, but no presentations. A good unconference starts off with a brief discussion setting the framework for the day and doing very quick introductions. I like the style of each person saying their name, where they’re from and three words about themselves, very quickly and moving on. This can work with very large crowds and be very revealing.

Then, people write ideas for sessions they would like to attend on sheets of paper. The sheets get sorted, duplicates combined and the most popular put on a board to list when and where the topic will be discussed. People go to a session and talk about what they are interested in. If they aren’t interested, they exercise the rule of two feet, walk out, and find a session that fits them better.

This is one of the reasons why presentations generally don’t work well at unconferences. The items to be discussed need to be what everyone in the room is looking for, and not some preconceived idea that a presenter has. Too often, I’ve seen people set on doing presentations be disappointed because people don’t want to listen to their presentations. They either interrupt and pull the session back to a discussion that doesn’t follow the presentation, or they simply walk out.

Yet this approach of unconferences is new to many people, and some people find the idea challenging to start with. However, when they think about so many conferences where they’ve sat and listened to a panel talk for forty-five minutes, with the only real value coming with the statements from the audience, converted Jeopardy-style, to questions for the Q&A during the last ten minutes, they often quickly realize the value of the unconference.

Will this group of social media enthusiasts be able to pull off a successful unconference about social media in Connecticut? If there is any group of people that can pull it off, this group seems well positioned. In addition, experienced campers from other PodCamps and BarCamps in the surrounding area are offering to help out. Given the interest in Tweet Crawls and other social media gatherings here in Connecticut, it seems like a great crowd can be gathered. I sure hope so. I’m looking forward to it.

LoKast: A Disposal Social Network?

Today at SxSW, NearVerse is launching their iPhone app, LoKast. The application lets people locally share content from their iPhones, iPod Touches, or iPads. There are plans to go cross platform in the future after some of their other applications get launched.

LoKast looks like a really cool app. In a press release, they about swapping demo CDs or video reels and how with LoKast you can do it easily from your iPhone. It uses a combination of WiFi and Bluetooth so that you can swap content even when the 3G network is swamped. It seems like the great tool for artists touting their wares at SxSW, but it seems like it has a lot of other interesting potentials.

The video that they have produced for the launch makes it look like the tool for parties, or networking events. I could easily see some gathering where everyone is LoKasting their pitches; speed networking or speed dating on iPhone steroids.

Beyond that, I’ve been to movie theatres that share video clips via Bluetooth. I’ve never gotten it to work, but LoKast could end up being a nicer way to do it. For that matter, there are a lot of interesting ways this could be used for other types of marketing; just imagine a local grocery store that LoKasts specials – You could add the Green Giant to your disposal network.

Yet there are other features that don’t get talked about quite as much. For example, they have shared browsing. Instead of trying to get everyone to look over your shoulder as you browse a specific site, with LoKast, it appears as if everyone could pick up your signal and watch the websites you’re visiting on their own iPhones.

The press release says they think LoKast will be this year’s breakout mobile app. We’ll see. It depends on how quickly they can get people load the app and spread the word. I know that if I were at SxSW this year and I was carrying an iPhone, I’d want LoKast on it. Instead, I’ll have to wait until they get it on the Nokia N900 and I can use it at some other venue, like a Podcamp or Falcon Ridge Folk Festival.

Review: Facebook Fairytales

We didn’t have a lot of money growing up, so the only reading material around the house was either books we checked out of the local library or copies of Reader’s Digest. When my parents got divorced my mother headed off to college as part of her effort to build a new life for herself. She took a creative writing class and received a comment on her first paper that it read like a story from Reader’s Digest. My mother, not realizing this was intended as a put down, was very pleased.

Since those days, I’ve gone on to enjoy reading James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Marcel Proust, and others that are a long way from my early literary explorations. Yet I still enjoy, from time to time, picking up a story that reads like it is from Reader’s Digest.

I read a lot of books about the nature of online social networking. Tara Hunt’s book The Whuffie Factor is one of the best books I’ve read about online social networking, especially for young sophisticated geeks living in silicon valley, silicon alley, or other places such people gather. Shel Israel’s book, Twitterville: How Businesses Can Thrive in the New Global Neighborhoods seems the best for older business people. Shiv Singh’s Social Media Marketing For Dummies is one of the best for marketers, and the best for the general population seems to be Leslie Poston’s Twitter for Dummies.

But if you want to find a book that truly captures the power of social media in a way that your beloved Reader’s Digest reading aunt who plays the church organ out in Kansas can understand, there is no better book than Emily Liebert’s Facebook Fairytales: Modern-Day Miracles to Inspire the Human Spirit. The stories read like Reader’s Digest stories, in a good way. They are simple, touching, well written stories about how people have used Facebook to connect with one another in special ways. They have stories about strangers becoming friends and helping one another through major life events. There are stories of adoption, organ donation and more.

So, if you are a young sophisticated geek living in a silicon region of our country and want to find a book which will communicate what is really important about what you do to your beloved aunt who is skeptical of all this online stuff, get her a copy of Facebook Fairytales. For that matter, if you are just an average reader who would like something simple and uplifting to balance out some of the bad news of the day, Facebook Fairytales might bring you a little joy as well.

As a final note, especially in terms of the latest government regulations about product endorsements: I have received copies of each of the books mentioned in this blog post by publicists looking for a good review. I actually receive many requests to review books, but I don’t like writing negative reviews, so I turn down many of the book review requests and only do occasional reviews of books that sound like I’m going to like them. That’s how I came to review Facebook Fairytales, and like the other books I’ve received to review, I’m pleased that it did not disappoint me.

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Social Browsing Revisited

In October, 2008, I wrote a blog post about various Social Browsing tools. One of the tools I mentioned was Socialbrowse. It was an interesting idea, but didn’t really catch my attention.

Today I received an email about Qwisk, ‘the new Socialbrowse’. It looks pretty much like the old Socialbrowse with a couple interesting new features.

First, it now has groups. I’ve set up the Orient Lodge Readers Community on Qwisk. I would encourage blogging friends from EntreCard, Adgitize, CMF Ads, Blog Explosion and Blog Catalog to join the community and see what we can do with it.

In particular, Qwisk now supports widgets for the communities. Currently, I have the Qwisk widget in the first column a little bit below the Adgitize widget. When people join the community and share links, the five most recent links will show up in the widget here. If you find a post on any of the blogging communities I mentioned that you think others would be interested in, please share it.

Let’s see what we can do with the widget and the community.

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Please Scare Me

In 1982, I invited unknown masked men to my apartment in New York City via the Internet. Seven years later, the apartment I was living in was burglarized and my portable computer was stolen. The Internet was much smaller then. I had been working at Bell Laboratories and the unknown masked men where people on a Usenet group coming to a Halloween party. Between 1982 and 1989, I moved several times, so I don’t believe there was any correlation between the two events.

Since then, I’ve started blogging and writing details about when I would be away from my home. In 2006, I started using Twitter. I’m not sure how long I’ve been on BrightKite, but it has probably been about two years. I’ve been on Foursquare for quite a while, but never started using it until I upgraded to my latest phone. With that, I’ve posted many times when I’ve been away from my house.

However, the vast majority of the times that I’ve made posts like that, someone else has been home, the neighbors have been watching the house, the dog has been standing guard, the alarm system has been on, and/or many other factors have made it so that if anyone managed to connect my online message with my real address and headed over to case out my house, they would have been disappointed at best.

So, it is with some interest that I’m reading all the posts about the latest sensational fear-mongering website, PleaseRobMe. “The goal of this website is to raise some awareness on this issue and have people think about how they use services like Foursquare”. That is an important goal. However, the sensationalism and one-sided nature of it detracts from the goal.

Yes, people should think about all the content they put online, their location, their activities, pictures of what they are doing, and so on. Everything has a risk and reward profile. There are risks of letting everyone know when you are not home. I believe those risks are much less than people writing about PleaseRobMe indicate. Just because you’re not home doesn’t mean that the house is empty or unprotected. For that matter, letting your neighbors know that you are not home may even encourage them to keep a closer eye on your home and you may, in fact, be better protected than if you hadn’t let your neighbors via an online service that you are not home.

No, instead the site and the responses people have had to it sound an awful lot like the famous movie ‘Reefer Madness’, or the warnings from parents to kids not to make faces because their faces might get stuck that way, or not to masturbate because they might go blind.

By the way, as I write this, my wife and daughter are out running errands. Our dog is sleeping, but I’m sitting at my computer in my home office. Watch out everyone.

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