Friday, September 2, 2011

Seesmic is focused on social enterprise; Android, iPad Debuts Apps for Salesforce CRM

Leena Rao is currently working as a writer for TechCrunch. She recently finished graduate school Medill School of journalism at Northwestern University, where she studied business journalism and videography. From 2004 to 2007 she helped lead Congresswoman Carloyn Maloney advocacy and community relations in New York. She graduated from Columbia University in 2003, where it was ... ? Read More

seesmic

Social application developer Seesmic makes a big step in social enterprise and debuting dedicated Android app and iPad app for Salesforce CRM product (Windows phone 7 will also be added soon), called Seesmic CRM. Android app will be published tomorrow morning at Salesforce at the annual Conference, Dreamforce and Seesmic launches iPad app within a few weeks.

For the background of Seesmic, which was founded by a French entrepreneur Loic Le Meur, allows you to monitor and follow up the social web. Seesmic desktop, Internet and mobile clients integrate with Twitter, Facebook and other social networks. Bonus using an application like Seesmic is the ability to combine your streams from a variety of social Web services such as YouTube, Foursquare, Techmeme, LinkedIn, and others.

But lately, Seesmic dabbling in the enterprise and launch more focused business functions. Last fall, Seesmic has deep integration with Salesforce enterprise social network chatter. And then earlier this year, Salesforce 4 million Australian dollars round in Seesmic.

Mostly Seesmic Android and iPad apps CRM lead all the functionality of Salesforce CRM for mobile phones. Users can search their Salesforce.com account from native applications; Search for leads, contacts, accounts, related activities and sets of chatter on the move; Creating and updating leads, contacts, tasks, and activities; Log calls and emails after meetings; and much more. And applications use mobile OS; to map users to their respective leads to their current location; upload photos and more. While prices had not been announced yet, Seesmic may charge a fee of $ 10 per month per user for the application.

Le Meur tells us that he does not compete with Salesforce CRM giant, because currently does not offer in-depth Android and iPad apps. In fact, Seesmic is working "hand in hand" with Salesforce mobile group to develop these native apps. And Salesforce particularly bullish on social enterprise at the end — "Welcome to the social enterprise» is the theme of the Dreamforce this year. As Le Meur said: "we are working with Salesforce, not compete with the company."

Of course it's interesting that Twitter's developer platform is shifting focus from building consumer and focusing on the enterprise. In March, Twitter basically told developers avoid compete with them on their own customers. It's not that Twitter doesn't want developers to build off their platform, they simply do not want developers to create clients that simulate Twitter's own services.

Thus Seesmic found new user base in the area of business. Le Meur explains that the use of mobile and social enterprise of the future for Seesmic. While the startup will not relinquish their Web and mobile applications (Android app company has more than one million users); all efforts of Seesmic now completely focused on attracting social for business users, "said Le million euros.

Seesmic BlackBerry app shuttered a few months ago. You can watch Le million euros in a recent conversation with TechCrunch TV Andrew Kina here.

(Disclosure: TechCrunch editor Michael Arrington was an early investor in Seesmic.)


Seesmic is a powerful set of social media and collaboration tools that provide businesses and individuals with everything they need to build and manage their brands online. WITH ...

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Thursday, September 1, 2011

Social network paradox

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Editor’s Note: Nina Khosla is a designer and founder of Teethie, a social blogging startup focused on building interest-based communities. You can follow her @ninakix.

Over the years, there’s been a radical change in the way we interact with our networks of friends online. It used to be that we had a few of our friends (online or offline friends) on a service, allowing us to connect to friends through the Internet and see what their activities were. Where the Internet used to be a somewhat scary world full of strangers, we suddenly had friendly anchors to explore that world with. Sure, most of our friends weren’t online, or at least not using the same services, but the familiarity was comforting and the ability to see what a few of our friends were doing allowed us to find new content and new friends.

We fell in love with sites that made us feel like there are people out there who are similar to us, who we are talking to and having common experiences with. But then, some of these networks — Facebook and Twitter in particular — began to grow explosively. Facebook facilitated a cultural norm of using its service to “friend” everyone we knew. All of a sudden we had tons of our friends everywhere we went. With the experiences gained sharing online spaces with a few friends, logic would dictate that having more of our friends online would make this experience richer. But that isn’t what happened.

Instead, there is a new trend happening: We’re not really paying attention to our friends we’re connected to online. Take Twitter, for example. Twitter used to be a great place for many early adopters to talk tech. It wasn’t so long ago that there were few enough people on Twitter that you could read every single tweet in your stream.

But as the network began to become more dense, and people found more people they knew and liked on Twitter, they began following hundreds of people, and reading all those tweets became impossible. This is such a fact of life that entire companies are based on the premise that you have too many friends on Facebook and Twitter to really pay attention to what they’re saying.

For example, Flipboard, among others, highlights its abilities to share with you the best of your friends’ Twitter and Facebook posts. These companies, and even Facebook’s news feed intelligence, are helping us deal with the disconnect we have with our friends because of our connectedness—they’re sorting through the deluge of information this expanded network created for us.

Therein lies the paradox of the social network that no one wants to admit: as the size of the network increases, our ability to be social decreases.

Like anything else, networks and the information flowing through them follow the laws of supply and demand. As the number of bits, photos and links coming over these networks grew, each of those invisibly began to decrease in worth.

Perhaps that explains the excitement over new products. When a smaller crew of people are using a tool, such as Foursquare, we can keep track of our friends’ locations and whereabouts. At a smaller scale, knowing this information and being able to expect that others have also seen it let us all in on a little secret, it made early use of Twitter feel somewhat magical. But as the number of friends begins to increase—particularly over that magic Dunbar number of 150—the spell begins to wear off. At this scale, we simply can’t easily keep track of it all. When our number of connections rises above 150 everything becomes simply comments, as real conversations tax our already limited ability to interface with the network.

What used to be a small community of web explorers and renegades had turned into nothing more than a large party of somewhat meaningless Foursquare checkins and an excessive use of hashtags. That mythical thing, social connection, doesn’t flow over these networks; information flows over these networks. The only reason the network ever felt meaningful was because, at small scale, the network operated like a community. But that breaks apart at large scale.

Which leads us to communities: Communities, the kind with clearly demarcated lines of membership, have always existed within the context of larger networks, and always broke off in bits and pieces to make them feel familiar. Communities, and the spaces that are given to them to form in, are the only way we are able to work with the network of the physical world. Our soccer team, our school, our workplace, our street, our town, all have their own communities. And I suspect that these are the only things that will make the digital world similarly manageable.

Communities give us an audience and a perspective. We know who we’re talking to. This doesn’t seem like a big thing, but it’s the glue that holds our communication together. It’s the difference between shouting out into the void, and having a conversation with someone standing in front of you.

What’s the difference between live tweeting a sports game or participating in an SB Nation game thread? A tweet is not an experience, it’s the broadcasting of an individuals’ experience to a vague and undefined audience. When I think about the kinds of things I tweet, they’re things like “I just read a cool article, check it out,” or “About to get on a plane,” or “GOALLLL!” if my team (the San Jose Sharks) has just scored.

The thing about all these is that they’re not a shared experience—they are my experiences, which I am sharing with you, but you probably cannot experience with me—my thoughts or fascination with the article I just posted, the feeling of getting on that plane, or the thrill of watching the Sharks tie the game. Perhaps you can compare your notes of your own experience of these things; that’s what most Twitter conversation seems to be, to me, but the experiences are not shared.

This differs from a discussion in a community, such as the type that occurs on SB Nation game day threads. The conversation does not center around any one individual’s experience, but rather the collective condition of the community. The conversation is the experience. Each comment is driven with the purpose of evoking and expressing the emotions that the community experiences, and particularly the ones they hold in common.

This habit of evoking and expressing common emotions is what drives inside jokes and their internet incarnation, memes. Sure, there are disagreements and differences in communities, but the magic is in the similarities: Knowing that everyone on there is also a Sharks fan and just swore at the TV over that goal is emotional and valuable. That’s what expands the sense of belonging and membership that people in a  community feel, and becomes a basis for the entirety of the rest of the discussion (even, especially, differences).

SB Nation is in real-time, but it doesn’t have to be: communities have sprung up for years on traditional, slow PHP bulletin boards. Lost fans populated message boards and blogs, uniting over their common love of Lost, and the way the show antagonized them—what is in that hatch?!

If the pattern of all our networks is to grow larger, as Facebook has pushed others around it to become, consumers will hit these limits on the meaningfulness of these networks. If we are creating social products, we need to create products that do allow people to be social, really social.

We need to build products that don’t just allow users to write and publish, we need to create products that encourage discussion, experiences, and lasting, meaningful relationships. These are the things that create real benefits for users and the products that inspire them. And thus, the future of the social web is no longer on a network, it’s within communities.


Teethie is stealth startup currently building a social blogging tool focused on building communities of like-minded individuals.

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Nina Khosla is a 22-year-old designer and entrepreneur that went Stanford and learned about Product Design. She’s a high school drop out, a ski racer, and is currently working...

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BoltJS: another secret part of Facebook's Spartan puzzles?

MG Siegler at TechCrunch to write for the 2009 year. It covers web, mobile, social, big companies, small companies, almost all. And Apple. A lot. Prior to TechCrunch it covers different technologies beats for VentureBeat. Originally from Ohio, mg attended the University of Michigan. He previously lived in Los Angeles, where he worked in Hollywood and in San Diego where ... ? Read More

Screen Shot 2011-08-29 at 4.37.09 PM

After a steady flow of information in June, all was quiet on Facebook project Spartan front in recent weeks. Initially, at least some thought the plan was to reveal the Spartan in July, but it is clear that came and went. It is certainly possible, we don't hear anything until f8 in late September at the present time. But one new bit of information has come to our attention that could be linked. Say hello to BoltJS.

BoltJS is a UI framework that is built on Facebook for this purpose "helps developers build fantastic mobile Web applications with HTML5 and Javascript, as you can read it here for yourself. It is entirely written in JavaScript and runs in a browser window, it means that you want to not handling backend. And guess where the focus of the project is now: mobile browsers WebKit — as the Spartan project.

Here is a description of the developer Shane O' Sullivan's own words from the GitHub project page:

BoltJS is a structure of UI design Facebook is compact, fast and powerful. It is entirely written in JavaScript and runs in a browser window, requiring no backend server. While BoltJS can be used in the progressive enhancement approach, it is intended primarily for interfaces that are built mainly, if not entirely, in a Web browser.

Although the objective of the project BoltJS to support as many modern browsers as reasonable, currently focused on supporting mobile browsers, WebKit, design the best possible platform for mobile sites and HTML5 apps.

About ' Sullivan is a software engineer at Facebook Client UI team. Other sponsors of the draft are will Bailey, Vlad Kolesnikov and Tom Occhino.

BoltJS is built on top of Spears and plays nicely with Facebook the current code, comments about ' Sullivan. It also contains modules that use CommonJS standard. For all other technical details, check the docs page GitHub.

But here are some other interesting things about the project. First Facebook doesn't seem to want to say a few words about this. I asked them about this a few hours ago after back and forth about something else. So far Nada in response to this. This is not surprising, given what I said about BoltJS — namely that it should still be secret.

While at GitHub are documentation, source code was never released to the public yet. Links do not work on this page for the source files zip and tar. But I'm told that BoltJS already being licensed secretly to third parties that are preparing applications to show off using the platform. At least one of these third parties is a major player in the consumer Web space. Again, this sounds a lot like the Spartan.

Also on GitHub-demo application built using BoltJS, entitled "Weather app". If it looks familiar, it's because you have an iPhone. It is essentially a weather app again using the JavaScript framework. Still think Facebook is not going to fight with Apple's mobile down the road? …

It's all for now. More as we get it.


Facebook is the largest social network, with more than 500 million users. Mark Zuckerberg founded Facebook in February 2004, originally as an exclusive network for students at Harvard University. She ...

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Google + source code Snoop Gets the job done in Google

google-plus-logo

Austrian blogger and designer Florian Rohrweck recently discovered a lot of Google + upcoming features just digging around in the source code for a new social networking services. He was one of the first (but not only), open Google + games prior to its launch, for example, as well as the still-unreleased features, such as "shared interests" and social search among other things.

Now it seems Google had enough Rohrweck snooping. He hired Rohrweck to protect the code instead.

This story is a little familiar, doesn't it? In the end only last week, Apple hired one of iOS best hackers, Nicholas Allegra, also known as "@ comex" on Twitter, to work on providing mobile operating system.

In addition Rohrweck will be responsible for providing Google Web apps from leaks and possible worked as a developer advocate. (Even he doesn't know that his duties would include, he said.) The ink does not dry on the contract Rohrweck notes, so technically he's going to be employed, do not work yet.

But to be clear, snooping code (and blogging about it extensively), got a Google account first. Said Rohrweck, Exchange, "Yes, that was my brain and sneaky!" that makes them nervous Google already took notice and gave him scream in Google + at the code in an Easter egg.

We expect to get hired by Google Rohrweck detailed and sneaky (and Yes, sometimes NSFW) views on the future of Google + will be published now is not for everyone. It's too bad for us, but probably smart of Google.


The Google project, headed by Vic Gundotra and Bradley Horowitz, Google + is designed for social expansion of Google. Its ability to focus on making online sharing easy ...

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