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  • The Big Lebowski (Limited Edition) [Blu-ray Book + Digital Copy]
    The Big Lebowski (Limited Edition) [Blu-ray Book + Digital Copy]
    starring Jeff Bridges, John Goodman
  • The Big Lebowski (Widescreen Collector's Edition)
    The Big Lebowski (Widescreen Collector's Edition)
    starring Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, Julianne Moore, Steve Buscemi, David Huddleston
  • The Big Lebowski - 10th Anniversary Limited Edition
    The Big Lebowski - 10th Anniversary Limited Edition
    starring Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, Julianne Moore, Steve Buscemi, David Huddleston
Friday
Jan092009

Build an Annotated IM Feed Reader with Friendfeed

Using Friendfeed as an RSS Reader

In my day dreams at least, one of these days I am going to write a O'Reilly book called Friendfeed Hacks. As they keep adding features, I keep finding new uses for the service beyond the obvious.

I have explained in the past on how to maximize the imaginary friend feature and how to turn it into a real time ticker. Now here's a quick tutorial on how to turn Friendfeed into a cool instant messaging-based feed reader. This uses a new feature they turned on late last year.

First set up one or more imaginary friends that either include RSS feeds and/or Twitter streams. You can find a nice list of media sources available on Twitter here.

Next, roll these imaginary friends into a list.

Then, log into your Friendfeed account and activate IM updates for that list in your settings.

Friendfeed IM Settings

Now whenever there are new feed items or Tweets that hit your list, you will get a ping in your IM client. What's great about this (other than real-time distractions woo hoo!) is that you can take notes on your feeds by leaving comments over IM! All of your feed items and notes are stored on Friendfeed where they can be searched. However, if you use Google Talk in Gmail, they're accessible under Chats as well.

In my case, I pull a mashed-up feed of my Faves that I created with Google Reader and into a Friendfeed list called Feeds. Very handy! Plus, I can always turn it off with a the pause command if I need a break.

Thursday
Jan082009

links for 2009-01-08

Wednesday
Jan072009

Three Reasons the Internet is Eroding Apple's Mojo

"Rotten to the Core" by Pupski on Flickr.

I have been an Apple fan and a Mac user much of my adult life. I bought my first Mac in 1992 and have owned half a dozen since. I wrote for Mac magazines in the mid-1990s. I waited on line for many hours twice for the iPhone and I am writing this post on a MacBook Air that I bought sight unseen last year after the Jobsnote.

However, after yesterday's disappointing keynote, I am convinced the Internet is slowly eroding Apple's PR mojo. They are still having a good run, but the times are changing. Here are three reasons why Apple may not make the turn like it did before. There's a lot of lessons here for PR professionals.

1) Bloggers and Citizen Journalists

In the old days, Apple could keep a tight lip on the ship. Steve Jobs has built a no-leak culture since he arrived back in 1996. Today, however, with eyes everywhere and contract manufacturing in China, that's getting harder.

The bloggers are getting pretty good at least at directionally writing about what's coming. The professional journalist are feeding off of it and doing more fact checking of their own. By the time the press invitations are emailed, there's not a lot of oomph left - especially since the iPhone debuted. If you think about it, that was the last time Apple was able to shock and awe.

What does this mean? That expectations are high and Apple can't meet them since the launch of the iPhone.

2) The Rock-Star CEO Era is Over

For years we lived in an age where CEOs were like rock-stars. Edison, Henry Ford, Jack Welch, Sam Walton, Bill Gates and Steve Jobs - all are rock stars.

Today, however, employees and "a person like me" are far more trusted, according to data from the Edelman Trust Barometer. This isn't Apple's fault. It's just times are changing. Recent CEO scandals haven't helped. More importantly, Web 2.0 and social software is giving rise to individual voices and personal brands.

Apple is still living in age where its CEO or executive team are the only people who speak for the company. Compare that to Google, meanwhile, who have an army credible faces in the community like Matt Cutts. Got a Gmail security problem? Matt is on the case. Got a flaming Macbook? Email Steve and pray he isn't too obnoxious.

3) Cloud Computing and Netbooks Erode Apple's Edge

As an early adopter, I am a huge enthusiast of web-based applications. About 75-90% of my needs are handled in a browser. I do all my writing in Google Docs. I edit photos using Picnik or Photoshop.com. The only desktop apps besides a browser that I still use are Microsoft Entourage and PowerPoint. (Microsoft and Adobe are clients of my employer, Edelman.)

Now I am rare. A lot of you still love desktop apps but I think that's going to change. In the next few years you will do more of your computing online. And that means you will be able to be just fine using a netbook or even a phone. The category is still emerging and many are still 1.0 products. But I expect that to change and if the current economic climate continues, then it could erode Apple's notebook share.

"But Apple has web-apps," you say. "What about Mobile Me and the new iWork.com?" They're gorgeous, for sure. However, functionally, they don't hold a candle to Google or Adobe's web apps. And I think Microsoft's products here for sure will be strong. In three years iLife and iWork will have to be entirely cloud-based and the edge goes to the first movers.

That's one person's view of the situation. There are others. What's yours? (For more, see this thread on Friendfeed.)

Tuesday
Jan062009

Co.mments Tracking Service Shutting Down

Co.mments, a service that enables you to track your comments on blogs across the web, is shutting down on January 11. The founder Asaf Arkin put up a blog post last night notifying users.

Co.mments.com is Shutting Down

I have been hungering for strong comment search and utilities for a long time. I was a fan of co.mments because it allowed me to create a comment feed on my blog. This is something that TypePad doesn't offer built in, except on individual posts. (Note - if you subscribe to the comment feed, it will be gone next week.) Backtype is a promising service, but I find it doesn't catch all comments. But it does a fair job.

Overall, I think Friendfeed has the opportunity to soar here. I envision that they will start to integrate more tightly with blog services like Blogger, TypePad and Wordpress, as well as Twitter, Facebook, Backtype and Disqus. Then, conceivably, it can aggregate all blog comments in one place, connect them to your account and make them searchable.

I still hold out that someone will be able to tie all the conversations together and make them searchable. It's painful going to multiple search and aggregation tools to track the conversation. My bet is on Friendfeed.

A big question remains though - how do you monetize aggregated conversation?

Tuesday
Jan062009

links for 2009-01-06