Archive for August, 2010

Facebook for Funerals

Monday, August 30th, 2010

It turns out that Facebook is an effective means of letting people know about a loved one’s passing… with internet speed. If you’ve created different lists with your Facebook friends, you have a network of contacts ready to go when you need it most. For this same reason, many funeral directors are turning to Facebook or other online means of sharing funeral and memorial service information, and allowing people to send condolences in a timely manner from anywhere in the world.

An article that discusses the Best Practices for Funeral Directors to use Facebook points out that in the days before online social networking, face-to-face networking was done by getting to know one’s community. This was done by being active in the organizations where people in your community might congregate. Then, when someone needed the services of a funeral director, they already knew who to turn to, and it was someone they knew and trusted.

Your Funeral Guy will walk you through how to set up a Facebook memorial from your loved one’s existing Facebook page. Or you can simply ask for the account to be closed. If you choose to have it memorialized, Facebook removes the deceased’s contact information, membership in online groups, and personal information like their favorite books, movies, quotations, etc.) Then for about a month, the user’s Wall, photographs, and basic info like the hometown and birth date remain. Then, already confirmed Facebook friends can leave messages on the user’s wall.

Do a search for “online memorials” to find several other ways to share condolences and stories online. You can also check with the chosen funeral home to see what they offer.

Big Brother Really IS Watching

Friday, August 27th, 2010

Except in this case, Big Brother is not the government, a corporation or even the producers of a television game show.  No, Big Brother is the collective –it’s everyone –at least everyone who has something to share with internet speed.

The latest example of why you should think before you act is The Cat Bin Lady.  Go to YouTube and you can watch the security footage of a woman who pets a cat, then drops it into a garbage can and closes the lid. 

The cat’s owners found their pet the next morning, and calculate the poor thing was trapped in there for about 15 hours, but luckily was otherwise unharmed.  They then checked the footage on the security camera they use to monitor activity in front of their home and uploaded the video to YouTube to get help in identifying the woman.

Gawker reports that the video “went viral, eventually ending up on 4chan’s anarchic /b/ board. It was there that 4chan managed to identify the cat tosser ‘within a few hours …The culprit? A 45-year-old woman named Mary Bale of Coventry.”

Mashable explains that once she was identified, the full force of the internet came down upon her.

“Subsequently, Bale received death threats, and information like her address and her boss’s phone number were spread around the web….

Bale was placed under police protection (due to the aforementioned death threats)…Facebook was forced to take down a group titled “Death to Mary Bale.”

Bale is currently being investigated by the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, but that’s not enough for many Internet lurkers. No, Bale is currently subject to that most severe of modern punishments/forms of praise: Memeification.”

You have been warned!

Most Followed on Twitter

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

The Mental Floss Blog posted a list on Monday of the most followed Twitter users…who are real people.  Their example to distinguish the difference: “For instance, President Obama would easily make this list, but we know for a fact that he isn’t the one tweeting on his account at this time.”

They also make a point of saying that the most followed aren’t always the most influential, and point us another site called Klout.com to find that info. 

10. Katy Perry -3,491,410, Klout score: 74- a pretty, quirky pop music singer/songwriter. 

9. John C. Mayer – 3,602,876, Klout: 66 - an accomplished pop musician whose dating history and social life have both been well covered by the media.

8. Taylor Swift – 3,970,319, Klout: 77 - a young country music star, the youngest person ever to win the Academy of Country Music’s Album of the Year and Entertainer of the Year award.

7. Oprah Winfrey – 4,060,639, Klout: 65 - an incredibly popular daytime talk show host since 1986.

6. Kim Kardashian – 4,514,040, Klout: 93 - famous for being famous…and beautiful.

5. Justin Bieber – 4,681,996, Klout: 100 - Canadian tween heartthrob who became famous with internet speed by uploading his music videos to YouTube.

4. Ellen DeGeneres – 5,072,270, Klout: 80 - a stand up comedienne turned actress, then daytime talk show host, and American Idol judge.

3. Ashton Kutcher – 5,569,167, Klout: 97 – boyishly handsome and funny actor turned creator/producer of projects like “Beauty and the Geek” and “Punk’d,” married to Demi Moore.

2. Britney Spears – 5,690,685, Klout:80 – from the Mickey Mouse Club to pop music stardom, she’s ranked the third most powerful female musician of the year by Forbes magazine.

1. Lady Gaga – 5,714,890, Klout: 81 - a recording artist well known for her pop hooks and outrageous outfits.

Pick a College Roomie Online

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

Until recently, incoming students arrived at their college dorm rooms to find a perfect stranger waiting to share his or her space. But today, more colleges let incoming students take advantage of internet speed  to find an ideal roommate, says the New York Times.

In some ways, social networking sites like Facebook have pressured colleges to relinquish control of the roommate process to their dormers. In the past few years, housing officers have been besieged by complaints from students and parents who looked up assigned roommates on the Internet and did not like what they saw, whether it was goth makeup or beer cans in the background.

While many colleges still insist on pairing roommates themselves, either randomly or carefully, a growing number are turning the choice over to students. Some universities have contracted with matchmaking companies like Lifetopia and RoomBug, which offer secure Web-based services. Others are acceding to a wave of roommate requests from students who use unrestricted sites like URoomSurf, and others have created Facebook pages to help students share information.

Matches made on URoomSurf.com do for dormitory life what eHarmony and Match.com have long done for romance. Each fills out a questionnaire covering study habits, overnight guests, tidiness, politics, sexual orientation and religion, among other topics, then received a list of other soon-to-be freshmen who had registered on the site, ranked by compatibility.

Housing officials say that “roommate self-selection,” as the process is known, empowers students while cutting down on irksome appeals to switch later on. But some worry that it robs young adults of an increasingly rare opportunity for growth: exposure to someone with different experiences and opinions. But isn’t going away to college stressful enough without finding yourself sharing space with someone wholly incompatible?

Twitter Following and Followers

Friday, August 20th, 2010

Once you’ve found all of your existing friends who are already on Twitter, how do you know how to find who to follow, and do so with internet speed?  Twitter has, according to their e-mail Newsletter, “created a selection of tools to help you discover the accounts that are creating the information you want.”  (Read more about it on their blog.)

Here’s what they’ve done, just for you:

• Worked with LinkedIn to create the Tweets app on LinkedIn — useful for finding and following tweets from your colleagues.

• Published a directory of popular accounts organized by topics of interest

• Released a feature called Suggestions for You which makes follow recommendations on Twitter.

 

Okay, that helps you find who to follow, but what about those who are following YOU? 

Mashable offers a list of five different ways to visualize what your followers are all about.

1. TwitterSheep generates a keyword cloud based on the text in your followers’ bios. It’s quick, easy and free!

2. Neuro Productions browser allows you to see the circles of connections on Twitter. Enter any Twitter user’s name and the app will load up a circle of contacts, along with their thumbnail pic and latest tweet. Click on any of those people in the circle and do the same.

3. ISParade trots your followers’ pics out with stick figure bodies so you can see them in a parade.

4. TweepsKey is confusing to describe, but here it goes: it displays your “tweeps” as differently colored and sized dots depend on the number of tweets and how many followers they have. Or something like that.

5. Crowded Ink “Friends” Mug lets you print your followers photos on a coffee mug that you can proudly display in your office.

Downloading Dislike may be your Downfall

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

With the growing popularity and general ubiquitousness of the Facebook “Like” button, people have been talking about wanting a “Dislike” button too. That’s why when it looked like it was finally being offered, many responded with internet speed by clicking to download the application—only to discover it was a scam.

If you see a post of Facebook that says “I just got the Dislike button, so now I can dislike all of your dumb posts lol!!” with a link, you’d be better off not clicking it.

According to the security firm Sophos, “If you do give the app permission to run, it silently updates your Facebook status to promote the link that tricked you in the first place, thus spreading the message virally to your Facebook friends and online contacts.” That will give you something to dislike!

While Facebook works to block and remove this, and similar applications that promise to allow you the choice to dislike something, they’d like everyone to keep the following in mind:

“…there is no official dislike button.

“Also, don’t click on strange links, even if they are from friends, and notify the person and report the link if you see something suspicious”

Those tips are from Facebook company spokesman Fred Wolens.

The L.A. Times Technology blog reminded us that the Facebook Security Page has more information on how to protect your data on Facebook, and offers words of comfort.

“If you installed the fake app, don’t despair. Just click on the account button, then application settings and disable it. You can also delete the application’s posts to your Facebook wall.”

Facebook Security recommends you read the story from CNN.com to learn more.

Quit Your Job Online

Monday, August 16th, 2010

In the age of internet speed and social networking, you may want to be selective about how you quit—that is, if you want to be hired anywhere else.

We’ve lived vicariously through the man who quit his job by telling everyone off and sliding down a plane’s slide/raft, and now we can enjoy the idea of quitting like a girl named Jenny did — with a dry erase board and series of photographed messages, sent by e-mail to the entire office.

Fortunately for Jenny, she’s a figment of someone’s imagination. (Her lack of confidentiality is not likely to get her hired any time soon.) But, as an actress who has just gotten tons of attention online, Elyse Porterfield may just have a career ahead.

TechCrunch tells us the photo shoot was for an image board site called The Chive (which gets around 5.6 million unique visits a month, according to Google). It’s part of a network of viral sites run by brothers Leo and John Resig, who “have a storied history of manufacturing Internet hoaxes”.

They told TechCrunch:

“This story wasn’t primarily done to see how many people in the mainstream media we could hoodwink (though that was fun), it wasn’t done for the publicity, money, nor was it a slapdash reaction to some JetBlue clown; it was done purely for the entertainment of the people first and foremost. The purpose of the hoax was to entertain and inspire, not to inform, so what difference does it make if the story has a single ounce of truth?”

The Chive went from 15,000 uniques to 440,000 uniques in a single hour, and people wanted to share it so much that it got over 238,000 Facebook shares and 31,000 Tweets (and counting, we’re sure.)

Reaching the Entire Internet in One Stroke

Friday, August 13th, 2010

Jet Blue, the airline that’s been getting a lot of press in regards to one flight attendant, seems to have expertly addressed the entire internet and perhaps therefore all media in one skillful stroke of using internet speed.

While the flight attendant, Steven Slater, was busy garnering the public’s support with his story, passengers began coming forward with a very different story. Jet Blue waiting to respond, only posting a comment to their blog 48 hours afterward. 

It wouldn’t be fair for us to point out absurdities in other corners of the industry without acknowledging when it’s about us. Well, this week’s news certainly falls into that category. Perhaps you heard a little story about one of our flight attendants? While we can’t discuss the details of what is an ongoing investigation, plenty of others have already formed opinions on the matter. Like, the entire Internet. (The reason we’re not commenting is that we respect the privacy of the individual. People can speak on their own behalf; we won’t do it for them.)

While this episode may feed your inner Office Space, we just want to take this space to recognize our 2,300 fantastic, awesome and professional Inflight Crewmembers for delivering the JetBlue Experience you’ve come to expect of us.

Fast Company, a magazine about doing business creatively, said, “It’s a wily little post, expertly done—mixing cheeky self-deprecation, ostensible privacy concerns, an apt and funny YouTube link (to the Office Space movie), and only the tiniest dose of PR pablum. What’s fascinating, however, is that these 140 or so words constitute almost the entire response to a story that has had every media outlet scrambling all week. Better yet: it did the trick.”

Fundraising Via Social Media

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

Here are some places that Mashable gathered for those who want to help raise money for good causes–either as a giver or an organizer–using internet speed and social media. Either way, you’re a philanthropist!

Facebook Causes - “Whether you are an activist who wants to stop genocide or a nonprofit that promotes literacy, Causes can be your platform. It is a tool to help people go from caring about issues to doing something to make change.”

Razoo  - Non-profits can have their own page, and can also build project specific pages for events or fundraising drives. Razoo’s widget allows non-profits to port their fundraising initiative to other social sites, and also enables donors to share on their Facebook and Twitter networks.

Twitpay - and its RT2Give platform, designed specifically for everyone’s favorite 140 character-based social network, Twitter, focuses on the viral nature of Twitter, creating donations based on re-tweets — and of course, re-tweets equate to more visibility.

Crowdrise- is a grassroots fundraising service that creates fun ways for your network to go and promote, including contests, giveaways and promotions. Kate Olsen of Network for Good said they “are enamored [with their] fun approach…and kitschy call to action messaging on social media outposts’”

ChipIn - A simple widget allows a non-profit to have complete control of funding via PayPal. Non-profits embed the ChipIn widget on a variety of websites or create their own ChipIn page. The widget does integrate a wide variety of social network portability beyond the big two (Facebook and Twitter), including Digg and Delicious.

Ammado - Based in Ireland, ammado’s big differentiator is its international reach, with more than 30 currencies accepted. Individuals can create their own grassroots pages, provide recurring donations, and share their donation or fundraising project via the most popular social networks.

The Tale of the Fail Whale

Monday, August 9th, 2010

If you’ve ever been on Twitter and seen the image of a smiling whale being lifted by little birds, then you’ve met “The Fail Whale.” “The minds at Twitter found it on iStockphoto and used the image as a 404 page,” Mashable.com tells us. And of course, if you’ve been cruising the information superhighway with internet speed for any length of time, you’ve met your fair share of 404 pages – they’re the ones that tell you that the file you wanted wasn’t found.

There have been a number of creative 404 pages. One of our newer favorites references the Double Rainbow Guy we mentioned in our previous post – check it out at TechCrunch’s post “Blippy Has Pretty Much The Best 404 Page Ever. What Does It Mean?“.

But this particular image itself, created by Yiying Lu, is “Lifting a Dreamer.” The artist posted her image on iStockphoto, and Twitter decided to use it.  She says of its appearance, “It’s not a Fail Whale… it has absolutely nothing to do with failure. Rather than people seeing the picture as a sign of technology’s failure, they should see it as a sign of, you know, ‘sit back and relax.’ It should be a visual soother, like, it should be a visual therapy rather than something that people would get really mad [about].”

While many may have feelings of anger toward the innocent whale for being the bearer of bad news, others have embraced the image and have been inspired to create their own versions.  Yiying Lu has created a page with a bunch of images and video that she’s collected at her site, whatisfailwhale.info.

Visit Mashable.com  for the full interview and to see examples of some of her other designs.