Via TechCrunch: Pownce Goes Public Tonight

January 21, 2008

Just caught this on TechCrunch via Daniel Burka on Pownce — not sure how it slipped by me! Pownce, the long-compared-to-Twitter micro-blogging tool, comes out of beta tonight. Great news for Daniel, Leah Culver, and Kevin Rose, who’ve worked hard to build a great tool for social aggregation.

I’ve been using Twitter and Pownce for the last six months, on and off, and I’m torn between the two. Which is a whole lot better off than I was before, when I was torn between just how stupid I thought they both were in the first place.

Twitter, Pownce, and legions of tools that have adopted the “Status” function, all appear to address the question, “what are you doing right now?” With Twitter, I didn’t really care at first. The public posts range from invites to meet-ups to updates on bathroom performance, to shots at sports teams, to cries for help.

Then, I ran into some folks on both services who know how to actually use them. Take Alex France, for example, who goes by the Pownce moniker dignews. Alex posts tech news and links with short headlines, and has become one of my favorites to follow, because he seems to share my interests. Alex is 16-years-old, from Manchester, England.

Or how about Thomas Hawk, president of photo-sharing site Zooomr, who is using Pownce as part of his photographic jihad to share a half a million finish, corrected images with the world. Every day I’m greeted with a handful of gallery-quality photography.

For me, where Pownce takes the hands-down lead is in offering the ability to group my friends into sets. Close friends? Co-workers? Each can have their own group, and you can ensure that messages you send to one group don’t clutter up the inboxes of others, who might find the message inappropriate.

Look at it this way: I set up a new “Clients” group. I can use the tool to send quick status updates to my clients who might need to know timely information about our work together. In a recent software launch, the client group served as a key lynchpin in delivering timely information to the people who needed to know it. And that, after all, is the key to employing a tool that actually fits the job.

This is the biggest hurdle, still, and I hope the Pownce launch drums up enough mainstreamish press to get the message out: these social aggregator/micro-blog services aren’t just for tweeners and programmers — there’s a business use, too. Finding the sweet spot where tool and utility intersect will help us all be more productive, and efficient.

If you use either tool, find me here on Twitter, and here on Pownce. And don’t forget to find me here on Facebook, and here on LinkedIn, too!

Apple Reduces iTunes+ Prices, Brings Parity to DRM’d Tracks

October 16, 2007

Today, the WSJ reports that Apple has reduced prices on all their DRM-free tracks to $.99, making the per-track price equal to that of tracks with DRM throughout the store. In addition, they have launched a wide new selection of indie artists and labels under the iTunes+ moniker, making Apple the new champ in volume of DRM-free music, buy maybe one or two tracks. Amazon recently launched their MP3 store, with over 2 million tracks and $.89 per track pricing for most songs to widely positive reviews from industry. 

Amazon Launches Public Beta of Amazon MP3 — Bests Apple’s iTunes Plus by 1.7 Million Tracks

September 25, 2007

Amazon launched their MP3 store — as widely predicted — but did it in the first commercially viable fashion the market has seen since iTunes debuted years ago.Others have tried, but all have failed to gain much ground on Apple’s store, not because of onerous copy protection schemes, but because all the competitors to date have been so, so very stupid. [Read more]

Radiohead Misses the Point, Allows “Integrity” to Interfere with Distribution

September 21, 2007

I won’t buy the next Radiohead release. As a matter of fact, I haven’t thought about Radiohead in years. I remember Radiohead listening parties in college, but since the advent of the iTunes Store, they’ve fallen off the radar.Until this morning, when I had a chance to catch up on the Wired blog. Eliot Van Buskirk has a quick post about how Radiohead has shunned iTunes not because of DRM, not because of pricing, but because the online store refuses to sell their releases as album-only.

According to an EMI, Radiohead refuses to distribute via Apple — even through Apple’s DRM-free iTunes Plus store — entirely because of Apple’s policy of selling tracks individually:”iTunes insists that all its albums are sold unbundled, but 7digital doesn’t.Radiohead prefer to have their albums sold complete. The artist has a choice, and if they feel strongly then we respect that.”

This is a tough one. It’s tough not because of some overpowering ethical nerve, but an emotional one. Artists certainly should have the right to determine distribution, but to allow this archaic emotional attachment to a format to get in the way of public access to the material is foolish. This is a statement many bands tried to make when Apple launched the music store — bands that realized quickly that they hadn’t the might to change the course of history through market protest. The beautiful part about this whole argument is that Radiohead, like ColdPlay and Pink Floyd, are lousy to listen to one track at a time. Fans know this, and I have to imagine would by the whole album on iTunes, even if the option existed to purchase one track at a time.And now, Radiohead’s refusal to be in the iTunes store has further cemented them in the category of emo-also-ran, along with the Beatles’ army of attorneys, and all the others who chained themselves to the old ways just before the bull dozer mowed them down. And I’m forced to say of their next release, “who cares?”

Apple Muddying Up the Already Ridiculous Ringtone Business

September 19, 2007

Between Dan Frakes and John Gruber, we have a great summary of the current mess that is the ringtone business, particularly as it is addressed by Apple:

What it comes down to is, as Gruber so eloquently put it, that “the distinction between ringtones and songs is an artificial marketing construct.” The entire ringtone market is based on artificial restrictions—not physical ones, not technological ones, not even logical ones—put in place to create a market where one would otherwise not exist.

It’s this last point that is particularly important for our purposes. The idea of creating a market where one doesn’t exist is the foundation of entrepreneurialism. It’s how the computer and cell phone industry got started. It’s how people are wearing jeans as a result of the Westward Expansion. It’s how Las Vegas was founded in the middle of the desert.
[Read more]

Hulu.com Early Contender to Join the Ranks of Obscurity

September 5, 2007

The squabble between NBC/Universal and iTunes — the latest squabble — is particularly amusing. The network has said they’re pulling their content and — in related news — said they’re launching a new service of their own, Hulu.com. The new portal has not launched yet, but the splash page up right now looks like this:

Hulu.com splash pageNote, second from the bottom left: “Drive”. That’s right, NBC is using this opportunity to go out on their own, to enjoy the freedom of their new lives unshackled from the iTunes master, by working with FOX, who’s promoting a show they had so much faith in that they didn’t even air the final three episodes on broadcast television. That’s not really fair. Guilt by association isn’t the problem. No, the problem is that NBC is creating a new network, building a new brand where TV isn’t, in order to be out from under the thumb of a quality service where TV is.

[Read more]

Letter to MySpace: We had a good thing, once.

August 29, 2007

On August 1, 2007, I broke up with my employer. There’s another post in me on that point, and it has something to do with why I haven’t posted here in exactly that long. But for now, I need to talk about MySpace. Because today, I broke up with her, too.

And it’s not because I was down-sizing my social relationships. In fact, I’ve upsized — at least in raw numbers. No, I broke up with MySpace because… well… I think she’s been cheating on me.

She hasn’t sent me a substantive message in months. All I get, every single day, are messages from other people she’s seeing, people hawking their bodily goods online, wanting to be my BFF. There was a time, not long ago, where people from my deepest past would find me on MySpace, would reach out to me, touch me in some new way. Not so, any longer.

[Read more]

Using Gmail on the Apple iPhone Solution — When Good Intentions Go Bad

July 16, 2007

By all accounts I can find, Apple has sold roughly a million iPhones since it launched on June 29. That makes a million people setting up the new phones in the US alone, and what is likely a healthy percentage using the Gmail email service.

Personally, I have about six Gmail accounts including those through the Google Apps for your Domain service, and I’ve recommended and installed a number for clients. So, given the popularity of the new phone and the email service it was something of a stun to find just how completely insane the two work — sort of — together.

[Read more]

BlackBerry Messenger: A trip through the Internet Time Machine

July 6, 2007

Blackberry LogoI don’t use a Blackberry. In spite of the cult of Blackberry, I’ve always found the device difficult to navigate. Even the new Pearl, with the cute scroll-wheel, is marred by the funky keyboard layout. I just can’t get used to typing on keys that have more than one character each.

Of course, as a new iPhone user, the Blackberry has drifted even further from my sphere of potential use. Today, I got an email from a good friend who happens to work at T-Mobile. It was an invitation to join his Blackberry Messenger contacts list (Messenger is the software application that provides chat between Blackberry users).

First, I can’t use the software because I don’t have the device. To my knowledge, I can’t use the software on my desktop machine either. Of course, I wouldn’t know the answer to that, thanks to my second problem.

[Read more]

iPhone Debuts — In My Pocket

July 1, 2007

I was one of those people. I was one of the who-knows-how-many standing in line at the Apple Store for a brand new iPhone. And, I did it on vacation in Buffalo, NY, meaning I got it a full three hours before all my peeps in Portland.

Was it worth it? Now that I’ve had three days with the thing, was it worth the money, the time, the sales tax?

First things first. The Apple Stores were — I have to imagine I can speak generally here, extrapolating my experience in the NY store — awesome. They were managed impeccably. Lines were bled into the store at around 4 customers every few minutes, ensuring no logjams on the store floor itself. We were shuttled all the way to the back of the store and asked the simple question: “What do you want — 4 or 8?”

[Read more]

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