20 Comments

  1. Twitter is fast, but not synchronous. The speed of response is independent of whether it’s a synchronous service. Video conference is synchronous, Twitter is asynchronous.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asynchronous_communication

    Digg and Reddit (though not delicious) have become content channels a la Slashdot / Kuro5hin, in that the comments are often of equal if not higher value than the linked-to articles.

    The bulk of link posts to Reddit and Digg are SEO spam to generate backlinks, the value is in the conversation on approved posts. Treating them as distribution networks instead of conversational communities is a category error.
    .-= barry´s last blog ..Short thoughts: online advertising =-.

    1. All the world is content. Watching a sunset is content, so is air we breathe and food we eat. I just don’t find it useful at a media level to call everything “content.
      Therefore depth of content – videos, photos, articles – are CONTENT. Links and FFFF (Find Filter Forward) are DISTRIBUTION. Comments and votes are CONVERSATION. By splitting generic content into 3 we can have more meaningful discussions about how services differ.

      By the way Facebook are offering a blogging tool now in “Notes”. It’s still your gated community that sees that blog post, no chance to build a large audience for the normal user, no?

      Feel free to come up with a different term for Depth of Content (content created in isolation, presented usually as a finished product, awaiting comments and critique). We usually differentiate between 1. the film we saw, 2. the distribution outlet or cinema and 3. the discussion afterwards tho all three add to the “experiential content”.

      1. I’m just saying, Digg and Reddit are conversation, not FFF. When a single photo post generates an erudite, literate 10 page thread, it’s obvious that the point of interest is the conversation, not the image.

        I think the issue is that you’re viewing this through the prism of a person who wants to build a mass audience.

        The bulk of people on facebook, reddit, digg and so forth want to have a conversation, not give a lecture. I hate to say it, but you’re analysing this from a heritage media mindset.

        Watching a sunset is content? I don’t even know where to begin with that.
        .-= barry´s last blog ..Short thoughts: online advertising =-.

        1. hmmm I teach people how to understand communities, their rituals, the influencers and behaviours unique to each community – and yes the same vocal minority make the same comments on the social media sites. But in terms of reach, exposure and velocity on Digg, on Reddit and even on Delicious, the majority are still silent.

          Digg is fascinating for the conversation around the content – Citizen Editors discussing whether it should be front page or not. But ultimately a huge HUGE number of people just bookmark stuff, get 3 diggs and zero comments. It cannot be compared to true review sites where a higher percentage forward reviews as well as the original source.

          You are looking at the service and how you use it, not how the majority use it. Run the numbers again…

          1. as i said earlier:

            The bulk of link posts to Reddit and Digg are SEO spam to generate backlinks, the value is in the conversation on approved posts.

            The bulk of any service is spam. That’s not where the value is. Writing off the spam, you get a community that’s made up of a few loud self-promoters (a la Zaibatsu), an active community of commenters and engaged users, and then the lurkers.

            As you noted, When you compare social networks such as MySpace with Facebook with Friendster it’s important to see the differences, not the similarities.

            Anyone can create a link list, and there are a million of those out there. The value is in the difference, which for Digg and Reddit is the active, engaged community of commenters.
            .-= barry´s last blog ..Short thoughts: online advertising =-.

    2. Forgot to mention: In social networking terms, we use “asynch” and “synch” in a less-technical way. Instant messaging, chat channels, in world chat are synch. Blogs, youtube, wikis are considered “asynch”.

      Hence the move from created-in-isolation content to real-live interaction. Whether that delay ever gets down to zero will be interesting.

      1. who’s we? Some of us who work in the field like to use terms accurately. You must differentiate technical features from affordances.

        Twitter allows rapid, pseudo-synchronous communication. It is still asynchronous. Email also allows pseudo-synchronous communication, it just happens that pseudo-synchronous communication never took off as common mode of usage.
        .-= barry´s last blog ..Short thoughts: online advertising =-.

        1. As an ex-senior telecommunications engineer (I set up TAC and NOC for UUNET in Europe) I completely concur on your technical telco use of asynch.sync.

          Only this is social networking speak, not telecommunications.
          Try Wagner, C. (2005). Supporting knowledge management in organizations with conversational technologies: Discussion forums, weblogs, and wikis. Journal of Database Management, 16(2), i‑viii. Retrieved October 25, 2005, from Business & Company Resource Center database as a base study on asynch/synch communications through social media sites.

          Some of the derivative studies show charts of instant vs delayed communication streams in online communities.

          Barry, I’m not going to footnote everything I say in comments. It’s not appropriate, but I’m happy for people to ask -politely – for links to back up claims. K hon?

          1. If you can point out an established canon for social networking studies, I’ll agree with you on that point. As there isn’t, it’s probably best to avoid claiming uncommon usage of technical terms as common usage within a field. One academic article does not an accepted usage make.
            .-= barry´s last blog ..Short thoughts: online advertising =-.

  2. … Wagner is not an established canon? o.O

    Ah well. Maybe you mean populist? GigaOm popular enough for you.
    http://gigaom.com/2007/10/29/meebo-20/ <-- Instant messaging as synchronous communication. You could try searching Google for "synchronous communication in social networks" or even this blog - I've done heaps of posts on it in the last 5 or so years.

    1. no, i don’t mean populist. There’s a lot of academic work about *produsage* in social networking studies, that doesn’t make it accepted use by everyone.

      I’m not saying you shouldn’t use it. I’m just annoyed when you say in social networking terms, we use “asynch” and “synch” in a less-technical way when that’s simply not always the case. Some of us may, many of us don’t.

      aaaanyway… I’ve got some site stats to run. You’ve piqued my interest on the reddit stats, I’m interested to see the spammer : active user ration.
      .-= barry´s last blog ..Short thoughts: online advertising =-.

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