Microsoft Popfly Alfa: Insert logo here

Under: Reviews; 1 year, 1 month ago at 3:09 pm
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Microsoft Popfly

Not too long ago, I received a Popfly alfa invite from my namesake working at the Popfly team based at Redmond, Virginia. (Special thanks!) I had the time to play around with it the past few days. I am going to focus on the nitty gritty aspects of my experience before moving on to my general feelings about this fly.

Signing up process took slightly longer than expected. I had to register or associate my gmail address with Windows Live ID before I could login to Popfly. I vaguely remember not encountering any holdup in registration of an account after this process, so semi thumbs up to this. =)

Popfly homepage

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First beta MacSpotify is out…

Under: Muzic, Reviews; 1 year, 1 month ago at 4:16 pm
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Knock yourself out.

Jaycut to open for public viewing soon…

Under: Muzic, Media, Videos, Sweden, Reviews; 1 year, 2 months ago at 5:15 pm
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Online social networking meets media editing in Jaycut. Guys, there might be some element of bias in this post because, well, I know the guys at Jaycut and they’re cool. ;)

Just spoke to Jonas from the Jaycut team and I was told that the service will be available for public viewing later this week. This is good news because their service has been getting alot of attention after their participation in the Venture Challenge in San Diego and at Hej! 2007.

Unfortunately, one will have to be invited by one of the current users to create an account, which I think is good thing because it will assist scalability.

I checked out the service and first impressions are simple and easy to use. It’s collaborative by nature and you can edit any sort of media you want. They’re doing a fantastic job so far. They just got featured as Europe’s Young Entrepreneurs 2007 at Business Week. They look all set for a very big sell out in the future.

Below, I have embedded an introductory video on using Jaycut. It’s funny because Jonas was unaware of it being publicly available when I showed it to him. Neways, that’s him in the video. It’s in Swedish btw. So is their blog.

Beta testing Jaycut

Under: Reviews; 1 year, 2 months ago at 12:25 pm
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Jaycut, the online social video editing service, just released their private beta. I will be testin’ and bloggin’ about it soon.

Get your spock invites

Under: Reviews; 1 year, 2 months ago at 9:53 pm
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Reply to this post if you’d like to receive an invite for Spock. I wrote about Spock here.

[Update] Invites ran out!

Tag people using Spock!

Under: Reviews; 1 year, 3 months ago at 6:44 pm
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A Spock review:

I just checked out Spock and I think it’s pretty cool for many reasons. In my previous entry, I mentioned that I had the beta invite and was gonna review it.

0.5) When you sign up for an account, don’t be freaked out that they have a profile of you with all the relevant information. I did.

1) Firstly, the Spockbot searches the net for people and creates a profile for them in Spock. For instance, the bot looked up my name and created a profile called Sriram Krishnan. There are many Sriram Krishnans in the world but it somehow managed to list the different Sriram Krishnans. A google search would unveil me in the second, if not the third page. But Spock clearly consolidates all the relevant information regarding people within one profile and lists them out, person by person.

2) Secondly, the cool part, it allows people to tag relevant keywords to a person’s profile. For instance, I realised that my profile did not contain nuStart…so I added that keyword to my profile. Users can then vote up/down the keywords according to relevance. So, if you want to look for someone related to Skateboarding and RoR, it will list down people who are associated with both!

3) Extensive. Information here is not restricted to linkedin or wikipedia. If one has any a number of online profiles, the Spockbot consolidates all this information. So you can conduct your background check/research on people with similar interests or so on here. So you don’t have to subscribe to many social networks for instance.

4) Explore relationships. Facebook allows users to define relationships. But most people don’t take this seriously anyways. If it held true, I would have been involved in 20 relationships with around 15 guys over the past 10 years. Linkedin doesn’t allow you to define relationships. Spock does. You can choose how you’re related to someone..and also view how other people are related to your friends/network etc.

5) Unfortunately, Spock is one of the sites where the coolness/importance/usefulness increases with number of users. It’s at an embryonic stage at the moment but as more people populate it, the more content it has..and hence hopefully more useful.

6) An important element in beta tests is feedback. I am pretty impressed with the turnaround rate of the guys behind Spock. I emailed them a couple of bugs/suggestions and they replied almost immediately. Impressive. I felt like a million dollars. All users should feel like that. =)

[Update] 7) As of now, Spock doesn’t have any feature that requires the user to constantly visit their site. Maybe they should add a social element to it such as messaging or commenting.

If you have beta tested Spock and have additional comments or (dis) agree with whatever I mentioned above, please feel free to comment.

For more information on how to use Spock, visit their blog.