Got today's biggest laugh when I saw Flickr's new language selection: "Arrr!"
That's a really clever bit of marketing. Not only does it showcase Flickr's multi-language support while celebrating Talk Like a Pirate Day... it also prompts people like me to talk about the site!
Click on the image for a larger view of Flickr's Arrr!
Hat tip to Picocool for pointing out that you switch languages in the footer of Flickr's page.
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Hardy Har Arrrrrr!
Sunday, September 16, 2007
Mapping Community Archetypes to Myers-Briggs
Tara Hunt asks: "What's Your Archetype?" in a blogpost last month, which I only saw today.
Worth a read especially if you're interested in building online communities and have an interest in the Myers-Briggs classifications.
Based on my own recent Myers-Briggs test results, I'm apparently a Planner in Tara's line-up.
Planners - INTJAnd at some point several years in the past, I was more a Leader.
Planners are your project managers and they are the best. A planner has the uncanny ability to imagine an event or an experience and account for every little detail. They are good delegators and hard workers. They are also extremely hard on themselves and strict perfectionists.Planners expect a great deal from others and would not do well paired with Dreamers, Spectators or Networkers. To them, these types are flaky. Planners are people you want to pair with Workers and Organizers to move forward methodically on a project, especially an event.
From: What's Your Archetype?
Leaders - ENTJ
Leaders can’t stand to let things idle for too long. As soon as there is an opening, they will come along and direct a project. Once in that steward position, there is no stopping the leader. If pointed in the right direction, Leaders will be your saviors in getting things done.
Leaders need to be teamed up with Creators and Caretakers in order to be effective. They may sometimes have good ideas, but quite often, they are too effective at leading people astray. Think the Pied Piper.
From: What's Your Archetype?
I find these archetype descriptions helpful to keep in mind, especially for those situations where I find myself part of a project where success is dependent on getting a multi-disciplinary team with very different personality types working well together.
Posted by m at 8:25 PM 0 comments
Labels: Community, Psychology
Friday, September 14, 2007
Managing Twitter Preferences
I've now been using Twitter for over a year and I follow 314 people (to date), with sms notifications ON for the vast majority of them.
I like waking up in the mornings and finding a couple of hundred new messages in my phone's inbox. Reading those messages while lying in bed is, IMHO, the perfect way to transition from that bleary-eyed, just-awakened, half-catatonic state to being lucid and ready to get out of bed.
These past couple of weeks, however, I've been so busy and tired from working late that I've had to resort to turning off sms notifications entirely. I do this with extreme reluctance, because when things get busy, I'm all the more cut off from news of any kind -- I don't watch TV, pick up the paper, or even surf news sites.
The Idea: Saving Notification Preferences for People You Follow
After a couple of weeks of this, I've found myself wishing I could predefine a handful of "Profiles" for my Twitter account. I use the term "Profile" here in the same way that Nokia uses it on their phones -- as a user-defined collection of preferences or parameter settings. Unfortunately, Twitter already uses the term "Profile" to mean something else, so I will use the (more awkward) term "Preferences" instead.
For example, my "Normal" Preference would be:
- SMS notifications: ON
- IM notifications: OFF
- My personal notification settings for each person I'm following
- SMS notifications: ON
- IM notifications: OFF
- With notifications for all followees set to OFF except for those who happen to be:
(a) Family
(b) Close personal friends, or
(c) Newsbots.
- SMS notifications: Direct Messages Only
- IM notifications: ON
- Notifications for followers would be the same as my "Normal"Preference
So how would I use this? Well, for example, when I get to work, I'd only need to send something like "SetPreference Online" and all my Online settings (as defined above) are applied.
Just before stepping out of the office for lunch, I can then send "SetPreference Normal" or "SetPreference Busy" to switch from IM delivery to SMS delivery, and more importantly, have the customized notification settings applied for each person I'm following.
Of course, it's understood that I would have to define the notification settings for each "Preference," but I'm more than happy to invest the time if Twitter were to remember the specific combination of notification settings, and allowed me to easily switch back and forth between Preferences.
Right now, when I want to switch from one "Preference" to another, I'm forced to go through all these steps every time:
(a) set my IM preference,
(b) set my SMS preference, and
(c) set the notify setting for each person I'm following.
The thing is -- when I'm busy, I don't have time to change the notify setting for each person I follow. So I have no choice but to set SMS notifications to "Direct Messages Only"-- which cuts me off from tweets that I would have wanted to receive no matter what.
I doubt that this kind of request would make sense to folks who are following only a handful of people, so it's unlikely that I'll actually see this go into production on the Twitter site.
Maybe if I'm lucky, a third-party developer out there can put together a simple Twitter client that can store my "Preferences," and apply the changes to the settings as a 'batch' of API calls each time I set a new "Preference." That would be awesome.
Posted by m at 10:45 AM 0 comments