Friendfeed est un agrégateur qui permet de réunir en un seul endroit les différents flux - del.icio.us, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr, StumbleUpon, etc. - par lesquels ils s’expriment. Cela permet de “centraliser son moi” estime Michael Arrington de TechCrunch. Je préfère y voir un moyen de regrouper nos différentes personnalités sans renoncer a leur diversité. FriendFeed permet aussi de suivre les personnalités des autres et devient ainsi un espace de conversations. C’est ainsi qu’on voit les gens y poster de... lire la suite
Lien du post: http://pisani.blog.lemonde.fr/2008/06/12/friendfeed-quesaco/
Friendfeed est un agrégateur qui permet de réunir en un seul endroit les différents flux - del. icio. us, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr, StumbleUpon, etc. par lesquels ils s’expriment. Cela permet de “centraliser son moi” estime Michael Arrington de TechCrunch. Je préfère y voir un moyen de regrouper nos différentes personnalités sans renoncer a leur diversité.
Yet another way to distract me from my goals: FriendFeed. Join me. Seriously, this is a really great way to join all your social networks together. More on this soon.
I love my FriendFeed. Here’s a list of top bloggers who are using the service. Why do I love it? It’s one place you can find all my stuff and, even, comment on it. It’s amazing the discussions that a 140-character “Tweet” on Twitter can generate. I subscribe to a ton of people on FriendFeed and notice that often the conversations after a Twitter message will be 1000x longer (and generally more interesting) than the Twitter itself.
After opening to the public a week ago, a lot more people are showing up on FriendFeed, and it' s got features the others don' t have. The others? Yeah -- it' s competitive with things like: Twitter, Facebook, Jaiku and Pownce. And it' s simple and minimalist like Twitter, yet it fully embraces everything else out there that has a feed.
Heh, I just had to write something about the FriendFeed Food Fight. Heck, everyone else is doing it and it seems to be working very well as a gaming mechanism for TechMeme, even if the words are getting pretty darn unfriendly there. Me? I’m loving FriendFeed even more as more people try it out.
FriendFeed just added search. I just talked with Bret Taylor and he said that next up is an API, coming within weeks. Rocky and me will do an interview with the team at the end of the month. I told Bret that I’m an addict. Of course, maybe that means I have a mental disorder.
newVideoPlayer("FriendFeed_founder. flv", 463, 387,""); During this interview with Fortune, FriendFeed cofounder Bret Taylor explains why he and three other ex-Googlers happily left Google's organic, locally sourced swaddling for an uncertain future at a startup: When we make decisions, I get to just look up from my computer and and say 'Hey do you think we should do this?
We said a couple of weeks ago that FriendFeed is gaining a lot of traction. Since then we' ve started a background conversation and have been giving them a bit of friendly advice (heh, sorry). Today they added a feature that brings it closer to Twitter, and in some ways takes it to a place Twitter hasn'
I' ve been talking with the folks at FriendFeed about APIs and such, and boy do they move fast. I got the first draft of the API spec on Friday, and today it' s out there. http: code. google. com/p/friendfeed-api/wiki/ApiDocumentation Here'
The one business that has most gotten my attention, other than Qik. com, so far this year is FriendFeed. They are growing very quickly, 25% every few days. Today I was fortunate to meet up with co-founder Bret Taylor and Paul Buchheit. If you don’t read these two guys’ blogs (here’s Paul’s and here’s Bret’s), you really should, they have written a ton of stuff that entrepreneurs should read.
J’ai très souvent évoqué les différentes solutions de “micro blogging” dont Twitter a été l’un des précurseurs début d’année dernière. Ces applications où en quelques dizaines de caractères nous pouvons faire passer une information, un lien, une humeur ou tout ce qui se peut se dérouler autour de soi.
You’ve seen my ego feed on FriendFeed. It’s the one on the right side of the page on my newly-redesigned blog. You know, that’s where you can find all the crap that +I+ have done on the Internet. All my Google Reader shared items. All my Qik videos. And a ton of other stuff all show up on my ego feed.
Well, just spent the past four hours watching FriendFeed for interesting discussions about the Yahoo/Microsoft deal. This is the result. Page-after-page of conversations. It’s like a new talk show. There’s even an audio talk show that I participated in during this time.
Over on FriendFeed I’m following some of the better discussions of the Microsoft pullout of the Yahoo deal. Far different than what you’ll read about on TechMeme. Possibly related posts: automatically generated) Maryam on Yahoo’s rejection of Microsoft Has Microsoft caught up to Google in search?
Cathy Brooks is a typically unapologetic Silicon Valley Web addict," writes Brad Stone in the New York Times. Last week alone, she produced more than 40 pithy updates on the text messaging service Twitter, uploaded two dozen videos to various video sharing sites, posted seven photographs on the Yahoo image service Flickr and one item to the online community calendar Upcoming.
Les blogs ne sont que des instruments imparfaits de communication. Malgré les commentaires qui parquent une rupture substantielle avec les pratiques traditionnelles, le (ou les) blogueur/s conserve/nt un quasi monopole du discours. C'est en outre un mauvais outil de gestion des connaissances dans la mesure où son organisation temporelle et la classification très approximative par «catégories» ne permettent pas de retrouver facilement des notes écrites quelques mois plus tôt.
FriendFeed : enrichissement ou bruit ? Sur Mashable, Stan Schroeder présente les choses ainsi : The problem with FriendFeed's behaviour is that it fragments the conversation further. Instead of consolidating all of your feeds and making them easier to follow, it makes life more complicated for you, because you need to follow comments on both Twitter - for example - and FriendFeed if you want to be in the loop.
In the first part of this two-post series you read my ideas on why FriendFeed won’t go mainstream. In this part I get to answer why it will go mainstream. First, something funny: Thomas Hawk just posted this to FriendFeed: “Things in life that are addictive: digital photography, Flickr, Tommy’s cheeseburgers, those tangy sea salt and vinegar blue chips in the blue bag, coffee, Red Bull, and friendfeed.
Robert Blum got me to call him an idiot because of this Tweet: FriendFeed only helps if you’re dedicating your life to following yet another web site. Chris Saad took the conversation in a different direction with this Tweet: discussion should occur around the target object - if its a blog then in the comments - not on friendfeed.
Friendfeed is an excellent service aggregating all your feeds from different service providers, compile them together, build a social network among your known people and finally deliver all these feeds as a mashup. As a result you can immediately track activities of your friends on all the different service they use (like jaiku, twitter, flickr) [.