Archive for April, 2010


Social Media Pollution

Social media platforms are a double edged sword. As soon as you see the value in one, it seems that someone finds a way to pollute the hell out of it.

Take Facebook for example. At its core, great networking tool to stay connected to people you know and keep in touch. Along the way, someone thought it would be a good idea to introduce applications and games. Well gee, thanks. Those who do not want to partake in them are subject to hundreds of status updates daily about Mafia War variants, quizzes, horoscopes, various useless game updates and the worst offender of all, Farmville. It took me a long time to hide all those applications updates, and to this day there still isn’t an option that lets you hide status updates that are not core Facebook features. There really should be.

The reasons above prompted my exodus from Facebook. You can only see/block so many useless Farmville/quiz updates before it drives you nuts. So I moved to Twitter.

Whoa, Twitter is awesome! It’s content is pure! I was, and still am, addicted to the flow of information that comes across my list every 10 minutes. I can disseminate information faster than I can by going to Digg etc networks, where the content there isn’t so guaranteed to be targeted to my interests. You can even acquire breaking news faster than the major networks can get it. Twitter has the Awesome!

Then came Foursquare and Gowalla.

Thanks a lot.

The once pure lifestream of Twitter is now being polluted by useless ‘me me me’ information of Foursquare/Gowalla services. I don’t get it. Why would someone think that other people care if they are at the gas station, or Walmart, or their office? In my opinion, it is such dead-end information that is useful to nobody, in contrast of passing along information like news or something interesting to build conversations on.

To me, Foursquare/Gowalla is the equivalent of meeting someone out, say, at a bar, and then the next day that person shows up at your house and says ‘I was just at the store. Thought you’d like to know.’ and drives off. Strange, you think. Then a few minutes later, they come back, and tell you they were just at the post office, and they were there twice today. Weird!

There’s a certain narcissistic aspect to these services that makes me despise them. Why should anyone be interested in -where- someone else is? The whole point of Twitter was people say short interesting things to spark conversation (anyone have a Wii?), report on whats going on around them (Muse is onstage now at Coachella!), or pass along news (Airplane crashes into the Hudson!! *pics). That style of content engages and helps keep people rolling on the service.

Which one of these is more useful:

‘Hey, check out this article on Windows 7 tweaks on ArsTechnica (link)’

or

‘I’m at Grotto’s Grand Slam! http://4sq.com/394832/annoying’

People abhor stalkers, but this is reverse stalking. I think the technology is so new that the super scary side of it is the abuse that can happen. For instance, the more you use Foursquare, the more people know you aren’t home. Crafty criminals will be casing Twitter instead of casing neighborhoods looking for a good target. Clingy/disturbed exes will know where you are at all times bringing a new sense to the word ’stalk’ (and I’ve seen this demonstrated). Establishments that encourage the use of Foursquare in exchange for discounts may bring a new meaning to the term ‘regular’, in the obsessive sense.

The thing that annoys me the most about this is there is no way to hide this on Twitter, no way to filter it out. It needs it, it really really does. Otherwise, I will have to find a new social niche that is as pure as Twitter used to be.

Wilgus Associates brand new Drupal real estate system was launched today utilizing RETS real estate technology. This will be the first of many sites to utilize a harmonious marriage between the power of Drupal and data feeding from RETS no matter what your vendor (Innovia, Trend, Rappatoni etc).

It works, it’s fast, it’s scalable and configurable. It was built right. It’s smart. No hard coded hacks required. No verbose/over-complicated SQL necessary. We had a plan, we architected it and executed it. Development issues were assessed and addressed instead of throwing more code at the problem. Coming in at a lean ~900 lines of code, it’s one of my favorite things I’ve ever built and a huge improvement over the previous Coldfusion system we had.

It doesn’t matter if we didn’t do it first. It only matters that we do it better. We are. I can really hang my hat on this because we aren’t rebranding bloated CMSRealty, or passing off a crufty propriety Coldfusion platform. We own this, it’s ours, and there’s a huge sense of satisfaction in knowing that.

What’s next? Rebuild it! The thing about web development is when you solve a problem, you immediately find a better way to solve it in the next iteration of code. I’ve got plans drawn and features defined. This is such a breeze.

I fixed my iPod, I became an uncle today, I’m building quality systems. I guess you could say I’m a happy to be alive person!

Haters, keep on hating. The comments that get back around to me and the conversations that happen at competing businesses amuses me. Delaware can be a pretty ridiculous place sometimes.

I know OpenID is supposed to be this great new technology designed to prove people are who they say they are, and so folks don’t have to login / remember a bunch of passwords to websites, but holy god.

It’s frustrating to work in a development site testing OpenIDs and launch it. Since it is now a different domain than the development URL, existing OpenIDs are no longer valid and thus you can lock yourself out of your existing account. C’mon.

Good thing this site has ‘alternate’ OpenIDs, I had to work my way backwards associating alternate IDs and tricking the system by fudging up the primary OpenID to log my way back up the chain to my original account and delete the others.

After that, I’d simply prefer the good ol login form.

I wonder if anyone else has had trouble working with OpenID systems.

I appreciate the tech but the implementations need work. I’ve also had trouble when using different machines to work on the same site under the same OpenID.

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Kevin Quillen is a web developer on the east coast specializing in web design, web hosting, custom website design, website design, web applications, Coldfusion development, database design, MySQL / MSSQL database & consultation, PHP development, Wordpress themes, iPhone application development, Drupal hosting, Drupal development, logo branding, business logic, custom application programming, Linux and Windows Server management and more. All views and opinions posted in this blog are original. Do not copy without permission, but feel free to share an article.