Showing posts with label FriendFeed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FriendFeed. Show all posts

Monday, June 09, 2008

FriendFeed for live-blogging

WWDC attendee MG Siegler is saying that FriendFeed is the best way to blog live events.

I created the room last night and started posting some questions such as, “What do you think is the more important feature, 3G or GPS?” The room filled up rather quickly with both FriendFeed power users and bystanders alike. By the time Steve Jobs’ keynote kicked off today at 10 am, we had over 500 members in the room interacting with us. (Remember, that is just members who joined to interact with us. It’s like a giant chat room minus all the nonsense usually associated with chat room.)

And that is really the key here, the interaction. Unlike if we were to do a constantly updated live blog post where users would have to do the usual routine of posting comments, which is both relatively slow and are unlikely to get answered, FriendFeed allowed us to have a conversation with those who weren’t at the event.

I haven’t had a chance to use FF’s new rooms feature, but it seems like it is a great addition to the service. However, I wonder how long the service can be “like a giant chat room minus all the nonsense.” Presumably, the nonsense is kept at a minimum by the fact that the number of obnoxious users is low. As the number goes up (it should correlate with the site becoming more popular), the nonsense level is likely to rise. This will lead us right back to a blog-type situation, where it is necessary to moderate comments, thus keeping them from appearing in a timely manner.

via Steve Rubel

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

FriendFeed is the new hotness

screenshot of FriendFeed app in FacebookI’ve really been enjoying FriendFeed over the last few days. The service aggregates activity from a number of different sources—blog feeds, Twitter, Flickr photo streams—into a single activity stream, and allows users to follow the activity streams of friends (here’s my stream). The site has now released an API:

FriendFeed Launches API - It’s About to Get Very Interesting

In his post, Marshall Kirkpatrick points out that 80% of Twitter use comes through its API, and I wouldn’t be surprised if FriendFeed is the next Twitter. The only drawback for the site is that it is a little too comprehensive: most users aren’t going to want to share all the information that FriendFeed aggregates. However, I have found the site to be very helpful in reducing some of the clutter on my Facebook page. Now that I’ve got Twitter, Del.icio.us, and my blogs routed through FriendFeed, I don't need those apps on my profile page.