Posts tagged going

Two Weeks In, Google Says “Search Plus Your World” Going Well, Critics Should Give It Time

Two weeks ago, Google launched Search Plus Your World. Since then, Google has faced strong criticisms that SPYW is making its search relevancy worse and favoring its Google+ social network too much. Not so, says Google search chief Amit Singhal. Most Google users are happy, Singhal said. Of course,…



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How to Increase the Odds of Your content Going Viral – Whiteboard Friday – SEOmoz (blog)


SEOmoz (blog)
How to Increase the Odds of Your content Going Viral – Whiteboard Friday
SEOmoz (blog)
This week we're talking about how to give your content a better chance of going viral, and from virality, what I really mean here is not just getting links, which are obviously very helpful from an SEO perspective, but getting social shares,
SEO Consult® to Review Important Google Algorithm UpdatePR Web (press release)
Content ProducerBizcommunity.com

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2 Years After Censorship Battle, Google Is Going Back To China

chinacensor.jpgThe Wall Street Journal reports today that Google is going back to China. Two years ago, facing censorship from the Chinese government, Google pulled out of mainland China, redirecting users to uncensored results from Hong Kong. Google took a stand against China’s authoritarian regime, but it did so reluctantly. China is too tempting a market for Google to write off.

Nevertheless, the WSJ reports that Google is hiring more engineers, salespeople and product managers and building new consumer Web services. As China’s mobile market booms, Google is pushing Android there, and opening a Chinese Android Market for mobile apps is one of the top priorities.

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Google’s Troubled Past In China

Google’s trouble in China all started in 2010, when it claimed that Chinese hackers had attempted to break into its services and committed malware attacks on Gmail accounts. Prior to that day, Google willingly censored its services at the government’s request. But after tracing these attacks to China, and probably to official agents, Google said it was “no longer willing to continue censoring” its results.

China thought those allegations were “irresponsible.” It led to some tough talk, but it took a while for Google to work up the courage to leave the mainland. The redirect to Hong Kong was an imperfect solution, since the government’s filters caused frequent disruptions.

Changing Its Tune

Google’s business is ads, and there are apparently just too many eyeballs in China for Google to give them up on principle. The WSJ reports that Google is working on commerce services and product search that will not require official censorship.

Google co-founder Sergey Brin grew up in the Soviet Union, and at the time of the censorship row, he told the WSJ that China’s repression reminded him of that past. “I see the same earmarks of totalitarianism,” Brin said, “and I find that personally quite troubling.”

“Pragmatic” Reasons

But now, two years later, China has 500 million Internet users, more than twice as many as the U.S. As Google Asia executive Daniel Alegre told the WSJ, Google is changing its tune on China for “pragmatic” reasons.

Nearly 60% of Chinese smartphones run Android, but they don’t have official Google services on board. That’s a massive install base just lying there dormant, not even able to access the Android Market for apps. However, assuming Google’s acquisition of Motorola Mobility clears, Google will be making money on much of the hardware, anyway.

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Google+ Is Going To Mess Up The Internet

googleplus150.jpgI hate Google+. Can’t stand it. It is agonizing to use. The stream is so noisy, it won’t even bother me when the inevitable Google ads arrive. Culturally, it feels like walking into a religious school. It swarms with disciples of the + waiting for the messianic downfall of the Evil Internet, so that the One True Google+ is all that’s left.

But I’ve been polite. It’s my beat, so I’ve covered it fairly. When it gets a feature I love, I say so. When it does something obscenely bad, I give its creators a fair chance to respond. But it’s getting harder to grin and bear it. I’ve been a happy Google customer product for a long time, because Google tools used to enhance the Internet. But as Google ships “the Google part” of its new Google+ identity, it’s breaking the Internet it once helped build. I can’t take it anymore.

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It all crystallized for me this morning when two Google+ transgressions presented themselves at once. Mike Elgan, “The world’s only lovable technology columnist™,” re-shared a post by Rohit Shrivastava, a manager at IBM. Elgan’s post bore an awfully familiar headline, although the punctuation and capitalization had been maimed. It was familiar because I had written it. I didn’t see any attribution, though, let alone a link to the story.

So I clicked ‘Expand this post’ on Shrivastava’s part, and there was a giant chunk of my article copied and pasted into Google+ without a link. Not even a ‘+ mention,’ or whatever, of +ReadWriteWeb. I wanted to click through and get the link to Shrivastava’s post, and I couldn’t do that. So I thought, “WTF, Google+? Why can’t I link to the original post? Is the popular kid’s re-share of someone else’s post more important?”

Then I remembered that public G+ posts count as websites now, as far as Google search is concerned. Furthermore, Google search now obscures natural Web results whenever possible, giving Google+ results from users’ networks instead. And it hit me: True Believers of the Holy + might see this re-shared Google+ post of an almost-unattributed rip of my story instead of the original. Google+ hates the Internet!

Google+ Hates The Internet

That brought me back to an incident on December 24. I was on the iPad, not on my main machine, and I was trying to find a link to one of my posts. The quickest way to do that was to type ‘jon mitchell jury duty’ into the Google search bar.

To my astonishment, the post I wanted was not the first result. It was the third. Ranking above the result I wanted were two Google+ posts, one by me, and one by our webmaster Jared, that were nothing more than links to the article with brief comments. Google thought I would prefer to click through Google+ to find my article than to go straight to it.

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I posted this screenshot on Google+ to see what my 8,000 … Followers? Plus-buddies? Plussers? +Friends? Friends+? Circlers? Encirclers? … To see what my 8,000 Encirclements thought. One comment (to which Google+ allows no way to link) said, “Yours is the top result when I search.” I presume she meant the article itself. Well, that didn’t make me feel much better, because now I know Google is showing different Internets to different people.

But there were two comments I found even more disturbing (and again, Google+ will not allow me to link to them directly). One commenter said, “It’s an algorithm. Get over yourself.” Typical, orthodox devotion to the Almighty Google Algorithm and its Infallible Wisdom. Okay. But then another guy offered this gem:

“Speaking as a user/reader, to me the G+ version of your posting is more interesting than the readwriteweb.com version, because I can comment here without having to jump through hoops.”

This might be the Googlest thing I’ve ever seen. First of all, he designates himself a “user/reader,” which is just spectacular. And he goes on to say that he’d rather see a Google+ post about the article than the article itself, because, and I quote, “I can comment here without having to jump through hoops.” Hoops like reading the article?

Google+ Is Social SEO

This darling “user/reader” has hit on the most touted feature of Google+: the conversations. Everybody finds it so much better than other forms of conversation on the Internet. It’s okay, sure. You can’t link to comments, but it’s not bad. It lets you make things bold and italic. That’s pretty neat.

But never forget that you’re Google’s product, not its customer. Why does Google want to facilitate long, riveting conversations on Google+ (with only one permalink, so the search results don’t get confusing)? Exactly. For the same reason blogs allow comments, despite the outrageous overhead of fighting spam. Traffic and search engine optimization.

Google+ is the new SEO. Just look at what it’s done to Google News. In the name of highlighting authors, it now pulls in Google+ profiles. It doesn’t let the author choose, say, her own website as her profile. If she wants a clickable, personal link on Google News, she has to use Google+.

Google does all this in the name of personalization. The public face of this effort is Amit Singhal, who presents personalization as this crucial element of context. Google can better figure out what a query means to each user if it has social signals, his story goes.

But my query for “jon mitchell jury duty” didn’t mean “Show me what my Friends+ are saying about ‘jon mitchell jury duty.’” It meant “Show me Jon Mitchell’s article about jury duty!” The Google of a year ago would have known that. All this personalization and real-time stuff surely helps Google organize its content, but it’s breaking search.

And Then There Are The Little Things

Meanwhile, I don’t know about you, but I think Google+ itself is infuriating to use. Remember when it was “minimal?” This is what it looks like now:

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The mobile versions are cleaner, but it’s still Google+. I know the Android experience is apparently wonderful – is that surprising? – but despite the many glorious iterations of the G+ iOS app, there’s still literally no way to post a rich link to Google+ on iOS.

You can paste a URL in with your text, but it won’t expand into anything worth clicking on. If you try to load the full Web version in mobile Safari, Opera or Dolphin (I’ve tried all three), the browser crashes when you click in the text box. Even Facebook can do this, and don’t get me started on how Facebook is ruining the Internet.

Sure, I can re-share and +1 things that are already inside Google+. Of course I can. But if I want to share something new to Google+ while I’m mobile, it had better be content that’s 100% inside Google+ (or my location, which it always seems to grab). And you may reply, “Well, why don’t you get an Android, then?” To which I reply, “No.”

Google’s Weird Attempt At Social

Mobile is increasingly the key social device, because it’s the one you have when you’re out living life. Path knows it. Yobongo knows it. Even Facebook has rescued its mobile apps from the edge, giving its users as much consistency across devices as it can.

It follows that Google would try to push Android as a vector for Google+. It’s trying to get us addicted to yet another free Web service and sell us to its customers, the advertisers. Google’s not alone there. That’s what Facebook does, and it’s what all of the above apps will do, presumably.

But Google is different. Google used to be about organizing the world’s information. It was a service to the entire Web. But this social tangent is changing that. It’s turning the Web into a Google+ popularity contest. It’s making us labor to prioritize our Friends+ by how much they matter to us, or by other undefined criteria, while Facebook just sorts them for us. Google+ may have bought Katango to do the same. We’ll see when it ships.

Google+ is encircling our relationships, and it’s encircling our identities. It doesn’t care how we want to present ourselves; our Google+ profile is our identity as far as Google is concerned. No pseudonyms or alter egos allowed. Large swaths of the blogosphere and the Web at large think this is wrong. At Web 2.0 this year, Vic Gundotra said pseudonyms are coming to Google+. Again, we’ll see when it ships.

Back To Work

Thanks to the Scoble effect, I have 8,000 encirclements on Google+. It creeps me out, because I don’t know why I’m encircled by all these people, and I don’t really get what they’re talking about most of the time. Since I presume it’s because I’m a tech blogger, I am waiting impatiently for the day I can migrate this whole thing over to my RWW Google Apps account and just let Google+ be a work thing.

Google is great for work. Gmail and Google Docs are nice things. Hangout meetings are fun. My work personality is much more measured, flat and bland than my real self, and Google tools are great for expressing that. Now that this rant is over, I’ll go back to covering Google and giving it as fair a shake as I can. I just had to get this off my chest.

Have fun flaming, +Friends!

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Hey Girl, I Know You Think This Meme Thing is Just Temporary But I’m Not Going Away

Ryan-Gosling-Feminist-flower-150.jpgSurely you saw the #OccupyWallStreet pepper-spraying cop Internet meme. And perhaps since then you’ve been inspired to create your own Internet meme. If so, then take a hint from the “Hey Girl” Ryan Gosling Internet meme, which features a picture of the actor alongside an intellectual pick-up line. It’s been going strong since December 2010, and it’s not disappearing anytime soon.

Ryan Gosling Feminist, one of the smarter iterations of this meme was created by Danielle Henderson, a graduate student in the University of Wisconsin Madison’s women and gender studies program. We asked her a few questions about her take on the popularity of “Hey Girl.” And just days after we did that, the Internet produced Museum Hey Girl, for the artier among us. Hey Girl Happy Hannukah appeared on December 20, the first day of the holiday.

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The idea for RyanGoslingFeminist came about after lunch with a few new graduate school friends who hadn’t heard of the “Hey Girl” meme. Henderson decided to introduce them to it by creating a few flash cards based on the theory they were learning. The she posted them to Tumblr, and RyanGoslingFeminist was born. This was on a Friday evening. By that Saturday morning, Jezebel picked it up.

This is not at all the first celebrity-inspired Internet memes. LesbiansWhoLookLikeJustinBieber points to the secret that everyone fears blurting lest they appear homophobic – Justin Bieber is as androgynous as most boyish lesbians, and vice versa. And then there’s RappersDoingNormalShit, which makes the all-mighty rapper appear as mundane as your boring next-door neighbor.

These memes are never-ending virtual art shows curated by either one person or the collective Internet. Henderson wasn’t really thinking about that when she created FeministRyanGosling, which provides a feminist context to the blank slate that is the open-ended “Hey Girl” meme.

“I don’t really follow memes, and don’t think of what I’m doing as fitting into that category,” she tells us. “I’m still just posting flashcards for my friends, and could stop the whole thing tomorrow. I have no allegiance to this format. I’m just a nerd trying to get through the semester.”
 
Truth be told, she actually dislikes memes and the collective impact they’ve had on the Internet-at-large.

“It’s like in junior high when people would repeat the same joke over and over again until eventually it removed all joy and just filled you with contempt,” she says. “I think memes contribute to the community feeling everyone thinks the Internet should instill in us so that we don’t feel so bad about spending most of our free time communicating to a machine, but they mostly serve to remind me how unoriginal and boring we’ve become.”

“It’s like in junior high when people would repeat the same joke over and over again until eventually it removed all joy and just filled you with contempt. I think memes contribute to the community feeling everyone thinks the Internet should instill in us so that we don’t feel so bad about spending most of our free time communicating to a machine, but they mostly serve to remind me how unoriginal and boring we’ve become.”

Like the nice guy who won’t leave your side, Ryan Gosling hangs on till the bitter end – even when the meme he inspires makes us feel like completely unoriginal pop culture-obsessed media consumers. Henderson, for one, counts herself as one engaged in this love/hate relationship with memes. “I’m including myself here, of course,” she tells us, “as what I’m doing is totally derivative.”

Here’s a full list of the “Hey Girl” meme iterations that we’ve found.

Please enjoy a few more variations on “Hey Girl.” We picked these especially for you.

Ryan-Gosling-Typography.jpeg

Ryan-Gosling-Feminist-flower.jpeg

Ryan-Gosling-menorah.jpeg

Did we miss any variations on “Hey Girl”? Let us know in the comments below.

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Google: Businesses Are Going Mobile First, Ad Landscape Begins to Shift

admob_150x150.jpgSmart devices have fundamentally changed how people interact with the world. Users now have information on tap, everywhere at any time. That has correlated into a shift in how consumers react with brands online, in retail stores, what products to buy and when to buy them. When consumers’ brand interaction change, it is a sign that advertising is going to change as well. According to Google, that shift has started to take place.

Google posted five trends to watch in mobile advertising that evolved in 2011 and will continue in the next couple of years. Google is targeting its mobile ads solution not only at developers and app publishers but also towards its traditional market of brands and retailers. The growth of mobile ads will be important in how publishers monetize mobile endeavors. How will it evolve?

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Google notes through its research that:

  • 79% of smartphone consumers use their phones to help with shopping, from comparing prices, to finding more product info, to locating a retailer.
  • 70% use their smartphones while in a store.
  • 77% have contacted a business via mobile, with 61% calling and 59% visiting the local business.

Google says that users are now expecting to engage with local businesses though their mobile devices. Think about it: did you go to a local businesses mobile website this year? Did that business have an app or a website optimized for mobile? People on the go rely on their smartphones for information and nothing is more fundamental to consumers then how they spend their money. Brands and retailers have to come to understand that the way users interact with their digital fronts is now being done from smart devices.

In turn, mobile search is changing the user experience. Apple realized this and is one of the reasons that it baked Siri into the iPhone 4S as a way to easily search on the go. Search functions include looking up a local restaurant to see what is on the menu or find directions.

The way ads are delivered via mobile underwent dramatic shifts in 2011. Google calls these the “pipes” of mobile advertising. That includes work on standards like ORMMA or MRAID or how ads are delivered through real-time engagement, real-time-bidding platforms or improvements in HTML5 that have made mobile advertising more seamless and ubiquitous.

Tablets have joined smartphones as an important factors in mobile advertising. Google notes that tablets are now a third screen that marketers have to deal with and that the company saw a 440% spike in tablet traffic in November 2011 from its December 2010 levels on the AdMob network. That number may be partly skewed by the fact that Google consolidated AdMob to mobile devices while keeping AdSense Web only, hence driving traffic numbers to the network.

What it all boils down to is the fact that enterprises, businesses, retailers and publishers are indeed going mobile first. Innovative mobile campaigns can drive engagement across the user base and place a businesses presence in the pocket of a vast swath of the consumer landscape.

Publishers, businesses, developers: What are your mobile advertising strategies for 2012? Are you planning to monetize your app through ads? Are you trying to drive foot traffic to your store with mobile initiatives? Let us know how you think this industry segment will evolve in the years to come.

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Siri, You’re Never Going To Take Over Search If You Can’t Find Abortion Clinics

Alternatives to Google Reader? Don’t Bother, You’re Not Going Anywhere…

Today Google Reader became the latest Google product to have Plus added to it. Now Google Reader users can +1 or share items to Google Plus, from within Reader. Google has made very clear over the past month that Plus will be integrated into all of Google’s products over time, so this wasn’t a surprising move. However, rather predictably, there has been a user backlash anyway. Writing on his G+ profile, Google Plus Marketing Manager and long-time RSS expert Louis Gray tried to assure everyone that they have choices: "We know that for some people, the changes to Reader will make you think differently about the product, and this may make you seek alternatives."

But are there in fact any viable alternatives to Google Reader?

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I believe that comment was a little disingenuous from Gray, because he knows that Google dominates what’s left of the RSS Reader market. There are always alternatives, but the reality is that relatively few people will use them. Google knows full well that most people not only will stick to Google Reader, they will also use Plus a lot more – now that it’s the only way to share from within Reader.

RSS Readers Ain’t What They Used To Be

This is another key turning point for RSS Readers, perhaps the final innovation in this long struggling market. No longer are RSS Readers independent products with their own devoted, reading-focused users – or "word-y people" as one Google Reader fan described them on my G+ profile.

Sure, the writing was already on the wall. Formally popular consumer RSS Readers like Bloglines and Newsgator have by now either disappeared, morphed into new products, or became focused on markets that will pay for them (which usually means the enterprise market).

The RSS Reader market has declined because reading content is a very fragmented experience these days. That was my conclusion even back in 2009, when I cited the likes of Twitter and Facebook. Nearly two years later and the fragmentation has only multiplied. As well as Twitter and Facebook, there are tablet-focused apps such as Flipboard and News.me, services like Instapaper and ReadItLater which make it even easier to read articles on mobile devices, and newly popular social services – like Google Plus.

Where To Now For The Google Reader Community? Google Plus Of Course…

Even despite all of the changes in the way people consume content on the Web, Google Reader had been the holdout as a specialist RSS Reader product. It has (had?) a passionate community of RSS Reader fanatics.

While RSS reading as an activity will continue in Google Reader, as of today the sharing features have been "retired" and moved to Google Plus. Also the note-taking features. And because almost all community activity happens on social networks – like Google Plus – that effectively spells the end of any real innovation in the RSS Reader market.

So what of these supposed alternatives to Google Reader? In fact, many of them rely on Google Reader. Google Reader powers – or its content can be plugged into – a number of the products that have forced the likes of Bloglines and Newsgator out of the consumer RSS market. Services like Flipboard for the iPad (Google Reader is one content input option) and Feedly (multi-platform, but one of its core features is that it syncs with Google Reader).

So even if Google reader users migrate to another product, they’ll likely still be connected to Google Reader in some way.

May As Well Get Used To It

Louis Gray positioned the changes today as giving Google Reader users more granular ways to share things, by way of the circles feature of Plus. So, for example, you might share a technology post in Google Reader to your "Tech Friends" circle. That does sounds appealing to me. And already in my tests I’ve seen how easy it is to share things from Google Reader to Plus.

So for people like me, where Google Plus is my (Google-related) social network anyway, the Reader changes are a positive thing. As for Google Reader’s avid fans, it is certainly a pain that they have lost some beloved features. But they will simply have to get used to the changes, because there are no real alternatives left in the consumer RSS Reader market.

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Going It Alone As An Indie App Developer

One of the great beauties of Web technology is that the barrier for entry into innovation has been significantly lowered. In the mobile world, all you really need to know to build an application is know the rudiments of coding and how to work within various native frameworks, like iOS or Android. Yet, independent developers face steep challenges in not only creating dynamic applications but trying to get anybody to use them.

Going it alone is ingrained in to the spirit of American innovation. In the modern technology world, the precursors to today’s independent application developers were the hackers and machinists like Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak creating the first personal computers in a garage in Cupertino. Indie developers working creating apps as a profession of passion today carry the torch.

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“There seem to be droves of young gumption-filled entrepreneurs and as long as there are the occasional run-away success story for them to pull inspiration from, I would guess they’ll continue to be an increase in young indie developers,” Jeremy Van Fleet, founder and CEO, New Media Mixology

Modern Day Indie Dev Faces Uphill Battles

Independent app developers are following in the footsteps of the great one-time indie developers like Jobs or Larry Page and Sergey Brin of Google. More precisely, they are trying to make a living in their shadows. Jobs and the Apple team created the iPhone and iOS. Brin and Page bought a little company called Android. These competing pillars of mobile technology have provided an umbrella under which the ambitions of app developers can be chased.

For instance, take a look at Erik Asmussen. He is a college-educated app developer who has come to developing applications for the iPad because he was inspired by the technology. His original thought was to create a board game that could be played by two actual physical people. Think of playing Candy Land with your babysitter as a kid except instead of an actual cardboard board, the board is an iPad.

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Asmussen has created a board game app called New World Colony through his project 82 Apps. It was derived from the notion of creating a great iPad version of Settlers of Catan and Risk. The first version was relatively rudimentary. The idea was good but it was pretty strictly a board game on an iPad. The turn-by-turn user interface was wonky and the graphics were atrocious.

Working Through Challenges

Asmussen acknowledges that graphics became his first major challenge and his biggest weakness early in his development was trying to find acceptable art. In later iterations of the game, Asmussen farmed out the graphics to those better suited to the task. The complaints from early users of the game were that it was, basically, a board game. The iPad does not tend to be a communal device. Players wanted a single player game with an artificial intelligence that could be turned into an online turn-by-turn two-player game.

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This provided challenges for Asmussen. He had never really done anything like that before. He made the improvements and when he released the updated version (after a couple iterations), the game started getting good reviews in the App Store. It sells for $2.99.

The challenges that Asmussen faced are common ones to developers everywhere. He taught himself to code which means that everything he did with New World Colony, he was doing for the first time. It is much harder to develop from scratch than an existing framework. At the same time, the only tools he used was the application development framework provided by Apple. He was unaware of many of the tools available, like PlayHaven for analytics or Sencha, appMobi or PhoneGap for frameworks. Marketing has proved a challenge because of his limited budget and getting his game reviewed by popular game and tech blogs has only caused a minor blip in sales.

As an indie developer, Asmussen has had to learn how to do it all. From the coding to the sales and customer relations. His experience has not been that different from any other American starting their own business. He just happens to be working on an iPad.

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The Gumption Filled Young Developer

Another indie developer, Jeremy Van Fleet of New Media Mixology (which has released an app called Toothpict and another one called Namerick), knows well how hard it is to cut through the clutter of the app store.

“I think getting all the parts working together is the biggest challenge. A lone developer really needs to be a jack-of-all-trades as there are such a broad range of skills under the umbrellas of designing, building, launching and promoting,” Van Fleet said. “The store is a frighteningly crowded place and a great app can get lost in the ether without all those different cylinders firing.”

*Note: I grew up with Van Fleet in a small town in Maine. He once pitched the ReadWriteWeb tips line about Toothpict and I found out that, randomly, he was the same guy I grew up with. I have not seen him in probably 13 years.

What Advice Would You Give Young Indie Devs?

Asmussen or Van Fleet will not be the next round of Steve Jobs and Larry Page of the world. But, they have a future and a say in how the mobile application environment evolves over the next several years.

At ReadWriteWeb, we have a terrific community of experienced developers who read us to see the news and the trends happening in all types of development. What advice can the ReadWriteWeb developer community give to indie developers like Van Fleet and Asmussen? What are the best frameworks, tools, ways to cut corners, marketing strategies, advertising options? As much as ReadWriteMobile is a resource for developers, the real resource is the community around it. Please let us know some of your favorite tricks of the trade in the comments.

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Why There Was Never Going to Be Facebook Integration In iOS 5

facebook_150_logo.jpgThere will be no deep Facebook integration with iOS 5 or the new iPhone 4S. The notion of Apple and Facebook teaming up for the release of the iPhone 4S has been secondary to most of the discussion surrounding the development of iOS 5. There are a variety of reasons that these rumors came up and why people believed them. None of them were believable. It would have been almost impossible for Apple to put Facebook’s Open Graph API into iOS without anybody noticing.

Yet, the rumors persisted. The final beta versions of iOS and the gold master were theoretically supposed to be released a few weeks ago. We now know that iOS 5 is coming October 12. What was the delay? Maybe to keep from people knowing the last minute features Apple instituted. Facebook could have been a part of that. There is still no Facebook iPad app and the Open Graph is not baked into iOS and the two companies are not teaming up on HTML5 development. Take a look at why after the jump.

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A History of Bad Blood

It is not like Facebook and Apple have had friendly relations in the past. When Apple released Ping, its social music sharing service for iTunes, there was supposed to be some type of Facebook integration. The relationship disintegrated at the last minute, mostly because of Facebook’s data policies.

The first bricks to Facebook’s new music sharing service through Spotify and other music services were probably set in Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s mind at that time. Ping has basically died without Facebook support.

http://www.readwriteweb.com/mobile/2010/11/twitter-plus-itunes-ping-is-a.php

Twitter was the initial Ping partner. Yet, Twitter was probably not mature enough or on the public conscious like it is a year later for Ping to really make a difference on the platform. Looking back though, Twitter and Ping may have been the first bricks of the deep Twitter integration into iOS 5 that was announced in June.

On Web Apps and HTML5

If anybody thought that Facebook would release its so-called Project Spartan on the world during Apple’s event, you were mistaken. There is no way that Facebook Apple would allow something as potentially disruptive as Facebook’s HTML5 Web app project make headway into its biggest announcement of the year.

Facebook Web apps will be all about sharing. That Facebook is good at. It is the company’s backbone. Facebook could help Apple with app discovery but that is a problem that Apple can tackle on its own.

Facebook may have an announcement about his new mobile initiatives later this week or next. Maybe they will not. The fact of the matter though is that Facebook’s new Web app project is going to be slow going at first. People know about the Apple App Store and the Android Market. Native apps are popular and they will stay that way for the foreseeable future. Even in the next few years, as HTML5 matures to create more powerful mobile application experiences, native will still be a major factor in the ecosystem.

The Door Is Not Closed But Apple Will Keep Facebook At Arm’s Length

At the press conference at f8, a reporter asked Facebook executives about whether or not there was iTunes service coming to Facebook Music. The question was phrased something like “there seems to be a large company missing from your music sharing roster.”

Facebook at the time said that there were no plans for iTunes or Apple. Yet, like almost every answer that was given during that press session, the door was left open. It is a smart thing for Facebook to do, because it may one day need Apple to beat back Google.

The fact of the matter is that the major tech companies (outside of the close partnership that Facebook has with Microsoft) are keeping Facebook at arm’s length. The Open Graph API has become a monster that permeates the Web and social sharing has become synonymous with Facebook. The data that Facebook controls is coveted by Google and Apple and others and it gives Facebook real power going forward. If Apple let Facebook in free reign inside iOS 5, the way it has with Twitter, that could spell trouble for the data that Apple wants to control about its users.

Facebook’s new media sharing initiative is something that Apple would have liked to do itself. Ping is the proof. Now that Facebook is on its way to a robust media-sharing project, Apple has been left behind.

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