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Bundle: it watches your wallet
Interesting new start-up called Bundle which aims to provide an objective take on recommending where to shop.
Instead of relying on personal reviews, which suffer from various biases (fake reviews by shops; people more likely to comment when they’ve had a bad experience), Bundle uses anonymous - but demographically-tagged - credit card spend data from Citi.
It uses this to analyse measures of where people like to shop - e.g. how many repeat customers a business has, the amounts customers usually spend, what types of people go there, and what other places customers of an establishment frequent.
Tagline: Discover the REAL top places for everything in your city
Posted on February 23, 2012 with 4 notes ()
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Hello world
I’m guessing you’re mostly here from the Tumblr Technology Spotlight. Thanks Tumblr! And thanks for following.
The 101:
Who: Jay Owens
What: social (media / research / anthropology / theory). Interested in what technology means and what it does to us psychologically and socially.
Especially: identity, privacy, big data.
Basically: social nerd.
Where: London, @hautepop and JayOh.net.
Weekdays 9-7: working at FACETwo other of my favourite Tumblrs were also spotlighted, so I want to share the love and recommend:
1. Modern Im/Material Things // @CDennaoui
Social media strategist by day, critical theory nerd by night, and former anthropology student to boot. (Sounds familiar!) But Christina studied Middle Eastern politics and religion, and also makes abstract electronic music and digital collage.
[I’ll update with links to my favourite of her posts when her SOPA block comes down tomorrow ;)]2. Stowe Boyd the Underpaid Genius // @stoweboyd
Stowe describes himself as a “Social anthropologist, clairvoyant, postfuturist. My work is social tools and their impact on media, business, and society.” He’s got an interest in social media tools for work (like Yammer and Basecamp) but envisioning a future where they’re (a) properly social and (b) change how we work.
But I’m recommending him because he also thinks a lot about political implications, economics and green issues.There are enough people just writing about technology. What’s interesting is to leave the hype-y Silicon Alley bubble and really mash it up with the complexity of the whole wide world out there.
Posted on January 18, 2012 with 8 notes ()
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Not Sharing Is Caring
A good article on Slate on Thursday - Not Sharing Is Caring: Facebook’s terrible plan to get us to share everything we do on the Web by Farhad Manjoo (@fmanjoo):Mark Zuckerberg wants you to share. He doesn’t much care if you want to share. Sharing, in Zuckerberg’s view, has morphed from an affirmative act—that video was hilarious, I think I’ll Like it!—to something more like an unconscious state of being. I watched that video, and therefore it will be shared.[…]
Zuckerberg calls this “frictionless” sharing. What he means is that I don’t have to bother with the “friction” of choosing to tell you that I like something. On Facebook, now, merely experiencing something is enough to trigger sharing. Once I sign up for Spotify’s Facebook app, my consent is assumed: When I listen, I share. The same goes for the many other apps that Facebook’s partners are launching. [….]
This is a nightmare, but not for the reasons you might suspect. I don’t hate this new model because of its lack of “privacy,” or due to Facebook’s clear financial interest in collecting my personal information. […] My problem with “frictionless sharing” is much more basic: Facebook is killing taste […]
For as much as he’s invested in sharing, though, Zuckerberg seems clueless about the motivation behind the act. Why do you share a story, video, or photo? Because you want your friends to see it. And why do you want your friends to see it? Because you think they’ll get a kick out of it. I know this sounds obvious, but it’s somehow eluded Zuckerberg that sharing is fundamentally about choosing. You experience a huge number of things every day, but you choose to tell your friends about only a fraction of them, because most of what you do isn’t worth mentioning.
Now Zuckerberg wants to lower the bar. “One thing that we’ve heard over and over again is that people have things that they want to share, but they don’t want to annoy their friends by putting boring stuff in their news feeds,” he said during his keynote. To me, this doesn’t sound like a problem that needs solving. If Facebook users aren’t sharing stuff because they worry it will bore their friends, good! Thank you, people of Facebook, for your restraint in choosing not to bore me.
But Zuckerberg couldn’t let this undersharing stand. “Our solution was to create a new place that’s lighter-weight where you can see lighter-weight stuff—that’s how we came up with Ticker.” If you translate “lighter-weight” to boring, you’ll understand what Zuckerberg is saying: Facebook now has a place on its site reserved especially for boring updates
I think Manjoo - but potentially also Zuckerberg - has misunderstood something about sharing all this information. It’s not for your friends to read. If it’s useful, it’ll work in subtle and largely invisible ways - simply shaping the selection of music you get on Spotify so it’s stuff you’re more likely to like, or helping you be directed to the news stories you really want to read.
If the Facebook interface has got it wrong, however, it will indeed be bombarding users with the little stuff. Already the top right Latest Activity box is entirely useless - I don’t care whether a ‘friend’ I hardly know has Liked a stranger’s status update; “Like” means so little.
This bodes badly for the usability of the new Facebook design.
However what I also wanted to highlight was Manjoo’s other point about all this sharing producing “another bit of noise in their already noisy world”. It’s made me think about what I retweet and some of the things I post to Tumblr. Another quote? Another article? I only share things I think are good, but I’ll share “good” and not just “great” or “life-changing”. And I wonder whether this essentially amounts to clutter.
Already I spend too much time reading things on the internet, and not as much as I should thinking and writing. I don’t read anything that’s not interesting and engaging - I will close a boring or irrelevant article after the first couple of paragraphs - but nonetheless I would like to refine this further; to read only five mind-bending ideas a day, not fifty “that’s nice”.
All this content sharing and recommendation is information that could be used to help direct me to those five articles. (I use TweetedTimes.com already, and very relevant it is.) But still the volume’s just a bit too close to ‘flood’.
Posted on September 24, 2011 with 18 notes ()