Archive for the 'Social Media' Category

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The Apology Podcast?

On This American Life episode #48, Ira investigates The Apology Line, a phone line that anyone could call up and anonymously apologize for just about anything.

Quoting from Jason Kottke:

“The way it worked was that you could call and confess to anything that you wanted, and you’d be recorded, or you could call and listen to other people’s confessions.” Sounds sort of like a phone-based message board.

Now quoting the apology project:

Over the course of the project, the Apology line received more than ten thousand confessions, for misdeeds ranging from pulling pigtails in grade school to a series of sadistic ritual murders. Click here to read a small selection of some of the messages recorded on the Apology Line. In a period prior to the emergence of the Web and online communities, Allan pioneered the use of telephone technology to permit confessions to be recorded, played back and commented on by an ever-expanding virtual community.

I think we need The Apology Podcast. If it doesn’t exist already (I’ve looked, didn’t find it, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t out there), I’d love to see someone create it, or create it myself.

Free Rice Challenge

FreeRiceNot doing anything tomorrow? Why not play FreeRice and help feed some hungry people?

There’s a group on facebook called “Free Rice Challenge” that asks you to play FreeRice and post your totals on the group’s wall. They’ll then add up the totals and see just how much of that rice is coming from facebook members.

If you don’t know what FreeRice is, here’s what the BBC has to say:

An internet word game has generated enough rice to feed 50,000 people for one day, the UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) has said.

The game, FreeRice, tests the vocabulary of participants. For each click on a correct answer, the website donates money to buy 10 grains of rice.

Companies advertising on the website provide the money to the WFP to buy and distribute the rice.

FreeRice went online in early October and has now raised 1bn grains of rice.

That is enough rice to feed 50,000 people for one day, the WFP said on Friday.

‘Viral marketing’

The head of the WFP, Josette Sheeran, said: “FreeRice really hits home how the web can be harnessed to raise awareness and funds for he world’s number one emergency.”

She said word of the game has spread with the help of internet bloggers and websites like Facebook and YouTube.

“The site is a viral marketing success story.”

FreeRice is the invention of US online fundraising pioneer John Breen.

I maintain that FreeRice is a genius idea. You boost your vocabulary, and someone gets to eat. Brilliant.

Social Media College Application

It seems that my friend Christopher Penn is up to his old tricks again, where I define “old tricks” as innovative ideas involving social media. On today’s Financial Aid Podcast he outlined his idea for a college application that involves online media aspects. I’d like to know what you all think about it.

Continue reading ‘Social Media College Application’

Third-Party Apps

Facebook applications annoy me sometimes. Continue reading ‘Third-Party Apps’

A Woven, Tangled Web

Coolest Facebook application ever, period.

Connection Cloud is a program that visualizes your social web on Facebook in a new and unique way. Find out who knows who in your friends list. An experiment in grouping and social webs. Go from an unorganized mess to an asthetically pleasing graph…

I’m aware that the application page spells aesthetically incorrectly, but let’s overlook this error. You get to see your clumps of friends in a giant graphic (1600×1200, png) and discover their relationships. Before thinking that this is lame, just try it out.

I would post up my Cloud, but I’m not sure how my friends would feel about that; I’ll stay on the safe side. Props to Christopher Penn for blogging about the application, where I discovered it.

Did you all discover anything cool or interesting? I know you will.

Thoughts on Facebook Polls

Everyday, Facebook, my social network of choice, puts up an interesting poll of some sort. I’ve made it a habit to check each day what interesting question will be posed, and what answers their sample of 1,000 participants gives. Today’s poll was so interesting, I just had to post some commentary on it.

Is global warming a problem?

Continue reading ‘Thoughts on Facebook Polls’