30
Jun 2011

Living Under a Rock

I just read a blog post that stated "Unless you're living under a rock, you know about..." I don't live under a rock, but I also didn't know -- until this morning -- about the subject at hand.

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An observation: Many in the online community seem to think that stepping away for a day or two makes one less viable -- or less knowledgeable -- about the activities therein. It seems to dilute the credibility of those engaged online when they don't spend EVERY moment staring at the screen and talking (at?) (to?) (about?) the rest of the online world.

I also wonder: If those that don't live under a rock already know about the subject being written... why write about it at all? It seems that we all know, so the post would be redundant.

Take some time away. Take care of real world tasks. Shut the lid on the laptop and breathe. It will all be here when you come back.

Photo Rock, Water III by Martin Burns

Filed under  //   internet   observations   online   social networks   time management  
02
Jun 2010
20
Mar 2010

RD in the Socnets (Revisited)

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I was cleaning out some files on the laptop this morning. I came across this item from a series that I had done on Toonlet.com. I used to enjoy doing those. I may have to start that up again.

Filed under  //   Toonlet   cartoon   social media   social networks  
14
Feb 2010

How do I turn off Google Buzz? Privacy settings, Gmail filters and more | Metro.co.uk

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It's at the bottom of your Gmail page. Just click it and turn it off. I did. It is supposed to help you streamline your social connections, but it just throws garbage at you and shares your email address, too. Kind of a smack in the face with loads of information that you still have to sort. NOISE!

Filed under  //   google   social networks   technology  
04
Jan 2010

Seesmic Acquires Ping.fm

 

From Loic Le Meur of Seesmic:

 

Dear TeamSeesmic Friends,

We're happy to share with you very big news if you have not heard. We've acquired Ping.fm. Get ready to update 50 social networks from Seesmic - and we'd love to hear your feedback on what features we can add to improve Ping.fm.

Your friends are not all in one social network, but we want to help you stay in touch with them anytime and from any device. That is Seesmic's vision and to deliver this faster, we have acquired Ping.fm. You can now update 50 social networks using Seesmic+Ping.fm from email, chat, sms, Blackberry, Android, web, Windows, OSX and much more soon.
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Ping.fm has more than half a million active users who post daily from any device just by sending an email, a text message or chat - simple tools that existed since the early stages of the Internet are available on all connected devices. This is why Ping.fm is extremely easy to use and access -just send an update and it can touch on 50 social networks including Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn, Ning, WordPress, TypePad, Yammer, Status.net and many more. Ping.fm is compatible with every single Internet device in the world, which is why it has become so successful among thousands of users. 

 

Get more details on this acquisition and what you can do with it at Seesmic.com

Filed under  //   Ping.fm   Seesmic   crossposting   social networks  
18
Aug 2009

MySpace Close To Acquiring iLike For $20 Million

MySpace is close to acquiring popular social music service iLike, we’ve confirmed with multiple sources. The deal, which should close this week, will be MySpace’s first acquisition since new CEO Owen Van Natta took control of the company in April 2009. The price is “around $20 million.”

iLike, which launched in late 2006, is a social music recommendation service that now has more than 50 million registered users. It tracks what you listen to and like and gives you recommendations on new music based on that data as well as what your friends are listening to. It is the top music application on Facebook, Bebo, Hi5 and just about every other social network other than MySpace, which has MySpace Music.

iLike also hosts band pages which are second in popularity only to MySpace Music. By acquiring iLike, MySpace solidifies their already leading position as the most popular online identity for bands. Last week iLike also launched their own music download store.

Details are still flying in, but at first blush the deal is particularly interesting for two reasons.

First, simply because iLike is so deeply integrated into the Facebook experience. Nearly 10 million Facebook users use the iLike application every month. And iLike has also been a key part of Facebook’s ongoing struggles with what-to-do-about-music. MySpace is now going to own this.

Second, it’s MySpace, not the MySpace Music joint venture with the music labels, that is acquiring iLike. We’ll have more to say on this shortly. We’re hearing that a key driver of the deal is the iLike team, particularly founders Ali Partovi, Hadi Partovi and Nat Brown, and the underlying technology.

Competitor Last.fm was acquired by CBS in 2007 for $280 million. June 2009 Comscore stats show Last.fm with 12.9 million monthly unique visitors. iLike had just 3 million monthly unique visitors, but that doesn’t take into account the massive usage of the service on social networks.

The company has raised a total of $16.5 million from the founders, Scott Banister, Bob Pittman, Vinod Khosla and Ticketmaster to date. But their last round of funding was in 2006, where Ticketmaster put the bulk of the capital in via a third round of financing that valued the company at a whopping $53.2 million.

In Q4 2008 Ticketmaster wrote down a number of their venture investments, including a $5.8 million charge for iLike. Internally, they valued that $13.3 million investment at just $7.5 million. Last month we reported that iLike was considering a new round of financing that would cash TicketMaster out of the company.

Neither MySpace nor iLike would comment on this story.

Update: More thoughts on the deal here.

iLike image

Website: ilike.com
Location:Seattle, Washington, United States
Founded: January 1, 2002
Funding: $16.5M

Born out of Garageband.com, iLike is a social music discovery site. Valued at $53.2 million in December of 2006, iLike has been funded by the likes of former MTV CEO Bob Pittman and at the time of the valuation, by Ticketmaster (IAC) which took… Learn More

MySpace image

Website: myspace.com
Location:Beverly Hills, California, United States
Founded: August 1, 2003
Acquired: July 1, 2005 by Fox Interactive Media for $580M in Cash

MySpace, which launched in January of 2004, is one of the world’s leading social portals. MySpace empowers its global community to experience the Internet through a social lens by integrating personal profiles, photo sharing, professional and viral… Learn More

MySpace Music image

Website: music.myspace.com
Founded: September 25, 2008

MySpace Music is a joint music venture, with equity stakes from major labels, that allows users to stream music on demand, create playlists, and add widget music players to their profiles. The streaming will be advertising supported - at first via… Learn More

Information provided by CrunchBase

I'm not sure if I like this idea or not (no pun intended). iLike, to my knowledge, is part of GarageBand.com. I don't know how this will affect either service, or how it can be beneficial to have MySpace integrated, however subversively, into FaceBook.

I've found MySpace to be a necessary evil in my efforts to promote my music, but I've not liked it much at all. In my opinion, it is gaudy, poorly designed, and full of incestuous promotion. Friending a band/musician and spamming their profile to promote oneself seems to be a bit cannabilistic.

Filed under  //   Facebook   GarageBand   MySpace   iLike   music   promotion   social networks