Social Textiles

 

Social media + T-shirts = Social Textiles

Posted by Katrien on Friday February 13th 2009 at 22:02

This week I came across two great examples that perfectly match with the title of this blog: Social Textiles! They combine social media with clothes; more in particular with T-shirts!

Firstly there is the Facebook application, Status king which makes it possible to order T-shirts with  some basic Facebook information about yourself printed on: more in particular your Facebook status, user picture and how long ago you’ve updated your status. So if you want to let  know “what are you doing right now?” in a non-digital way!

But if you say: I’m not so a Facebook-fan. I’m more into Twitter, than I have some very good news for you! Similar to the Facebook application there is a service, called TWitoShirt which displays your tweets on a shirt, exactly as it appears on the web; so not only the message is printed, but also the username, user picture and the time that has elapsed. An additional feature is that you can also customize the size and colours.

Source: Mashable, Status king, TWitoShirt

5 stages of Twitter acceptance

Posted by Niels Hendriks on Tuesday February 3rd 2009 at 10:22

Via Robin Hamman, blogging at Cybersoc, I found a great presentation on the use of Twitter called “How Twitter changed my life” (by Minxuan Lee).

Most interesting elements of the presentation are:

* The 5 stages of Twitter acceptance (Denial - Presence - Dumping - Conversing - Microblogging)

* The fact that it’s not about the question “What are you doing?”, but about “What has your attention?”

* About the open API: “For every pain you face, there is a Twitter app. Otherwise, create it!”


via: Cybersoc

Internet Archaeology - history and sketches of Twitter (in 503 characters)

Posted by Niels Hendriks on Monday February 2nd 2009 at 11:02

The immenseley popular Social Media tool Twitter was founded in March 2006 by Evan Williams (@ev), Biz Stone (@Biz) and Jack Dorsey (@jack) who all worked at the podcasting company Odeo. The initial idea of Twitter however, started already in 2000 and came from a frustration from Jack Dorsey who was quite active at LiveJournal but wanted to create an even more ‘live’ journal: “Real-time, up-to-date, from the road.” He tried to slip the idea of live status updates into each project he was working on, but it was only at a daylong brainstorm at Odeo that he found the right people to start Twitter.

First Sketch of Twitter by Jack Dorsey

First Sketch of Twitter by Jack Dorsey

The initial use case for Twitter they worked on, was strongly linked to your mobile phone and text messaging and was city related: “Telling people that the club he’s at is happening. I want to have a dispatch service that connects us on our phones using text.” The first name one of the users came up with was friendstalker, but eventually became twttr, a name which was -self evidently- inspired by flickr, but also by the fact that American SMS shortcodes are five characters. Still, from the very first beginning they were using the name twitter (with the vowels) but had to halfly launch at twttr.com as they didn’t own www.twitter.com yet.
Twitter used to call Twttr - Mind the green logo.

Twitter used to call Twttr - Mind the green logo.

As Odeo needed to lay off a few of the founding fathers of Twitter a new home for this instant status update-service was needed. Obvious was born and it had the sole purpose of being the incubator for Twitter (in April 2007 Twitter got its own company -Twitter inc- with Jack Dorsey as a CEO). For a long while Twitter stayed in private beta and had the opportunity to grow in close contact with (and thus with a lot of feedback from) a small number of first user and enthusiasts. Now, Twitter seems to be the new popular kid on the social media block as it has by one measure over 3 million accounts and, by another, well over 5 million visitors in September 2008, a fivefold increase in a month (source: wikipedia).

Trivia:

  • There were no whales, nor birds in the beginning. The initial mascot was an indian (asian?) girl
  • One of the initial team members Dom Sagolla is working on a book called “140 Characters
    A literary guide for terse content”
  • The initial Twitter (or should I say twttr) colour was green
  • The short code to send your message to the Twitter service was “89887″ (which reads TWTTR on the numeric pad of your cell phone). It was later changed to 40404 as this was much easier to remember
  • The initial Twitter question to trigger action was not “What are you doing?” but the more informal “what are you up to?”
Indian (asian?) girl - the first mascot of Twitter

Indian (asian?) girl - the first mascot of Twitter

You’re on Twitter? Cool! I’m on Twitter too…

via: Wikipedia - 140 characters - Flickr

Obama’s inauguration and Social Media

Posted by Katrien on Tuesday January 27th 2009 at 11:21

Social media play an important role in sharing experiences, thoughts, feelings … During Obama’s Inauguration Day a lot of people used social media to get/stay connected with others and thus being part of that historical day. Some numbers:

During Obama’s inauguration Twitter reported five times more tweets.

But also on YouTube, this week only 332 000 new videos  containing the tag “Obama” were uploaded and 17 000 with the tag “Inauguration”.`

The full report can be found on Mashable

1983 - 2007 / The Machine - Person of the Year

Posted by Niels Hendriks on Thursday January 15th 2009 at 11:07

In the intro of his Phd (Defending my Bastard Culture!) researcher Mirko Tobias Schäfer writes about two TIME-magazine covers depicting the man/woman/group/… of the year.

The first one is the well known cover from 2007. A computer screen is depicted and in fact mirrors the reader looking at the front cover. The text on the bottom of the page says it all… “Yes, You. You control the Information Age. Welcome to your world”. Though this image has been widely used (and thus maybe loses a bit of its importance) it still is relevant as it refers to the so-called participatory culture (popularized under the term Web2.0).

The second one dates from 1983. Time Magazine did not elect a Person of the Year, but choose the computer as the Machine of the Year. The man in front of the computer is almost blanked out and sits alienated in front of the screen not even touching the keyboard.

Schäfer sees as a reason for this emancipatory evolution from a ‘machine in control’ to the ‘user in control’ the development of the computer as a work medium to a life-medium (work, leisure, friendship, family,…) and the great amount of content which ordinary users can publish online.

These are not ’shocking’ conclusions, but the way they get depicted by these TIME-covers, covering almost 25 years, is beautifull & illustrative.

10 Facebook friends equals one free whopper

Posted by Katrien on Friday January 9th 2009 at 12:26

Burger King is handy making use of a well-known Facebook phenomenon: having a lot of friends, you actually don’t know, in your list . Burger King now gives you the opportunity to lose some of those so-called friends: it created an application for Facebook - Whopper Sacrifice - which allows users to sacrifice 10 friends in exchange for a free Whopper.

But good news for my Facebook-friends: I’m a vegetarian :-)

Source: Whopper Sacrifice, The Huffington Post

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