myspace

My software and web Applications of 2007. The good and the bad.

[Know that a website is different than a web application.  If you are using a website, it’s probably only going to give you information.  If you use a web app, you are probably going to exchange information.  This is what “web 2.0” is about – exchanging of information.  Web 2.0 is about the world being a database.  Go get the data you want.  If you aren’t getting the information you want, you probably haven’t looked hard enough.]

Here’s a list of software and web apps that I used regularly over the past year.

Gmail – Gmail is the most powerful web-based email client.  It got IMAP support this year which, if you know about IMAP, is huge and revolutionary.  I use Gmail from different PC’s and from portable devices.  Gmail hooked me up with 6 GB of space this year.  With Gmail’s powerful filtering system, I get email thrown into my Gmail account from other email accounts.  This enables me to go to one place to send mail from different email accounts.  One email to rule them all.  Additionally, Gmail’s SPAM prevention is top-notch.

Flock - web browser built from Firefox.  Flock is the "social networking" browser with intuitive and time-saving features built in to the interface that makes blogging, Facebook, Flickr, uploading images, Twitter, etc. so much easier and faster.  Flock will run almost all Firefox extensions.  I'm amazed at how easy it is to use their blog editor and images.  Flock will automatically upload images to image-hosting sites (like Flickr or Photobucket).  Flock will also embed the images in your posts.  If you are a blogger, Flickr user, or Facebook user, I suggest dumping Firefox and running with Flock.

Basically, I ported by Firefox footprint (install) into Flock and it has been seamless.  Blogging is a breeze.  Flickr is much easier.  Facebooking is simple.

Google Reader - The internet is a database.  Every webpage, every file, is a record in this database.  It is up to me to go to the database and pick the news and topics I want to learn about.  With Google Reader I'm subscribed to 271 RSS feeds that give me information about technology, Huntsville, family, politics, entertainment, and the purpose of life.  271 individual feeds is a lot.  However, with keyboard shortcuts (mainly the “N” and “space bar”) I can scan over all feeds and only spend time on the ones that interest me.  After I follow a website for a couple of weeks, I get an even better feeling for how the content comes to me, making it even faster to sort through the data.

I have found that I spend as much time reading news in Google Reader with 271 feeds as I did when I had 20 feeds.  The only difference is now I read the news that I want to read while cutting out more and more cluttering information.

del.icio.us - personal bookmarking.  I used del.icio.us more than ever this year to bookmark various files and webpages.  I even wrote a script or two to import some of my bookmarks into this website.  Don’t use the bookmarking system built into your web browsers.  Use a secure online bookmarking service like del.icio.us.

Pandora.com – I like music.  I used to buy dozens of CD’s a year (even when Napster/Kazaa was big).  Today, I don’t consume much music mainly because such a piece of art is all but forbidden in my work place (that’s another story) and I’ve found a love for NPR while driving.  Still, I enjoy music at home.

Pandora is a part of the Music Genome Project.  Basically, I pick an artist or song that I like and input it into Pandora.  Pandora creates a station and then streams music that is similar to the artist/song that I inputted.  I can give an up or down vote to any song that plays.  Using my feedback, Pandora learns what music I like.  Over time, I get a good mix of music that I like listening to for hours on end while discovering new artists and sounds.  Surprisingly you find that Pandora is pretty accurate right out of the gate.

Flickr.com – Online photo gallery site.  Still archiving digital images for me and millions others.

Flickr Uploadr – I wouldn’t use Flickr nearly as much if it weren’t for the Flickr Uploadr.  Note:  If you are uploading images to Flickr one at a time, you are not investing your time efficiently.  There are mass uploading tools out there that let you mass upload images, tag them, add descriptions, titles, and so on. 

Flickr Uploadr is a tiny little software app that allows me to drag and drop my images into my Flickr account. 

Fatwallet.com/Slickdeals.net – I rarely pay full price for any non-service product.  I’ve saved thousands of dollars on purchases in the last several years by using websites like FatWallet and SlickDeals.

Digg.com - I used DIGG like crazy at the beginning of the year.  And then they got big - too big.  They started censoring stories and attempted to covered up the fact that a ring of people were controlling the frontpage.

reddit.com - My new digg.com.  Reddit gets the stories faster than DIGG.  There's less turnover on the reddit homepage so I check it less often.  However, reddit has some really interesting stories with better discussion than that found on DIGG.  It’s a good place to go for tech news and interesting stories.  It’s full of political stories.

Facebook
- I joined Facebook and started using it.  It was much safer and simpler than MySpace.  Facebook is on pace to be the largest social networking website.  It has been valued at $15B.

MySpace
- I ditched it.  MySpace is bad.  Very bad.  Don't go near MySpace if you are looking for a social networking experience.  Use Facebook.  Just after I log into MySpace, I begin getting SPAM from MySpace bots looking to add me as a friend. 

Twitter - Twitter was all the rage this year.  Neat, clean design. Easy interface.  However, who needs Twitter when Facebook already has status updates?  With a little bit of code, you print out your Facebook status to a new website - effectively making a Twitter clone and saving you from having to crosspost to multiple sites.

Drupal - Drupal is getting more support and more powerful.  Major corporations (especially those in the entertainment biz) are using Drupal to built interactive websites.  IBM, NASA, Electronic Arts, and MTV use Drupal to built communities and/or share information.

WordPress - I setup a few WordPress blogs for people this year. WordPress is the best personal publishing software out there.

Huffington Post – It’s news blog to counter Drudge Report’s news.

rEVOLution - When I get home from work each day, I listen to 30-120 minutes of speeches by the most potent Presidential candidate.  This after having read years worth of www.house.gov texts.  My life is forever changed.

Facebook and MySpace reveal class divide

I have plainly seen it in my Facebook and MySpace accounts.  Now a researcher at UC Berkeley has some draft statistics on the matter.  Conclusion:

"[Users on] Facebook come from wealthier homes and are more likely to attend college.  MySpace users tend to get a job after finishing high school rather than continue their education."

Hey - I'm glad someone else is seeing this. 

Of the high school graduates on my Facebook profile, almost everyone has at least one college degree.  Few don't.  That isn't the case with my MySpace profile.  My friends on MySpace are in fact more likely to not have a college degree.

I suspect this is due to the fact that Facebook at one time was only open to college and university students and later high school students.  You had to have a .edu email address to get in.  MySpace has always held open registration.  Anyone could create an account.  MySpace was never exclusive to higher education students like Facebook was.

Because Facebook is now open to everyone, Facebook's demographic will certainly approach that of MySpace's.  I'm not surprised at the current divide between the two websites.  It will be interesting to see what the demographics of both sites are like in a few years - as Facebook gains more market share (check out this plot at Google Trends of the popularity of MySpace vs Facebook).  A study in a few years of the two biggest social networking sites could provide valuable information into user interface research and business to business relationships.

But, I think it's a little too early to make the comparison between the two sites.  Facebook has only been open for...what...a year? 

MySpace vs Facebook

I think a better study would be one that compares high school to high school on the same site (Facebook or MySpace).  Doing so would reveal information about the website AND the high schools.  Let's look at two high school from different demographics.

I went to high school in rural east Tennessee called McMinn County High School.  We didn't have Calculus or a Trigonometry class (which made a trip to your local university to pick up an engineering or science degree a little inconvenient).  We did, however, have a huge vocational school with small engine, auto body, and agricultural classes.  We didn't have classes that encouraged us to become scientists, engineeers, and technology nuts.  We did have classes that advanced the skills of trade workers that are vital to the county and region.  My family didn't have internet when I was in high school.  I only knew of one kid that has an internet connection at his home while I was attending MCHS.

Look on MySpace and you can see the differences between my high school and other high schools of similar sized from in non-rural areas.  Compare my high school in rural east Tennessee to Grissom High School here in Huntsville, Alabama (which has one of the most well educated populous in the world).

My class graduated about 350 students.  Less than 2% have Facebook accounts.   Yes.  Only 6 of my classmates have Facebook accounts.  46 students have MySpace accounts.  (Hrmm.  46 was the number of classmates that attended our recent 10-year reunion.  Communications were primarily through MySpace.  Only a few of the people on MySpace attended the reunion.)

Go look at Grissom High School.  They graduated about the same about of kids of my high school in 1997.  Facebook has 37 graduates registered. MySpace has a whopping 118 graduates on MySpace.  Hundreds of kids in that class have MySpace or Facebook accounts.

So the totals are:

MCHS '97 on Facebook:  6
GHS '97 on Facebook: 37

MCHS '97  on MySpace:  46
GHS '97 on MySpace:  118

I think the Facebook stat is staggering.  Mind you that Facebook was probably NOT around when my fellow classmates were in college.  Then again, it wasn't around the Grissom High School students either and they have SIX times the amount of registered users.

I decided to take the study a couple of steps further.

Total MCHS accounts on MySpace:  976
Total GHS accounts on MySpace:  2112

MCHS Class of 2007 accounts on MySpace:  43
GHS Class of 2007 accounts on MySpace:  83

MCHS Class of 2005 accounts on Facebook:  99
GHS Class of 2005 accounts on Facebook:  268

MCHS Class of 2006 accounts on Facebook:  92
GHS Class of 2006 accounts on Facebook:  303

MCHS Class of 2007 accounts on Facebook:  68
GHS Class of 2007 accounts on Facebook:  330

According to SchoolMatters.com, 10.9% of adults in the 2006 MCHS school district have a bachelor's degree (compared to 23.4% for the state of Tennessee).  Conversely, 43.3 of adults in the Grissom school district have at least a bachelor's degree (compared to 23.1% for the state of Alabama).  In 2006, 91.6% of the adults in the Grissom district have a high school diploma compared to 74.8% for the McMinn populous. 

So, it would seem that users on Facebook and MySpace ARE more likely to come from families that are well educated. 

I think UC Berkeley's study is opening eyes to the class divide and the internet.   I think by comparing high school to high school, we can learn more about the division.

By the way, just 52% of 2005 McMinn County High School students were proficient at Math.   99.8% were proficient at Grissom High School in 2005.  Reading: 67.9% for McMinn and 99.3% for Grissom.

By the way #2, I'm sure the MCHS class of 2007 baseball team would drill the GHS class of 2007...

Wow.  This post got a lot longer than I though it would. I just wanted to comment on the UCB research.  I guess I ended up doing some crackpot research myself. 

I'm listening to Jamie Cullum's "Catch the Sun" on Ben Folds Five radio channel on Pandora.  I don't know why, but it's a catchy song.

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