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‘Pics of My Homies’, and Artificial Intelligence at Facebook

Pics of My Homies Artificial Intelligence at Facebook Social Graph

Are you one of the people who are still actually using Facebook? You’re not alone, of course, but Zuck & Co. see their pending irrelevance coming. That’s why they created Facebook Graph, a new way of searching Facebook that, when it works right, is a pretty neat tool.

I’ve been using Facebook Graph for a few weeks. I can confirm that it does a better job of finding quasi-useful stuff than any other method of getting around everyone’s favorite (and least favorite) social network. And this morning, this piece at Wired illustrated a bit about why.

I Hate That All My Facebook Friends Are In My Phone

Smart Phone, Dumb Feature

I hate that all my Facebook friends are in my phone.

Or I would, if they were. That said, since I’m not just The Answer Guy, but The Computer Answer Guy, I’ve made sure that my Facebook contacts, LinkedIn connections, and the like haven’t been translated into address book entries in my SmartPhone.

The person you see tweeting above hasn’t been so lucky. As she points out, technology has taken over her SmartPhone in a way that she doesn’t care for. #idontknowyou, indeed.

I Dream of Jeannie Vs. Nate Silver’s Election Day Statistics

Election Day Statistics Meet I Dream of Jeannie on Facebook

You wouldn’t think it was possible to draw a line between I Dream of Jeannie and Election Day Statistics. You’d be wrong. And who drew that line for me? “Americans Against The Tea Party”.

While I have opinions, my overall theological/political stance is a lot like John Lennon’s was: “I don’t believe in Beatles; I just believe in Me“.

So, yes, I tend more toward Democrat than Republican, and the map you see above makes me happy. But it isn’t because this map makes the red states look vulnerable in a way that the standard land-mass-based version doesn’t; I like this map because it explains something that the standard topographic map hides.

I Dream of Jeannie, Barbara Eden, and Facebook Non-Privacy

I Dream of Jeannie, With Jeannie and Her Evil Twin Sister Jeannie II

I’m pretty sure Barbara Eden was my first crush.

I say this because I remember looking at the lady in the harem outfit watching I Dream of Jeannie and thinking how pretty she was. I was five years old at the time and we watched I Dream of Jeannie on a small black-and-white television. It was no great loss; the first season of I Dream of Jeannie was actually shot in black and white. In fact, in researching this article I learned  that I Dream of Jeannie was the very last black and white network television program.

A Year In, What’s Happening at Google+ ?

 

Jeff Yablon on Google Plus

 

Are you using Google+ ?

Here’s a better question to ponder before we try to answer that first one: do you know what Google+ is?

The folks at Neowin don’t. Welcome to business change, Google+ style. It’s a world where the search and advertising giant throws everything it has against a wall, waits to see what sticks, gathers up what fell to the ground, and starts throwing again. And while Neowin thinks that means Google+ has “no purpose”, they’re wrong.

Facebook, ‘Like’ Buttons, and Staying Out of Courtrooms

Oh, that pesky Facebook “Like” button. It turns out that your friends seeing what you read isn’t the only think that Facebook can broadcast to get you into trouble. Now, your ‘Likes’ can be held against you.

And frighteningly, that isn’t even the news here.

A federal judge has ruled that clicking the ‘like button’ doesn’t qualify as protected free speech under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. It’s a mind-boggling development in the “what is OK to say and do on the Internet?” branch of business change, and while this non-attorney is pretty sure the ruling will be overturned at a higher level, please be clear that if you fall into a Like Button Trap, ‘overturned on appeal’ isn’t going to help you.

A Facebook Happy Birthday and Social Networking Stupidity

Facebook Wishes You a Happy Birthday

Last week I celebrated my birthday. And Facebook celebrated right along with me; when I started my abbreviated workday on Friday morning I had a handful of Happy Birthday wishes from my social networking friends, and more rolled in while I was replying to those.

Facebook, Instagram, Business Change, and Fish Stock(s)

Yeah. Fish Stock.

If you think about it, Facebook is kind of a fish story, right? “I once caught a fish THIS BIG“. Yesterday, an even more unbelievable story unfolded in business change land, as Facebook spent . . . I can hardly even type this without retching a little bit . . . $1 BILLION (yes, one billion dollars) to buy an App. One App. One single, simple, been-copied-to-death-and-does-nothing-unique App.

Can Your Boss Ask For Your Facebook Password?

Give me your Facebook password, or you’re fired.

What would you do if your employer said that to you? Give up the goods? Refuse to allow the breach of privacy and hope s/he was bluffing? Lean in (either) direction and quickly hire an attorney?

What if a potential employer demanded your Facebook credentials as a precondition for getting hired?

In the social networking era, it’s a tricky question, and one that can be shut down by simply leaving your social network profiles open to exploration by whomever wishes to see them.

Facebook Stores are Shutting Down—Were They Ever Open?

Bought anything on Facebook lately?

Last week I came across this story at Mashable, talking about the demise of several major brands’ e-commerce efforts on Facebook. And my immediate reaction was that I hadn’t even realized these “Facebook Stores” existed.

My next thought went to what my reaction has been since we started seeing established brands with established web sites running television commercials trying to send people to their Facebook pages. Can anyone really believe that it’s a good idea to send traffic to facebook.com/pepsi instead of pepsi.com?

“Ranting About S*** At Work” on Facebook and Twitter

In the early hours of this morning, my son Mike tweeted this expletive-laced apology to his Twitter Community.

You can only imagine my pride.

Being a stickler for manners, I was happy to see that Mike thought his overuse of Twitter was worth an apology. But as a web-and-smartphone Twitter user I wasn’t sure what he was apologizing for; I never saw the 133 tweets he referred to—because, let’s face it, most of your tweets are never seen by most of your followers.

And then it hit me: I’ve always hated texting. And now I see a new reason to hate it.

Google Merges with Facebook. Privacy Ends Permanently.

Whenever I decide to write about privacy, I always cringe a little. As I’ve said more than a couple of times, privacy is a relatively new idea, has never really existed, and is impossible to legislate. The very idea of privacy is so complicated it makes my head spin.

Joining with Facebook, our friends at Google have decided to help us out and define privacy as simply as possible: at Google, your information is no longer controllable by you and you can’t opt out of whatever way Google decides to use your information.

Social Networking, But No Social Graces

social-media-ungrateful-iphone

If I hadn’t seen it myself, twice, I wouldn’t believe it.

In both the example above (courtesy of my son Mike’s Tumblr) and this example at Gizmodo, social media/social networking (via Twitter) show just how ugly it can be.

Facebook, you aren’t off the hook, but Twitter does seem to be a more rife grounds for this kind of thing.

SERIOUSLY? Tweeting about your displeasure with the Christmas gifts you received? And not just general “I wish I got better stuff for Christmas”—which would be no more or less self-indulgent than “Bob just ate a taco!”, but “my dad is a jerk because he didn’t get me the iPhone I asked for“.

Here’s Long-Tail SEO for Facebook’s Timeline Going Live

When Facebook announced their new Timeline View, I told you about it immediately. I also activated Timeline on my Facebook account, even though it wasn’t officially available. Courtesy of Timeline, starting a couple of months ago my Facebook account has looked like this to other early adopters:

Facebook Timeline View Profile for Jeff Yablon

When Timeline was released, Facebook stated that it would start rolling out “in a few weeks”. And word is trickling in that Facebook Timeline is starting to go live for everyone; presumably, Facebook has settled the legal challenges to Timeline that had cropped up.

Julien Smith, “The Flinch”, Kindles and Facebook Comments

Julien-Smith-The-Flinch-Facebook-Comments

I really like Julien Smith, but as you can see from this Facebook Comment Stream the dude is missing something important. And it’s really simple: Not Everyone Uses a Kindle.

I first came across Julien exactly two years ago. The Robin to Chris Brogan‘s Batman, Julien co-authored Trust Agents, a book that’s made Brogan very famous and thrust him into the upper strata of marketing consultants. Now, Julien’s released a book he’s authored himself. The Flinch is an easily read, insightful tome on human reactions to stimuli, and fits nicely into the questions that more and more people are trying to answer in the social media era.

And The Flinch is free.

Seriously. a full length book by one of the smartest young business authors around is yours for the asking. No strings attached.

OK, there’s one string: you can only read The Flinch on a Kindle, or using Kindle software. (aside: Julien Smith has just made a PDF version of The Flinch available in response to my questioning him on this point) aside #2: and now, two days later, Julien has deleted it.

Since only the people who visit here are likely to ever find that link, Julien still has a problem: it appears as though Julien Smith is endorsing the Kindle platform and telling his fans and potential readers that unless they drink the Kindle Kool-Aid they aren’t welcome to read The Flinch.

This of course isn’t true. But remember, perception is reality.

A very long time ago, I did TV and radio as The Computer Answer Guy, and make the radio program available on the Internet. I needed to decide what audio format to use. Was it WindowsMedia? RealMedia? QuickTime?

I chose “all of the above”. We encoded the program three times for each feed, so that as few people as possible would have to install software at the moment they were trying to listen to the program. We did the same thing at TechTalk, a radio program I co-hosted with Ken Rutkowski, and at the other media properties that Ken and I once co-owned, including Chris Pirillo’s Lockergnome.

But the days of what platform you use to publish your work are supposed to be over. Click a link, and your browser does the heavy lifting. If that work leads down a path where you need to jump through hoops to get at the content you’re looking for, the chance of you ever getting it are reduced tremendously. And remember: this problem only gets worse as computers get easier to use.

I’m happy to report that Julien Smith gets all of this. He and I are debating the issue even as I write this piece:

Julien-Smith-The-Flinch-Facebook-Comments-2

But I can’t help wonder how Julien could miss this point the first time around. And while that might sound like a criticism of Julien Smith, it’s much more a commentary on how much nuance there is in marketing in the social media age.

Read The Flinch. Think good thoughts about Julien Smith. And when you need help making your business and media goals come together, Contact Me Here.

Or if that’s one click too many ;-) , just fill out this form, and I’ll get right back to you:





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