Archive for February, 2010

Why I got the Droid

So, I have now had my Droid for long enough to talk about it.

And I love it.

To get why it is so great for me, its important to realize that I live my daily life in WordPress, Basecamp, Google products (both regular and Apps for Domains), and various social media sites. On my laptop, I can basically live in my browser, Terminal.app, and a twitter client. Most of the other things that I run are desktop versions of webapps.

In my mind, the Android platform is the best for people who live like this. I knew that I was going to go Android from the get go, it was just a matter of what flavor. I am tied to Verizon in a big way, so an iPhone was not an option.

On Verizon, there is the Droid and the Droid Eris. The Eris runs Android 1.6, while the Droid is 2.0. There is also a lot of speculation over what will get updated-some think that the Eris will not get the 2.0 update, while we know that the Droid will get at least 2.1, and beyond. Along with the Nexus One, it is flagship hardware for the platform.

The specs on the phones are both close-processors were nearly the same speed. The Droid has better hardware, but the real kicker comes in the memory department-it has more onboard, and comes with an SD card that is 2x that of the Eris.

So, I went with the Droid. However, the Droid is not only about the hardware specs. I love the keyboard-I didn’t think that I would use it all that much (Chris Brogan described his as a vestigial keyboard), and the onscreen is great, but when it comes to typing out a full blog post, responding to comments, or replying to emails, it rocks to be able to slide out the full QWERTY and just fly.

11 days in, I still love it. I find myself using my laptop less and less, and my phone more and more. I have yet to have a single “I wish my phone could do X” moment-and it can do it all without daily resets, like my BB Storm needed.

Currently, I use:

  • Seesmic-for my Twitterings
  • WordPress-for writing and handling comments
  • Astrid-AWESOME task management app, and it syncs with RTM for free
  • NewsRob-a great Google Reader app, which finds use during any bit of free time
  • Beacon-Basecamp client. Its a paid app, and 100% worth every penny.
  • Wireless tether-I had to hack it first to make this work, but now it turns my phone into a MiFi. Again, worth every minute it took to root my phone.
  • Listen-Googles podcast client. It syncs with Google Reader, to make management a snap, and streams while it is downloading. Paired with my Jabra Stone, I can stream podcasts OTA.
  • Foursquare/Gowalla-I live in public
  • GDocs-full Google Docs on my phone. Create, edit, upload, share. Really helps the mobile GTD
  • Qik/Ustream-trying to decide which is going to be my main streaming client.

Now, the real fun comes in running the mindgame of having the iPhone as an option. Honestly, I cannot say which I would have gone with. Both have their pros and cons, and both can fit my life. I just know that, with the options that I had, the Droid was the best choice, hands down.

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Location based apps and privacy

Over the few months, I have been putting two of the top location-based mobile applications through their paces in our fair cities. The contestants were Foursquare, the location-based game from the creators of Dodgeball, and Gowalla, a startup that is new to the scene, but shows promise.

Before I get to the reviews of each, and how well they work in our cities, I want to write a quick word on the privacy issues that are coming up. Last week, people found out about PleaseRobMe.com, which aggregates all of the checkins from these location-based apps. The idea is that, if you are checked in somewhere else, you must not be at home, therefore making it a target. This also fits in with a story that I heard eariler on Twitter, about someone who was out to eat and received phone calls from “randoms” because they saw she was checked-in there.

As someone who has been using location-based games for longer than many, I can tell you that it can be dangerous, and it can be safe. Sure, boradcasting where you are can lead to your home being a target for theft, but so can having your answering machiene answer calls-its another signal you are not home. Same goes for putting wedding notices in the paper-it is a gaurentee that you will not be home. When it comes to getting phone calls, I would simply like to point out that no one can see your number unless 1) you are a friend of them or 2) you post it on Twitter/Facebook etc. If you use common sense when adding friends, you will have no privacy worries.

On the surface, Foursquare and Gowalla share many characteristics, namely the idea behind them-it is a good way to figure out where you friends are, what they are up to, and to join them in what they are doing. However, the similarities are only skin deep.

Foursquare is just under a year old, yet has gained a worldwide audiance, and plenty of media coverage. Despite not being the most-used location based network out there (that crown goes to MyTown), it is the one that has been getting the coverage. Foursquare is one of the few Web 2.0 companies that have a business plan, revenue, and are making money. They do this by making everyhing in the service into one big game-user compete to become mayor, get awarded badges for their work, and are ranked on a leaderboard. Sure, this leads to some gaming of the system, but it also paves the way for social media to get integrated offline into marketing plans: One of Foursquare’s best ideas is that of a “mayor special”, which rewards the user that has the most check-ins in the last 60 days with anything from a free drink to a free meal. This is a big shift for a few reasons:

  • It moves loyalty programs from a punch card in your wallet to and online experience
  • It turns a simple “Your 10th coffee is free” campaign into a game, which drives users to go to a location more often, in hope of either protecting or stealing the mayorship.
  • It encourages more interaction, rather than just a one-to-one transaction: I know of several places that I frequent that I have gotten to know others based on their check-ins, and am trying to go there more often to hold on to my mayorship.

Gowalla, on the other hand, is all about the social aspect. There is no real business model yet, and their application focuses on dropping/picking up items at different location, and going on “trips” with your friends. These trips consist of a set of locations to visit and check-in at. The founders see Gowalla as a way to find and share locations in your city. Not as game-changing as Foursquare, but still a really good idea.

The startups also differ on their technology, and this is where Foursquare really begins to shine locally. Foursquare relies on users and Google Maps to provide their location information, and Skyhook for figuring out location. This leads to having most of the places you vist show up in the database, ready for you to check-in at without missing a stride. I have only needed to add 3 locations since I joined nearly a year ago, and have checked-in about 500 times. Foursquare also uses its users to maintain the location database-if you earn “super user” status, you can remove closed venues, or merge 2 listings into one. This allows them to operate with a staff in the single digits, while maintaining a robust POI database.

Foursquare also has applications for Android OS, iPhone OS, and Blackberry OS, a mobile website for non-smartphones, and also a check-in syntax for text messages. If you have a mobile phone, you can play Foursquare.

Gowalla currently has an app for the iPhone (none for the iPod touch), an early beta app for the Android platform, and a mobile website that only works on Webkit-based browsers (currently the iPhone and Android, although rumors out of the Mobile World Congress suggest that Blackberry is getting one in 2010). Using it on my new Motorola Droid was a decent experiance, but you can tell that it is an early version-it is buggy, and missing several key features. Using the mobile app was ok, but the location feature was off-Google Maps would have me at my exact location, and Gowalla would put me several blocks away.

I was also not able to check-in anywhere that I went without creating the spot. I am not sure if this is because of the location issue, or if their database is that much smaller. Adding a spot is not hard, it is just rather annoying considering the simplicity that Foursquare’s large database provides.

If someone asked me to recomend one, it is Foursquare, hands down. Better experience, more users, and a bigger database all give it the win. This goes doubly so if you are a business-the integration of businesses into Foursquare’s model is top-notch. I was recently at CES, and the minds at Intel and Foursquare created a bunch of badges specific to the event, which is a really fun way to get people to both use their service and get them to brag about their trip to their other geeks, thus creating buzz.

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A few quick updates

I will write a better post later today, but I wanted to officially post these items:

I am now a writer for Minnov8! I am really excited to work with these guys-look for my first post coming in the next few days.

Also, I am going to be taking down the Twin Cities iMarketing calendar. I am working with Ian over at MM-UR.com. MM-UR is going to be the one-stop place for all of the meetups happening-whether they are ad-hoc or part of a huge group, you will find them here. Please go check it out, add your event, and help this grow!

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Disclosure post

This is one of those posts that is fun for me to write:

I am helping CoCoMSP as a “Co-Community Manager”. This is a very undefined role, but the part that I have to write about (screw you, FTC guidelines) is that we have a “material” relationship. So take note of this whenever I blog, tweet, or talk about CoCo.

Back to your regularly scheduled tech randomness.

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Why I got the Droid

I will do a more in-depth review in a few days, but this is the short version:
~it can connect to my server via ssh or ftp
~its easy to develop for
~its open
~the full qwerty is so nice to have
~I live in google, so having a phone that ties into that as well as this one does is a must

Basically, it is a device that makes me need my laptop less, and still be fully functional.

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Get your skills

In addition to getting out and networking with other verticals, anyone in social media needs to get more skills.

You need to know web, or ppc, or analytics, or something. My litmus test for people who talk about social media is to ask them what else they do-if they only do social, I am weary.

Personally, I know web. I do websites, I am working on webapps, I do analytics, and I am integrating all of them.

Others may do things like pr. While I may diss pr from time to time, if you really know it, you are solid.

Social media is not a hard skill. Get those skills, or you will fall behind.

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Questions for caribou?

I will be spending a few hours later today at Caribou HQ, for my marketing class. Anything that you would want me to ask? I will update this post later with answers/what I learned from their marketers. (If there is nothing good, I will just put up a new post)

Post the questions below.

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Google Wave Use Case-”Honey, Do” list

I am blessed with a semi-techy girlfriend. Last night we were talking, and stumbled on a use case for our favorite service to make fun of, Google Wave.

We are using it as our honey-do list!

This lets us keep track of all of our little projects-she just moved into a new studio, so we are getting everything ready.

This is what I love using google wave for. As you can see from my inbox, its mostly things for ad-hoc projects, side things, or shared to-do lists.

At SMCpros, we are using Basecamp, and love it. Wave fits perfectly in the slot right below it, for the times when Basecamp is too much for a project, but you still need to collaborate.

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Digital Ownership

So, Tumblr is in a bit of a flap with some of its users, all over the idea of dormant accounts. Ill recap:

Pitchfork (the music site) wanted a Tumblr. pitchfork.tumblr.com was taken, so they email Tumblr asking what they could do.

Tumblr emailed the user, and with no response, gave the Tumblr to Pitchfork Media, as per their guidelines. From all accounts, the Tumblr in question was dormant, with only a few posts spaced several months apart.

This is the same as if there is a Twitter handle that you want. If it has been dormant for 6 months, you can have it released.

(If you want to read Pitchfork’s side, click here. The old owner’s, here. Tumblr’s, here.)

Naturally, people are all in a tizzy-mostly saying that Tumblr just sold out to a corporation.

My opinion differs. If you are squatting on a brand name, never post on it (the last post on it was 6 months old), and do not respond to their inquiries about it, you do not get to keep it. Notice what is between your witty domain and the .com? Thats right, its Tumblr’s name. Because it is theirs. You have a subdomain on your server, meaning you are renting their property.

Digital assets are very important to anyone online. If someone would have had my name, I would try to contact them. Especially if it was dormant.

Now, this all gets a little iffy if the person is using it. Luckily, I am 99% sure that this would not have been handled this was if the account was active.

Bottom line-if you have it, use it. Don’t just squat on it and plan to get rich selling it. Nobody like squatters-not online, nor the people who squat on patents and just sues people to make money. If you have an asset or a resource, USE IT. Make something. Do not try to get fame or money just by holding onto something. Make the fame and money by MAKING something.

What do you feel about digital ownership? It is something that we often take for granted, until it comes back to cause us issues.

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Verizon just changed the game

Skype Limited
Image via Wikipedia

Earlier today, Verizon announced that their smartphones (Blackberry and Android based) would all be getting Skype over 3G next month.

For any small business, freelancer, or anyone with one of these phones, this is a huge deal.

Owners of the phones will be able to make unlimited Skype to Skype calls, use the text based chat, and use Skype Out.

That last one, combined with one other tidbit, is the real gamechanger.

Forever, Cell companies have been charging fairly high international and long distance rates, and getting away with it. However, Verizon customers now have no reason to ever pay for an international call again, or at the very least never pay Verizon’s rate for it, and Verizon is ok with it. Here is the logic:

  1. For people who have the smartphone, they can use Skype to call their international recipient for free. Verizon knows this, touted it in their announcement, and are leveraging this.
  2. If the other person doesnt have Skype, simply use some Skype Out credits, which are much cheaper than what VZW charges.
  3. If all else fails, get a Google Voice account, and use their international rates. Again, way cheaper.

The crazy thing about this all is that Verizon is OK with it. This is not some sneaky backdoor, this was announced by them!! What other company would do that?

So, to all of you loving your iPhones and defending ATT, maybe this will quiet you down for a bit.

Or maybe that quiet is your phone not having the service to make a call (ZING!!)

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