Image via WikipediaI don't "get" Quora yet.
I mean, I get it. I see its importance. I see why it is hot. I see why it needs to survive and thrive. But I don't "get" it in that I am not an avid user yet.
It feels more like a way to rub shoulders with some top names in tech than anything else. But after a few years in New York City, you kind of get past that celebrity thing. Accomplished people make for interesting conversations, sure, but that is not true of all famous people. And there are famous people in all sorts of domains.
I have never owned a TV. I don't watch TV. So I routinely miss out on hit shows. I have been to a few parties where you get introduced to people who are apparently on some kind of a show, and you are like, you know, I am sorry, but we are just going to have to start with names. My name is. I mean, I don't know you, you come across as a pleasant person, so tell me more about your show, what is it about?
Showing posts with label Quora. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quora. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 05, 2011
Sunday, November 07, 2010
Askalo: Do You Know Your City?
Image via Wikipediahttp://www.askalo.com
Over 1,000 cities, 38 countries, 5 languages. Askalo is a web community. It is a platform. It is local. Ask questions. Share tips about your city. The Q&A format - Quora comes to mind - seems to be the latest craze in social. And Askalo brings that to city discovery.
Over 1,000 cities, 38 countries, 5 languages. Askalo is a web community. It is a platform. It is local. Ask questions. Share tips about your city. The Q&A format - Quora comes to mind - seems to be the latest craze in social. And Askalo brings that to city discovery.
Quora is a continually improving collection of questions and answers created, edited, and organized by everyone who uses it..... TechCrunch: Quora Has The Magic: Benchmark Invests at $86 Million Valuation ...... GigaOm: Former Facebook CTO Launches Quora, Competes with Yahoo Answers, Aardvark, Hunch
Wednesday, October 06, 2010
Facebook Needs To Revamp Email Next
Image by Ian Muttoo via Flickr
And the download feature is Facebook nuking Diaspora. This is a preemptive strike and a pretty big one too. On the other hand now suddenly there is room for some smart aleck startup to do something pretty phenomenal. This is Diaspora's death sentence or its godsend. Is the glass empty or full? I don't know. Let Diaspora decide.
What got my attention though is what is missing. Facebook has not yet revamped its email program. It needs to. 2010 is the year of The Dreaded Inbox. The original app of the computing experience has become a monster. And I think Facebook is uniquely positioned to tackle this huge problem.
How about giving every Facebook user a Facebook email address? So I might get paramendra@facebookmail.com. And give each user three inboxes. Inbox 1 is for people who are in my social graph. Inbox 2 is for people who are not necessarily in my social graph, but they are on Facebook and they are sending the email while they are logged into Facebook. Inbox 3 is for people who are neither here nor there, as in they are maybe sending you email from their Gmail account, maybe.
That simple, doable step would solve a lot of inbox problems for a lot of people.
Email has to be a scalable experience. Right now it has stopped being an experience for most people. And so people go hide. They hide on Twitter, and Quora, and, yes, Facebook.
Inbox 2 perhaps should have bells and whistles. You can email someone not in your social graph, but when you do, you are giving them permission to take a look at your full profile for perhaps one day of opening the email.
This is akin to the priority inbox concept. All emails are not the same. All human beings are equal, but that does not apply to emails.
I think the best part of the new Groups feature for Facebook might be that people now have the option to create robust Facebook work groups, and Facebook can now go Facebook Enterprise. Do you smell money?
Mark Zuckerberg: The Facebook Blog: Giving You More ControlFacebook's revamping the Groups feature is pretty fundamental. This has been a demand a long time. People have been saying that Facebook thinks people have only one social graph, the truth is people have many social graphs. I have not used the feature yet, just read about it, but looks like Facebook now lets you have your many social graphs.
And the download feature is Facebook nuking Diaspora. This is a preemptive strike and a pretty big one too. On the other hand now suddenly there is room for some smart aleck startup to do something pretty phenomenal. This is Diaspora's death sentence or its godsend. Is the glass empty or full? I don't know. Let Diaspora decide.
What got my attention though is what is missing. Facebook has not yet revamped its email program. It needs to. 2010 is the year of The Dreaded Inbox. The original app of the computing experience has become a monster. And I think Facebook is uniquely positioned to tackle this huge problem.
How about giving every Facebook user a Facebook email address? So I might get paramendra@facebookmail.com. And give each user three inboxes. Inbox 1 is for people who are in my social graph. Inbox 2 is for people who are not necessarily in my social graph, but they are on Facebook and they are sending the email while they are logged into Facebook. Inbox 3 is for people who are neither here nor there, as in they are maybe sending you email from their Gmail account, maybe.
That simple, doable step would solve a lot of inbox problems for a lot of people.
Email has to be a scalable experience. Right now it has stopped being an experience for most people. And so people go hide. They hide on Twitter, and Quora, and, yes, Facebook.
Inbox 2 perhaps should have bells and whistles. You can email someone not in your social graph, but when you do, you are giving them permission to take a look at your full profile for perhaps one day of opening the email.
This is akin to the priority inbox concept. All emails are not the same. All human beings are equal, but that does not apply to emails.
I think the best part of the new Groups feature for Facebook might be that people now have the option to create robust Facebook work groups, and Facebook can now go Facebook Enterprise. Do you smell money?
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- Email Solutions (technbiz.blogspot.com)
- A Quick First Look At The New Facebook Groups (techcrunch.com)
- Facebook Overhauls Groups, A Social Solution To Create "A Pristine Graph" (techcrunch.com)
- Graph Your Inbox (e1evation.com)
- Facebook revamps groups, creates new privacy transparency (popwatch.ew.com)
- Facebook About To Launch A "New Organizing Principle For The Social Graph"? (techcrunch.com)
- What Facebook's new groups feature means for media (lostremote.com)
- Facebook opens the walled garden door; Here's how you download your data (zdnet.com)
- Facebook Groups and new privacy dashboard will change how you game (games.com)
- Why Facebook's New Groups Will Change the Way You Use Facebook (readwriteweb.com)
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Super Angels, The Churning VC Game, And Catch Up Tech
Image via WikipediaThere's web services - aka dot coms - and then there's clean tech, bio tech, nano. Dot coms have become much less pricey. Anyone can rent server space with Amazon. Pretty much anyone can write code.
"You can learn the basics of Ruby in two days," a techie told me a few days back. "And it is all on Google, all the material is free."
Clean tech, bio tech and nano are still capital intensive.
But the biggest returns are in what I am going to call catch up tech. This is the world of microfinance and global infrastructure projects. An annual 10% return is the floor when it comes to these opportunities. If the wise guys - and they were guys - on Wall Street had known to pump excess capital a few years back into catch up tech rather than housing, we might have skipped the pain of the past few years. You pump up housing value, and you sell mortgage based securities to each other. That was like setting the house on fire starting from the basement.
Mike Arrington, TechCrunch: So A Blogger Walks Into A Bar…
Master Of 500 Hats: Fire in The Valley, Fire in My Belly... and Yes, Mike, I Have Stopped Beating My Wife.
Fred Wilson: Collusion
Quora: Who are the Super Angels that Michael Arrington is talking about in his 9/21/10 Techcrunch post, "So a Blogger Walks into a Bar..."?
Silicon Alley Insider: Hooray For Mike Arrington
"You can learn the basics of Ruby in two days," a techie told me a few days back. "And it is all on Google, all the material is free."
Clean tech, bio tech and nano are still capital intensive.
But the biggest returns are in what I am going to call catch up tech. This is the world of microfinance and global infrastructure projects. An annual 10% return is the floor when it comes to these opportunities. If the wise guys - and they were guys - on Wall Street had known to pump excess capital a few years back into catch up tech rather than housing, we might have skipped the pain of the past few years. You pump up housing value, and you sell mortgage based securities to each other. That was like setting the house on fire starting from the basement.
Mike Arrington, TechCrunch: So A Blogger Walks Into A Bar…
Master Of 500 Hats: Fire in The Valley, Fire in My Belly... and Yes, Mike, I Have Stopped Beating My Wife.
Fred Wilson: Collusion
Quora: Who are the Super Angels that Michael Arrington is talking about in his 9/21/10 Techcrunch post, "So a Blogger Walks into a Bar..."?
Silicon Alley Insider: Hooray For Mike Arrington
Related articles by Zemanta
- Hooray For Mike Arrington (businessinsider.com)
- Super angel Dave McClure admits he was at secret dinner, denies collusion (venturebeat.com)
- Aliza Sherman Takes Mike Arrington To Task (technbiz.blogspot.com)
- Super Sleuth Mike Arrington Uncovers a Plot - or Does He? (chris.pirillo.com)
- "Super Angels" Reportedly Trying to Stamp Out New Angel/VC Competition (webpronews.com)
- An Apologetic Mike Arrington (technbiz.blogspot.com)
- AngelGate: Who's Thinking About the Startups? (gigaom.com)
- AngelGate Update: What the Web is Saying (gigaom.com)
- Mike Arrington Is A Sexist Pig: Say PeeeeG! (technbiz.blogspot.com)
- Collusion (businessinsider.com)
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