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Argh! Feeds, Feeds and More Feeds (But Not Quite Enough…)

April 15th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Blogging, Geeky, Social Networking, Tech News

While some people are rejoicing that Facebook offers the ability to import content into your feeds for your friends to devour, I tend to disagree with the hype. It’s my belief that by offering a limited set of feed imports, you are just hurting your own social network appeal. More »

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Facebook Spam: You’ve Got to Be Kidding, Right?

February 21st, 2008 | 6 Comments | Posted in Blogging, Geeky, Social Networking, Tips

I have a new friend — or do I? After I logged into Facebook, I was presented with a rather nice looking female who found me and wants to be friends. Oh, joy!
More »

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Facebook is Great, But Is It Sustainable?

October 30th, 2007 | 1 Comment | Posted in Blogging, Geeky, Social Networking, Tech News

Lately, Facebook has been quickly catching up to MySpace for world domination, or at least Techmeme news aggregator domination. But the question critics always ask, “is it sustainable,” at least when it comes to reaching new audiences and keeping the perceived value in a product high.

I try not to rely on numbers for a lot of my logic, I use fuzzy logic and qualitative analysis, but I figure I’ll take a deep dive and see what I find.

Buzz
Facebook has generated a lot of buzz, not from themselves, rather among many A-list bloggers. Most notably, Microsoft’s rumor to buy Facebook for $6 Billion. I decided to run some quick Google searches on various terms in the industry on the Techmeme aggregator to compare where FB is to MySpace to the Industry. Here is what I found:

Chart: Techmeme Popular Stories
MySpace leads as #1 as Facebook follows closely at #2 number of stories on TM.

“Real World” Metrics
Popularity doesn’t equal sustainability, although it does contribute. Ultimately, innovation can be the key ingredient for sustainability. How popular is Facebook compared to MySpace? In my opinion, Facebook and MySpace are still considered to be in separate leagues mainly because of corporate ownership, user demographics, and the features offered. That said, let’s take a look at some fancy graphs, courtesy from Compete.

Compete: Facebook Vs. MySpace -- Vistors

Not bad for FB. MS seems to be dropping lately.

Compete: Facebook Vs. MySpace -- PVs Per Visit
Interesting. It appears around the time that MS deployed its new home page skins, PVs have dropped.

This numbers and graphs look pretty for Facebook, but they should know the giant they are up against. The only thing that [to me] MS offers that FB doesn’t is fully customizable profiles. While FB is easy — too easy — to add modules to their pages, it can inundate and take away the value of them for some users.

Conclusion
Is Facebook sustainable? Possibly. What they must do is offer valuable content to their users and listen to feedback. Listening can come in the form of Web analytics, user feedback, and even spot-testing new features with users. Looking at the PVs per visit, you can see MS has substantially dropped since they released their new home page skin … did they not poll their users enough? Were MySpacers looking for a more Web 2.0-ey interface? We won’t know ’till the end.

What do you think? Is Facebook sustainable as a prominent social network, or does it need to incubate some more?

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Is Facebook Connected with the CIA?

July 8th, 2007 | No Comments | Posted in Blogging, Geeky, Safety, Social Networking

Facebook LogoFirst, let me start off by saying that I acknowledge the fact my risk of my aggregate data could get in the hands of the unknown. Saying that it won’t or can’t happen, is merely denial.

Facebook, which concerned user’s previously about their ability to syndicate user feeds throughout the social network, has absolved their concerns by implementing privacy options that by default are set to public.

That said, I just came across this video today that raises the question about government data mining interests, and the theoretical connection to Facebook. I’d like to informally suggest that Facebook isn’t alone, and I’m sure that Myspace and Bebo have plenty of data mining interests on board, but it does raise the question to their Terms of Service and Privacy Policies.

Do I think Facebook will go to the dark side? No. However, I do like the fact people are questioning their motives and interests in regard to handling of their personal information.

Video Link - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZMWz3G_gPhU

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