This document discusses the future of participatory media and microblogging. It contains a talk in three parts: 1) the case for social objects, 2) five principles for building services around social objects, and 3) the next wave of participatory media. The talk argues that successful sites are built around social objects like photos, bookmarks, or books. It outlines five principles for doing so: defining the object and verbs, making objects shareable, turning invitations into gifts, and charging publishers not spectators. It suggests microblogging and presence updates will disrupt blogs by being simpler, cheaper, and freeing people from inconvenient places.
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Microblogging: Tiny social objects. On the future of participatory media
1. Microblogging
Tiny social objects
on the future of participatory media
Jyri Engeström
jyri.jaiku.com
2. Top 100 English Web sites on Alexa
1. Yahoo 31. Friendster
32. BBC Newsline Ticker
2. MSN
35. Internet Movie Database
3. Google 39. Go
4. YouTube 40. Craigslist
42. Flickr
5. MySpace 48. CNN
6. Baidu (Chinese search engine) 50. ImageShack
7. Windows Live 52. AOL
54. PhotoBucket
8. Orkut 59. Xanga (weblogs)
9. QQ (Chinese instant messenger) 67. LiveJournal
70. Geocities
10. Yahoo.co.jp (Japanese portal)
73. Adult Friendfinder
77. Apple
11. Wikipedia
78. RapidShare
13. Microsoft Corp.
79. ImageVenueHosting
14. EBay
80. Digg
15. Blogger
81. Alibaba (trade leads)
16. MegaUpload (file sharing) 84. Rediff (Indian portal)
19. Hi5 87. Googlesyndication
21. RapidShare 92. Skyblog
23. Amazon 94. Adobe
26. TheFaceBook 96. Starware
97. About
29. Fotolog
98. Sourcefourge
30. Passport.net
An increasing number of the most popular services are built on user-generated content.
4. 1. The case for social objects
2. Five principles for building services around them
3. My take on the next wave
5. butterfly, butterfly
fly in the sky
butterfly, butterfly
flies so high
butterfly, butterfly
lands on my thigh
butterfly, butterfly
motionlessly lies
butterfly, butterfly
gracefully dies
26. When we first launched Flickr, it
was a Flash application that was
mainly just a chat environment
with real-time photo sharing.
As we started adding features to the site
itself, like pages that hosted the photos
so that people could visit them at a
unique URL, we had a lot more success
with that. People responded to it, and
the site began to grow.
Eric Costello
40. Quick Checklist
1. What is your object?
2. What are your verbs?
3. How can people share the objects?
4. What is the gift in the invitation?
5. Are you charging the publishers or the spectators?
41. What will be the Next Big Thing in participatory media?
77. “The future’s here, it’s just not evenly distributed yet.”
Is it free?
Is it quick & easy?
Is it cross-device & multi-channel?
Is it everyday?
Does it bring people closer together?