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Augmented Hyper Reality

5 Sep

For his final year of his Masters in Architecture, Keiichi Matsuda has produced a short film exploring the new intersections of consumerism and architecture made possible by augmented reality. All I can say is that the experience being portrayed fills me with a tremendous amount of anxiety. If you subscribe to Kurzweil’s theories that we are merging with machines, how can we go about making that experience more human?

As much as I have fantasized about being a robot (not just growing up… like last week), the idea of having every interaction mediated by an interface that provides contextual data (accompanied by contextual advertisements unless you upgrade to the subscription service) sounds good in theory, but I suspect it would be absolutely soul-crushing in practice. As much as I feel one with both my laptop and my phone, I don’t want all my interactions to be mediated by an interface.

While I am sure the end game is to reach a stage where the C (computer) has all but been removed from HCI (human computer interaction), it will be interesting to see the path it takes. Are we reaching reaching a breaking point in terms of computer intermediation or will we continue to adapt to the point where the vision Matsuda presents or something similar is both comfortable and familiar?

Augmented (hyper)Reality: Domestic Robocop from Keiichi Matsuda on Vimeo.

Toronto Facebook Camp – July 8, 2008

8 Jul

Tonight I attended the Toronto Facebook Camp, an event put on jointly by Trapeze and Refresh Partners. The night started with a recap of what has been going on with Facebook and its platform since the last camp, which was well done but had a varying level of value depending on how close you had been following Facebook over the last few months.

Next up, was Rebecca Sawyer from Facebook’s monetization team, which you can imagine was highly anticipated given how great the representatives Facebook had previously sent to Toronto had been and the fact that anything related to monetization of social networks (particularly Facebook) is bound to draw a crowd.

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Facebook Rethinks How it Defines Page Relationships

15 Apr

Facebook has changed the box that displays the Pages that a user has joined from being labeled “Andrew is a Fan of” to the more general “Andrew’s Pages,” a change that will improve potential success of most Facebook Pages.

Since many users join Pages and Groups as a form of self-identification, the nomenclature that Facebook had used had limited the Page’s potential reach as a communication tool (yet another example of how much impact well or poorly copy can have on the user experience). For example, Vampire Weekend’s Facebook Page has 9156 fans, but only 249 wall posts, 132 discussion posts, 20 fan photos and 3 fan videos with the majority of those contributions coming from a small group of active fans. Assuming that the 8700 or so members who haven’t contributed have not joined for the band’s updates, it is safe to say that most of the members have joined the Page as a way of constructing their online identity/profile and signaling to their peers.

While this dynamic may serve to inflate Page numbers in some cases, it can be detrimental in others where the focus of a Page does not lend itself to users identifying themselves as fans. For example, if I were a high school administrator, it may be a good idea to consider creating a Page for my school, allowing me to effectively disseminate important information and get important feedback from the students and faculty while boosting the profile of the school. However, under the old fan definition, how many surly, image conscious teens would be willing to stamp on their profile that they are a fan of their high school?

This dynamic is the reason that Facebook changed the definition and by doing so effectively eliminating the only advantage that Groups had over Pages for marketers (I am expecting the Groups application to slowly die out or be merged with Pages). While this more general definition is a step in the right direction, why not allow the user to define their relationship with a Page or Group by selecting between a few categories (fan, advocate, hater, friend, coworker)? This would benefit the marketers that the Pages application was built for by providing them with more granular data on their product or brand’s status while enabling the users to more accurately self-identify.

The 9 Types of Brand Community Expanded

7 Apr

A couple of weeks ago, Sean Moffitt at Buzz Canuck wrote a blog post that presented 9 types of brand community based on their positioning on two axis, one of exclusivity and one of involvement. I found this to be a fantastic way to dissect and describe brand communities and wanted to explore the model a little further by attempting to define the lines between the various levels.

Exclusivity
As I examined the levels of exclusivity (low, medium and high), I attempted to identify the divisions between the three levels and I came to the conclusion that there are actually four, which are as follows:

  1. Open – These are communities that do not require registration in order to participate. Examples of these include message boards that allow anonymous posting and blogs that do not require registration in order to comment. To be honest, I can’t think of many brand communities that fall into this category as most marketers can’t resist collecting consumer information although you may be able to make a good argument for Facebook Pages and other similar social network groups to be included in this category as the brand creating the group has no ownership over any of the users’ data and many do not even require the user to join the page or group in order to participate.
  2. Registration – These are by far the most common form of brand communities and require nothing from the user but registration.
  3. Purchase – These are communities that require either the purchase of a product or a membership in order to join in addition to registration.
  4. Outside Selection – These are communities where members cannot self-select themselves into the community. They must be selected to join by the organizer of the community or invited by an existing member. Communities in beta mode are excluded from this as their exclusivity is either an attempt to generate buzz or genuinely a function of technical limitations.

Interaction
As I attempted to define the lines between the levels of interaction with communities, it became apparent to me that the level of interaction is rarely consistent across all community members. Even in the communities where a certain level of interaction is required in order to maintain membership, there is always a huge spectrum between the users who are performing the bare minimum and the most active participants. As a result, it makes more sense for the model to become an explanation of the types of brand community members rather than the types of brand communities. In defining the differences between members’ interaction levels, I decided to use a pared down version of Forrester’s six categories of participation.

  1. Spectators - This category could be considered a combination of the Joiners and Spectators in the Forrester model. These are people who will join a community, but will not contribute anything, preferring to consume the contributions of others without joining the conversation.
  2. Critics – These members are people who will respond to discussion threads, tag content and post comments as well as ratings and reviews.
  3. Creators – These members are nearly always the most active members of the community and contribute by writing articles (often as a way to start a discussion thread) and posting their own photos, videos or artwork.

Upon initial inspection, it would appear that now I am mapping traits of a community member (interaction) against traits of a community (exclusivity), but I would argue that the level of exclusivity of a community also represents the level of commitment on the member’s behalf prior to joining, with the only exception being potential members of an outside selection community. However, in most cases I would say that the influencer status required to gain an invite to those communities require a prior commitment far beyond a simple purchase.

Below is a diagram showing the intersections between the three levels of involvement and the four levels of prior commitment. The arrows indicate increasing levels of potential brand impact (both positive and negative). While it is fairly intuitive that a more involved member can do much more to boost or damage your brand, the level of prior commitment also corresponds to the level of brand impact because as the level of commitment increases, the exclusivity of the community increases, thereby providing each member with a higher degree of influence (both on and offline). For example, people are much more likely to listen to someone who they know owns a Harley Davidson (by virtue of their membership in that owners’ community) than an anonymous post on a Harley Davidson discussion forum or blog. Also, in addition to having more potential impact, I would expect community members to demand more involvement from the brand as they move upwards and to the right through the categorizations.

The Different Types of Brand Community Members

The above dynamic creates an interesting balancing act for those setting out to create brand communities. I believe most brand managers if asked would say that they would prefer brand community members in the upper right part of the chart., but before a brand sets out to recruit or create a community of those high impact members, they need to consider whether or not they are willing to devote the internal resources necessary to continue to feed the demands of those members and respond appropriately if a negative groundswell does occur.

Google Experimenting With Video in Paid Search Results

28 Mar

Google is now providing select customers with the ability to embed videos within PPC results (check out the second sponsored result). I am sure this is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of what Google will enable in search results, both paid and organic in the next few years. Once these type of features become enabled for organic search results (which should present enough incentive for web developers to adopt some standardization in terms of microformats), we really will begin to see the next generation of search results emerge.

Update: I should have taken a screenshot as it looks like the experiment is over.

SXSW Interactive – Jane McGonigal Keynote

27 Mar

I went into this keynote with no expectations, having never heard of either Jane McGonigal or Alternate Reality Gaming (for a great example of ARG, check out World Without Oil, one of Jane’s creations) before. In fact, I was debating whether or not to go to this or Secrets of JavaScript Libraries. However, I found this event to be unequivocally, the most inspiring and eye-opening event I attended during SXSW.

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SXSW Interactive – Mark Zuckerberg Interview

15 Mar

I don’t really need to post about this as it has been covered just about everywhere you can think of, but since I was there, I thought I would share my thoughts on it and provide a couple updates to the story. First of all, I didn’t think Sarah Lacy’s questions were that bad. I found some of them to be quite insightful. I was just more upset at how she started off the interview by attempting to humiliate Zuckerberg (very odd considering she was hand-picked by Facebook). He clearly wasn’t totally at ease to begin with and isn’t known to be very open so I doubt embarrassing him would encourage him to open up.

Also, her conversational interview style didn’t seem to work too well for him as she ended up talking far more than I think anybody would have liked to hear, leading to the mob uprising. While the way the audience reacted was not warranted, she reacted very poorly to the situation. If she had ignored them, the interview would have likely had a happier ending. Instead, she went on the defensive, lashing out at the audience and even her interviewee.

To make matters worse, in an interview she gave at a party shortly after the fiasco (nearly 40,000 views so far), she put the blame on not only the audience, but also the organizers, implying that what she was talking about was over the heads of the audience and that SXSW isn’t a good forum for someone of Mark Zuckerberg’s stature (funnily enough, he showed up and did an open Q&A at a Facebook Develop Garage the next day to some acclaim).

This dissolved all sympathy I had for her as her reaction to the situation clearly put her at just as much fault as the audience. Regardless of who was to blame this should have been the point where she apologized and admitted to having had a tough day, instead she insults the audience that includes a number of key influencers that could have a profound impact of the sales of her upcoming book. I wonder how her publishers reacted. I would love to know what their sales projections were for the book before the interview and whether or not they have shifted and in what direction.

Related Links
Full video of the interview
Sarah Lacy’s first article for Business Week in the aftermath (still unapologetic)

SXSW Interactive – March 7th and 8th

8 Mar

I thought I would share a brief outline of what I have done to date at SXSW Interactive and share some brief thoughts on what I have seen. I decided to combine Days 1 and 2 as Day 1 wasn’t really too eventful. I will likely be expanding on some of the thoughts/threads below in the coming days.

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SXSW Interactive

7 Mar

I just arrived in Austin for SXSW Interactive and will be posting some coverage over the next few days. I am looking forward to some great panels and keynotes.

Thinking Interactive Goes Mobile

28 Feb

Not that I think that many people are reading this site on a mobile device. I just wanted to try out a service called MoFuse that creates a mobile site for your website from its RSS feed.

Check it out:
http://thinkinginteractive.mofuse.mobi/

Apparently it publishes an iPhone version as well.

Update: I tried out the iPhone version (thanks Brian) and it is pretty slick, complete with those AJAX page transitions that scream Apple. Although you could just as easily open the site feed as it automatically displays in the Mac reader (without the slick transitions though).