chrisbrogan.com

Covering social media business strategy and personal power

  • Home
  • About
  • Speaking
  • Rockstars
  • Subscribe
  • Newsletters

18

Thinking About the Database of Things

November 16, 2008

Do you have about 15 minutes? Watch this:

Now, mash this with my thoughts about the annotated world, and what I’m thinking about with Brightkite. Are we on the way to a borderless world? This is data in a post media world, but also in a post-web world.

Throw in a taste of Dave Winer’s “commercial information” idea:

A commenter named Hartsock put it perfectly: “I look forward to the day when I can search like this: “pants waist:38in inseam:32in cargo” and find a listing of cargo pants that fit me and places I can go and buy them.” Permalink to this paragraph

However this is not advertising! It is commercial information. The former is in our way, the latter is what we seek.

That adds even more ways to think about all this.

It’s a lot to think about.

Your ideas?

Article
Join the conversation - 18 Comments
data, kevinkelly, thefuture, thinking
27

Secrets of the Annotated World

November 6, 2008

maps One day several months ago, David Alston said to me at a conference something like this: “I just realized that there are two conferences going on here. One is in this room, and there are people with note pads writing feverishly and chatting with their neighbors. The other is out on the web, and we’re all Twittering the conversation out to others who aren’t even here.” That’s part of why we did the Twebinars, was because David and I were talking about how events need to stretch beyond the physical world now.

I’ve recently started using BrightKite again, specifically because of the iPhone application. The application is reasonably simple: map your GPS coordinates to a specific location and then allow you to annotate that area with text or a photo. So, I can be visiting a place like St. Petersburg, Florida, and I can check in. I might take a snap of the hotel where I’m staying, and I might add a note like “the coffee here is horrible, but there’s a Dunkin Donuts a few blocks west.”

Someone else in the area who is using the same application might now see this update and realize two things (depending on my privacy settings): 1.) I’m nearby. 2.) That the coffee at the hotel stinks. In both cases, this information is only available through the use of this software.

But it’s like glyphs. There’s a whole sense of meta information that is passing between people that you might not know is there. (William Gibson covers this beautifully in the not-science-fiction book, Spook Country.)

How Does This Impact You?

Services like Twitter and FriendFeed and Flickr and Facebook and LinkedIn and more are hosting conversations around you that might be of value to you. You can’t always tune in, but if you don’t even opt to build a PORTAL into these areas so that you can learn what’s being said, you’re missing out on information that might add to your business needs.

If you’re not using services like Yelp and BrightKite, (and you could name several others), you’re missing some of the glyphs and warnings we’re leaving on the landscape to tell you about the way things are versus the way things are marketed. You’re missing chance encounters. You’re missing stray opportunities.

Again, you don’t have to get involved. It’s just that we are, and we’re passing many more notes than you can imagine.

Participating in the Annotated World

There are many projects here. There are many ways to add to this body of work. If you think about it, we are helping a web of human information exist and think. We are directing warm information to where it’s needed when it’s needed without a core leader. It’s quite a project, if you think about it.

Here are some ways to feed the network:

  • When you’re somewhere new, snap photos and post them to Flickr.
  • Take photos of people at events and post the good ones. Add their names and companies to them.
  • When you post photos in Flickr, when you can, add contextual information about where.
  • Write reviews for places and services in Yelp.
  • Use Twitter at conferences.
  • Add hash tags to events. (We used #nms08 at the New Marketing Summit. It just means type #SOMETHING at some point in your twitter post for tracking purposes.)
  • Add hash tags to specific presentations if you think Twitter will enhance it.
  • Provide information about places. I tweet traffic jams.
  • Build human networks to feed information through. Find people who share like interests. (There are 40 groups listed on Facebook for “cartographers.”)
  • Participate in wikis and shared information building projects. The rewards of such projects are better community. (Look at what Colin Browning has started at Constructing Social as a tool for mapping social media resources, for instance.)
  • Share the good stuff. When you see great blog posts, tweet about them, reblog them, pop them up into Delicious and StumbleUpon so that people might see them and benefit from them later. For instance, I’m collecting social media case studies. I’d love more of those. When you find them, and if you use Delicious. just add a tag that says: for:chrisbrogan , with the colon in there. Pow. It lands in my box and I can add it to the file.

There are conversations - rich dialogues and information sharing experiences - happening with or without you. Several of them have business value. Many can impact your life. Get in the habit of using Twitter Search to find out about places and events and people before you visit. You’d be amazed what you turn up.

Is this making sense? Do you get where I’m coming from? Are you already participating? Or does this scare the poo out of you to consider?

This is related but not. It’s a fascinating book worth checking out of your library:

Thanks for your thoughts. Trust agents are attuned to these glyphs. I just want to share the premise out further.

Photo credit, CosmoPolitician

Article
Join the conversation - 27 Comments
conversations, data, davidalston, information, locationbasedtechnology, mapping, metadata, secrets, services, spookcountry
19

Facebook Could Get Really Creepy

February 6, 2008

Disclaimer: part of me thinks this video is a little bit of “Do you think your food is safe? Think again! Film at 11!”, and yet, another part of me thinks this is all really worth considering further. It relates a bit to my post about Facebook’s use of the Social Graph data from the other day.

What do YOU think?

Hat tip to Pamela Rosenthal, a Boston area community specialist you should get to know.

Uncategorized
Join the conversation - 19 Comments
Article, data, facebook, identity, privacy, socialnetworks

Get the blog sent to your inbox. Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

  • About Chris
    Chris Brogan advises businesses, organizations and individuals on how to use social media and social networks to build relationships and deliver value.

    I work with:

    CrossTechMedialogo

  • Recent Posts
    • Thank You Sheraton Four Points
    • Three Books to Check Out
    • Own the Crowd With Better Speaking
    • Thinking About Branding
    • Should Every Outward Facing Employee Have a Web Presence
  • FREE eBook
    free ebook
    Trust Economies (w/Julien Smith)



  • Blog Archives
    • November 2008
    • October 2008
    • September 2008
    • August 2008
    • July 2008
    • June 2008
    • May 2008
    • April 2008
    • March 2008
    • February 2008
    • January 2008
    • December 2007
    • November 2007
    • October 2007
    • September 2007
    • August 2007
    • July 2007
    • June 2007
    • May 2007
    • April 2007
    • March 2007
    • February 2007
    • January 2007
    • December 2006
    • November 2006
    • October 2006
    • September 2006
    • August 2006
    • July 2006
    • June 2006
    • May 2006
    • April 2006
    • March 2006
    • February 2006
    • January 2006
    • December 2005
    • October 2005
    • September 2005
    • August 2005
    • July 2005
    • June 2005
    • May 2005
    • April 2005
    • March 2005
    • February 2005
    • January 2005
    • December 2004
    • November 2004
    • October 2004
    • September 2004
    • August 2004
    • July 2004
    • June 2004
    • May 2004
    • April 2004
    • March 2004
  • CEA Ad
  • Contact Chris
    • blog at chrisbrogan.com
  • Find me on LinkedIn
  • Search
  • Tag Cloud
    advertising Announcement Article blogging books branding business chrisbrogan communication community conference conferences contentmarketing customerservice event events friendfeed guestpost howto linkedin marketing media nml nms personalbranding podcamp podcasting pr presentation Promotion rss socialmedia socialmedia100 socialnetworking socialnetworks SocialSoftware software Strategy technology twitter Uncategorized video videoblog writing youtube
  •  
  • Lijit Search
  • Upcoming.org Events
    More of chrisbrogan's events
  • freshbookslogo

Powered by Wordpress | Based on WP Premium theme by WP Remix. Customized by SnowyDay Design.
All contents Creative Commons licensed. chrisbrogan.com. Click here for rights info.

ss_blog_claim=8a12b33fb23b0a68375c9c034073f868