Browsing the archives for the Web category.

Grooveshark’s business model is a bit dodgy.

by Calvin Robinson on October 27, 2009.

I have been a member of Grooveshark since they first launched, so this post is in no way biased towards Spotify, regardless of the fact that Spotify has been the subject of 4/5 posts lately.

Grooveshark started out as something really interesting. It was a peer-to-peer music sharing platform with a difference – legality. You had a little system-tray widget installed on your computer, which would gradually upload your enitre music library to Grooveshark’s servers. Users could then purchase these tracks from Grooveshark, who would give you a cut (we’re talking pennies here), and pay the royalties, making the whole thing quasi-legal.

However somewhere along the lines the business model switched.

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Tech, Web
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How I won Helloapp

by Calvin Robinson on October 3, 2009.

Yesterday was the second and final day of  ‘Future of Web Apps’ 2009. Hosted by Carsonified, FOWA is one of the biggest tech events in the UK. You can read about the event itself on Sporkings.com over the coming days. In this post I want to talk about a new app launched by the Carsonified specifically for the event. Helloapp.

The idea behind Helloapp is absolutely brilliant. When you sit down in the conference hall, you ‘check-in’ to your seat, by tweeting @helloapp with a code attached to your seat and giving a few hashtags to describe yourself. IMG_0020Then if people want to approach you, they know where you are. Whenever you meet someone throughout the conference you tweet “@helloapp met @cr” for example, and then if the person tweets helloapp back, you both get 10points. This is where the points system comes in.

Whoever collects the most points throughout the conference wins a prize. You can earn prizes through several different means. If someone Hi5′s you (@helloapp hi5 @cr) that’s a one-way shout-out that’ll earn you 20points. There are tokens hidden around the venue, that once claimed will earn you 5 or so points. Certain vendors also have their own selection of tokens to hand out as they see fit. Microsoft and Sun Microsystems (Sun Start-up Essentials) were handing out a code to anyone who would sign up to their program/newsletter.

The reason this app is so cool, is because the whole purpose is to encourage people to network and make more connections. I’d love to see it being used in more events, not only Carsonified hosted. No to mention everyone loves a bit of competition, and as the gaming industry is demonstrating lately; everyone loves a sense of achievement, however small.

Of course there are a few tweaks that need to be made to this app. The biggest two problems I faced over the last two days were these;

  • Finding your own profile page is not exactly self-intuitive. There was a UX lapse here. The only way to view your profile, or that of other people’s is to know the URL (http://hello.carsonified.com/Profile/cr) or to click someone’s thumbnail photo on the seating plan. It’d be  nice to have a ‘Go to user profile’ search, where you can type in the name or twitter handle of someone to view their profile.
  • Special codes that were hidden on tokens around the venue not only gave users tokens but they added badges to your profile. There were some rare tokens (for this event they were Star Wars themed, i.e. Millennium Falcon). The system *should* have a mechanism to stop users simply searching “@helloapp claim” and copy & pasting the codes themselves. The idea was that you share (or trade) the codes with other people around the conference. So maybe only allow these codes to be used a certain number of times or something.

I was lucky enough to find a couple of tokens downstairs in the Sun Start-up Essentials Chillout Lounge (with the help of @scoobeesnac). If you search the codes for these, you can see people claiming the code, who I’d never even met – cheeky!

So I managed to get to about 200something points by claiming the codes I found, other people had found, and the ones vendors had handed out, then my score was practically doubled when my friends started Hi5-ing me, bringing me up to 570. It’s at this point people started telling me to check Twitter, because Ryan Carson had called me out. Brilliant, I had won! I got to take home the excellent remote control car – but not before charging it up and rampaging around the venue with it :D . I also got to quickly pimp my company (SRCLDN.com) on the stage. It would have been a nice prize to do a short 3 minute pitch – maybe something to think about for the future.

Anyway, here’s my HelloApp profile. Check out my pro badges :) . I’ve been playing around with the system a bit more and by exploiting I managed to get over 1,000 points. A good job nobody figured this out during the event!

I want to end on a quick ‘props’ to Elliot Kember for Tweets From FOWA – this live twitter stream monitoring the #FOWA hashtag made for huge fun during the Gary Vee and Kevin Rose show at the end of the final day.

Tech, Web
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The end of the music industry

by Calvin Robinson on September 18, 2009.

After listening to Daniel Ek speak at Glasshouse last night, I’m predicting the end of the music industry as we know it.

Just imagine in a few years, if Spotify becomes ‘the way’ that people listen to music. Everyone around the world listens and shares music via Spotify – which is very possible. For years we’ve relied on mp3s and CDs. Let’s face it, nobody buys physical media any more, and with services like Spotify, piracy is becoming less of an issue.

The music industry has failed to modernise. They failed to provide people with what we want: easy access to music, on any device of our chosing. They tried to tie us down and it will be the death of them.

Now, back to Spotify ruling the world. Once Spotify become popular enough, I predict they’ll start going directly to artists, more and more, to arrange royalty deals. Of course is Spotify are dealing directly with artists, this cuts out the evil middle man – the record labels.

Spotify (and/or similar music services) could be the end of the music industry as we know it. By killing off the record labels completely, they make music about music again. Give control back to the artists. After all, record labels are not needed for distribution any more.

Of course there’s still the issue of marketing (which is about the only service record labels seem to offer these days), which will also solve it’s self in due course.

I look forward to a time with no Record Labels and in turn, no RIAA!

Tech, Web
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Tweetdeck Groups

by Calvin Robinson on August 25, 2009.
Best language?
Image by skoop via Flickr

I whipped up another Twitter app over the weekend. Or rather I upgraded my current Twitter app.

Now you can browse your TweetDeck groups via RogerThat. From here you can copy/paste the contents of any of your groups – for backup purposes. The TweetDeck client itself offers very little group management.

I’m going to work on integration a little more too, so you can follow/unfollow directly from the list, instead of having to copy/paste back to RogerThat’s mass follow tool.

Got a few more ideas to add to my little Twitter project. I’m loving the Twitter API, it’s fun! Last time I used Python, this time I used PHP – a little reverse engineering of TweetDeck’s database files.

If you have any ideas of features I could add to my little Twitter project just let me know ^_^.

And yes… I will add a design to the page at some point! I know it’s ugly. It’s like pure code right now.

Tech, Web
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My Twitter Friends Mosaic

by Calvin Robinson on August 22, 2009.

Everyone I’m following on Twitter.
Get your twitter mosaic here.

Get your twitter mosaic here.

Personal, Tech, Web
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