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Bill Sodeman writes about management, mobile computing and information systems

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Entries tagged as 'twitter'

Mobile social media sites

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Posted Friday, 15 August 2008

I’m back in Honolulu after my conference, and I am catching up with my social media sites today. Some of the sites have reasonable mobile versions, so I was able to post updates and stay current through my phone or my iPod’s WiFi connection:

At least one of my sites offer mobile versions with very limited feature sets:

  • LinkedIn offers a contact list. On an iPod Touch, it’s a little clumsy to use. Other than that, there’s hardly any useful content available. 
Some of my favorite social media sites have no mobile versions at all. Bookmarking sites are a good example, as most of these sites are designed to support desktop and laptop users. Mobile phone users have to use their browser’s bookmark menu. 
Tags: anaheim, facebook, friendfeed, linkedin, mobile, social-media, twitter, usability

Is email in danger from microblogging?

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Posted Wednesday, 9 July 2008

I’ve claimed for several years now that email is broken. At best, email is the lowest common denominator (LCD) for sending messages to a specific Internet user. Every ISP subscription comes with some kind of email account. Free webmail addresses are easy to get. Many mobile phone accounts come with an email address. Alex Iskold’s post from ReadWriteWeb called Is Email in Danger? discusses how microblogging services like Twitter can overcome the inherent problems of heavyweight email clients like Microsoft Outlook.

Broadcasting with a microblog

Microblogging services are best suited for broadcasting messages to lots of users. FriendFeed, Twitter and similar services are widely used by popular bloggers to publicize their latest posts and mention their daily activities. Most of these services accept text messages and offer mobile versions of their web sites, so they are easier to use than email from an ordinary mobile phone. iPhone and BlackBerry users have better email clients on their devices, but microblogging from these devices seems to work well. 

Image courtesy of gwEnvisionAs I mentioned yesterday in my article called The battle against Twitter spam, microblogging services like Twitter have their own problems. Because email is a mission critical service, it’s almost always available and working. Collecting comments and posts from microblogs can be accomplished with RSS - I use this to repost my FriendFeed activity to billso.com, but it would take a bit more effort to do this as part of an archiving and compliance effort. 

I’ve never been a fan of Outlook. In its easly versions (Outlook 97 and 98), the application would crash at least once a day. Microsoft developed  ActiveSync software to support PDAs, but 10 years later it is still a maddening piece of cruft.  

Look out for Outlook and iTunes

My university uses Microsoft Exchange as its faculty/staff email server, so I occasionally get meeting invitations and Outlook forms in my Gmail my box. All of my university email is auto-forwarded into my Gmail account. Microsoft meeting invitations are useless in Gmail - I have to tap out a reply to accept or decline the meeting.  

To be honest, Apple’s iTunes is following a similar evolution. It start as a music player, but has become a media storefront, disc burner and iPhone application installer. I’d think that several specific lightweight apps would work better than a huge, monolithic instance of iTunes. On a Mac, iTunes performance is barely tolerable. iTunes on a Windows box is a lumbering behemoth. 

Gmail, on the other hand, was designed as a lightweight solution that would work in a standard web browser. I love Gmail because I can search for messages quickly, and I know I won’t run out of storage room for old messages. There’s no reason for me to delete an old message in Gmail. 

Attacking the inbox

One approach to managing a bulging email inbox is to sit down and clear the queue. The Inbox Victory web page tries to make this process fun by letting users post pictures of themselves with their empty inboxes. I clear out my Gmali inboxes a few times a year. 

Luis Suarez of IBM claims that he reduced his incoming email by 80%, thanks to his usage of social networking tools like RSS feeds, Twitter and IBM’s internal clone of Facebook, Beehive. Suarez discussed his  article in the New York Times called I Freed Myself from E-Mail’s Grip.

Suarez admits that his job as a social computing evangelist helped him cut his email volume. He’s supposed to encourage his fellow IBM employees and managers to use Beehive, which is as much a knowledge management (KM) tool as it is a social intranet application. IBMers are supposed to use Beehive to share events, lists, pictures, tips, and ideas across the enterprise, as part of formal and ad hoc workgroups and project teams. 

Image courtesy of gwENvision through a Creative Commons license. 

Related articles and pages on billso.com

Tags: Apple, email, friendfeed, gmail, IBM, intranet, iPhone, iTunes, Microsoft, network, social, storage, twitter, usability

The battle against Twitter spam

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Posted Monday, 7 July 2008

Read 1 comment

Image courtesy of HilI’d been offline all weekend, so this morning I decided to check my Twitter page. Twitter is a web site that lets users microblog with 140 character messages typed into the web site or mobile text messages. 

I had a few new followers whom I did not know in real life, and each of them had weird names. A few reminded me of the passwords AOL used to stamp on its disks and CDs, while others were straight from a spammer’s imagination:

  • agoraindex
  • tarahbrown
  • MyInternetBusin 
  • HarbourHeights 
  • WallpaperManica
  • she0foreclosure 
  • xiaopan
  • Rhonda1989

As it turns out, these were all attempts at sending me Twitter spam. My Twitter profile is public, so anyone can follow me. 

To make matters worse, Twitter has no system for mass blocking profiles. I had to block each of these profiles one by one, and each block required a round trip through 5 web pages. 

Adam J. O’Donnell of Cloudmark has a good ZDNet article called Twitter’s holiday battle with spammers that has some good observations.

Twitter has enough problems as it is - the service goes down for hours at a time, and has inspired users to name one of Twitter’s network outage notices as the Fail Whale.

Image courtesy of Hil through a Creative Commons license. 
Tags: networking, reliability, social, spam, twitter