Designing for Social Traction
on Monday, September 28th, 2009
Extremely nice approach. It’s a nice tool to teach people about social web
web, money and etc.
on Monday, September 28th, 2009
Extremely nice approach. It’s a nice tool to teach people about social web
on Sunday, January 27th, 2008
I was trying not to write about facebook but it came to a point that it’s a good example for my post.
Classic web advertising for banners (in some cases text links) are still paid by impressions. Like the banners on the left column of Facebook pages, everytime user changes a page, an ad is shown, and the advertiser is charged per 1000 impressions. Everybody knows that there is nothing interesting with this.
Facebook, some weeks ago has changed their photo gallery to an ajax photo gallery.
Everytime you see a photo and start browsing to the other photos, without refreshing the page, an Ajax call was done and new photo was shown on the very same page. There was no refresh, therefore the rest of the page -as well as the banner on the left- were not changed.
Facebook recently switched back to their old way. One photo is 1 page view again. I wondered why? It was really obvious. They’ve lost major page views with just this change. On the old system, people were rapidly viewing photos spending (in most cases) no more than 15 seconds per photo. For an album of 20 photos, it was an easily generated 20 page views for them. New system, slowed down the page views but now the users were spending more time on the same page with the same banner. Still with the old metric, 1 page view for 20 photos.
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on Thursday, November 15th, 2007
I was reviewing the formula 4C + V + P = Web 3.0
This is what I think:
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on Friday, May 5th, 2006
I’ve found this interesting article on why the web2.0 applications fail (or will fail)
1. Focus on social instead of personal.
2. They solve too many problems, or try to.
3. They’re about making someone other than the user happy.
4. They sell it the wrong way.
5. Not in it for the long haul.
6. They show too much of what’s going on, and get gamed.
7. They don’t have an underlying business strategy of improving people’s lives.
nicely pointed out by Joshua Porter
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on Friday, August 19th, 2005
HP’s Scott A. Golder and Bernardo A. Huberman have a good article about tags and tagging.
worths reading..