Friday, March 13, 2009

@LLiu @MikeG514 @georgedearing http://bit.ly/A2tKw : My take on this. "Habits"


Mike is very much right when it comes to the expectations vs. current capabiities of SharePoint 2007 as a E 2.0 tool (presumably there's some sort of definition for E 2.0 now). I spoke to Jeffrey Mann of Gartner today about E 2.0 and most of the conversation centred around on-premise / off-premise, corporately controlled / public available, legacy / new, build / buy kind of scenarios. Organisations will have spent a reasonable amount of on SharePoint 2007 installation, probably more if they upgraded from 2003. Sweating this asset is something that a lot of organisations are going to do, especially in the current climate. For those organisations that follow Microsoft's information Worker path and have Exchange with AD and .NET developers it's not a bad platform - single sign-on, basic identity, integration with Office count for a lot. Users like the flexibility, but it lacks in most of the areas it actually tried to proclaim itself in. It's not a good Portal, it's not a good application platform (lists aren't even relational for a start) it's not even a good document collaboration tool and laughable as a document management system if you compare it with what EMC have at the moment. However, it's probably good enough. It's breadth is its strength and its weakeness. Jack of all trades, far from being master of any of them let alone one.

The likes of Telligent and Bluekiwi have tried hard to supplement SharePoint (not that you need SharePoint for get value from either vendor) in ares where it is lacking. Indeed, my company used Telligent for press releases and it did a fairly good job until requirements matured and changed. I've seen demos of Bluekiwi and Telligent and other tools and I've been privvy to what Microsoft are planning in Office "14" being on the Advisory Council for that product. The tools are great, but they still take a lot of getting used to and, in particular, to become habitual to the average user. Microsoft are in a powerful position because of the SharePoint deployments they have and what will come in Office "14" and how it will link in to other tools that Microsoft have - they have a good chance of making E 2.0 habitual. Link it in with Outlook, link it in with Office Communicator, have a client for Windows Mobile (and a client for iPhone dare I say), make it browser agnostic, host it in the Cloud, yadda yadda. Breadth will give the tools the chance of weaving themselves into the natural working day. I saw @LLiu mention once that he'd been on twitter so much in one day he needed time to get back to some real work. Well for most people 'real work' is what they do - it's certainly not twitter. In Gartner terms E 2.0 is probably somewhere between the 'trough of disillusionment' and at the beginning of the 'plateau of productivity' - I'd put SharePoint slightly ahead on the hype cycle.

SharePoint deserves a beating, because of a lot of us have to either sell this stuff, run this stuff, evangelise this stuff or 'cope' with this stuff. E 2.0 is something that as a corporate IT strategist I have to take notice of, but I also have to take notice of compliance, document management, file shares, email, etc etc. It's confusing enough what medium to use to communicate and collaborate for most people without throwing something else at them. Microsoft's attempts to tack E 2.0 concepts onto SharePoint actually makes my life easier as it provides a smoother path to introduce it to the masses and for it to become 'habitual'. Massive paradigm shift is not normally possible until you have a huge change programme in an organisation - and I don't know many that are doing that with E 2.0. It's growing small and organically, it's appearing in the places we know and are familiar with, it's out there on the Web and creeps into our companies. Where Telligent are going with Harvest is probably the most exciting part. Because once you can make this stuff habitual being able to measure it, report on it and then change as a result is very exciting.

A ramble. I didn't spend long writing this so it's certainly not been written with hours of thought behind it, let's say it's straight from the hip. :-)

Posted via web from gazcoop

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Even more ancient email from Biz Stone


Scratch that. Found a more ancient email from @Biz Stone dated Febraury 7th 2007. Love this bit at the bottom

We made Business 2.0 magazine's list of "What's Next" at #4! We're
nestled snugly between wind power and implantable medical devices.
Reporter Michael Myser wrote that we're "catching fire."
He's right, it's getting hot in here!

Too right!

 

Hello Twitter-ers,


Is it February already? That means Twitter's been launched
publicly for over six full months now. Things are moving fast
these days. Even faster since we moved Twitter onto a seriously
impressive new server setup. Now our pages will be perky and our
little operation can continue to grow. Come on back if you get a
chance, http://twitter.com.

Vote for Twitter

Twitter has been selected as a finalist for the SXSW Web Awards.
The judges think we "revolutionize the power of publishing."
We hope we win! There's also a People's Choice category and we're
allowed to ask folks to vote for us. If you have a couple minutes
you can help us take home the prize!

Vote here: https://secure.sxsw.com/peoples_choice/

Speaking of SXSW, the conference organizers were kind enough to
work with us to do something they've never done before. They're
letting Twitter take over the hallways. Everyone knows that the
hallways at conferences are always brimming with action and this
year Twitter is going to reflect some of that action back out with
a couple big plasma monitors showing Twitter updates. We'll send
out more details on how this is going to work later but it should
be fun.

Twitter: Getting Easier

Making Twitter more obvious and easy to use is part of our ongoing
master plan. To that end, we made a few changes recently.
Specifically, your Twitter username is now more prominent. You can
still put your real name in your one line bio but it's your
username folks will see everywhere.

Displaying unique usernames means it will now be easier to tell
the difference between two people who happen to have the same real
name. So, instead of getting updates from multiple people named
"Adam" you will get updates from Adam, Adam12, and Adam_Ant. This
change also makes it simpler to direct message another person.

Example of a direct message:
d biz where are you right now?

When you text the letter "d" together with a friend's username,
that tells Twitter that you want the message to go specifically to
that friend and not to your other friends.

Twitter Updates and Upcoming Changes

Whois Command - We've added a WHOIS command to Twitter. Now, when
you text WHOIS BIZ to 40404 you will get the info I've filled out
in my settings. Try it out with anyone's username.

Fill out your one line bio: http://twitter.com/account/settings

Standardized Update Length (coming soon!) - Twitter updates will
soon be standardized to a maximum of 140 characters. Previously,
the maximum length varied and this caused some confusion. Soon,
everyone will have the same amount of characters to work with.
However, if you do run over, we'll catch the rest on the web.

Direct Message Emails - We added a new notification setting that
sends an email to you when one of your friends sends you a direct
message. This is good if you have Twitter deactivated on your
phone or IM but still want direct messages.

Friend Notification Toggle - If you don't want to get an email
every time someone makes you a friend on Twitter, you can turn
those off here: http://twitter.com/account/notifications

Welcome, Jason Goldman!

We're really excited to welcome our friend Jason Goldman to
Obvious and Twitter. Jason was formerly product manager for
Google's Blogger and he joins Obvious as Director of Product
Strategy. We're looking forward to working with Jason again.
Of course, Jason is on Twitter: http://twitter.com/goldman

His Name Is Earl

Our friend Mike Pennie writes and produces a sit-com called
"My Name Is Earl" for NBC that is all new this Thursday February 8
at 8pm (PST). Mike is going to update Twitter during the show for
viewers in the Pacific Time Zone. If you like the show, it might
be fun to follow Mike for an extra laugh.
Follow mike on Twitter: http://twitter.com/mikepennie

What's Next? Twitter in The News

We made Business 2.0 magazine's list of "What's Next" at #4! We're
nestled snugly between wind power and implantable medical devices.
Reporter Michael Myser wrote that we're "catching fire."
He's right, it's getting hot in here!

Alrighty, that's it for now.

Happy Twittering!
Biz Stone and the Twitter Team
http://twitter.com/biz

Posted via web from gazcoop

Ancient email from Biz Stone when Twitter was young.


Found this lurking in my email box. An email from @Biz from Obvious when twitter was still fairly young. Dated February 21 2007. Seems all my first posts from my phone (before Twitter had all it's mobile clients) are gone now, not sure why. However, they were very much 'Hello World' style posts. :-)

 

Hello Twitter-ers!

As you may already know, Obvious is the parent company of Twitter
and it's never a dull day around here. Today our little building
is abuzz with activity surrounding an announcement that Odeo
(another Obvious product) is ready for a new home. We're
entertaining offers from potential buyers because Odeo deserves
the same love and attention we've been heaping on Twitter these
days. Have you been by lately? http://twitter.com

More about Odeo: http://tinyurl.com/2yoy84

Defamer Brings The Oscars to Twitter

Popular Hollywood gossip blog Defamer.com is going to the Oscars
this Sunday and they're bringing Twitter! Sorta. Follow Defamer on
Twitter and you'll get live from-the-scene updates. Who won what?
What's happening in the seats? What are the stars doing? Get the
updates on your phone while you watch on TV to make things more
interesting or if you can't watch, just get the updates.

Text FOLLOW DEFAMER to 40404
or, Visit http://twitter.com/defamer
Oscars: http://oscar.com

If you haven't set up your phone to work with Twitter yet, now is
a good time! You can do that here: http://twitter.com/devices. The
Oscars are broadcast live February 25 at 5pt/8et on ABC. Speaking
of coveted awards, you can still vote for Twitter and help us win
the SXSW People's Choice awards. We will be so psyched if we win.
Vote Twitterhttps://secure.sxsw.com/peoples_choice/

SXSW Update

There's going to be lots of folks from three industries
represented at the SXSW Conference in Austin next month. We've
heard from people in the Interactive, Music, and Film industries
who are excited to get on Twitter during the week-long event.
We'll have big screens set up in the hallways and we're setting up
a special, easy way for folks to get their updates on the screens.
Once we set that up, we'll tell you more. Even if you can't make
it to SXSW, you'll still be able to catch all the buzz.

Office Full of Great Folks

Obvious employs less than ten people but the building is filling up
fast since we've opened our doors to some other really cool
companies working on interesting projects. Two of the projects are
still top secret, there's a couple Y Combinator startups sharing
space with us, and the other folks are 30boxes.com, Boso.com, and
the illustrious Niall Kennedy. (Hi Niall!) When the secret
projects launch, we'll tell you about them--they're cool!

http://30boxes.com
http://boso.com
http://www.niallkennedy.com/
http://ycombinator.com/

Okay, back to work. Lots to do this week!

Happy Twitter-ing,
Biz Stone and the Twitter Team
http://twitter.com/biz

Posted via web from gazcoop