Micro-blogging growing up?

http://tinyurl.com/6bvdk6

The term ‘Web 2.0′ seems to have reached its apex.  By this, I mean that the new internet appears to have well established its ground roots.  One way to tell this is happening is the relative explosion of open source forums of these popular applications.  Specifically, lacroni.ca and Sweetcron, steroid-enhanced versions of Twitter and a pseudo-ish Netvibes, respectively.

Since its release, July 13, 2006, Twitter has shown the idea of micro-blogging to be very welcome.  But, as with any popular idea, it was copied and cloned - sometimes for the better, but usually the worse.  Intentional or not, these have proven to be independant feature-testers for the ever evolving micro-blogging community.  Pownce, the most successful post-Twitter service, was founded by Leah Culver, Daniel Burka and the internet god known as Kevin Rose, the father of Digg.  It was renowned for its contextual media formatting as well as its threading ability - something Twitter should have (but still has not) started out with.  Along with that, the Digg team brought an extremely loyal community, that community was then very compliant with the aforementioned technological advantage it already had over Twitter - the basic idea of threading.

As said in a previous article, the popularity of social networks can lead to its eventual standardization, as was the case with MySpace and, later, Facebook.  The difference here is that after MySpace’s apparent ‘prime’ my favorite acronym came to be; RSS.  Although the following system used in Twitter, or in any other micro-blogging service does not use RSS (directly), but as a following/ (Real Simple) Syndication system, RSS did seem to popularize the idea.

So where are we now?  Micro-blogging has proven itself as one of the distinctive aspects of Web 2.0.  The only problem, is, well, no matter how secure a server may be, private corporate data should never, and will never, leave the office - in server form or not.  That is the problem with all online services - being online, rather, online in servers not of your own.  Companies and groups and clubs and communities will be able to create and manage their own social groups.  With more control and less server-overloads, as are so famous on Twitter.com.

As for Sweetcron?  Lifestreaming appeared not long ago, not even a year.  My favorite one is, most cleverly titled Lifestream.fm.  With so many social communities, how can anyone keep track of a single person?  The answer to that is called lifestreaming, FriendFeed was actually one of the first, Lifestream.fm is just the nicest looking one.  The idea here is to just aggregate all of your information to one spot.  In this case, security and serverload has never been much an issue, but the idea behind it, the self-aggregation, can be used in so many services.

And that is where this OSS comes in.  This is why I get so damn excited about programs like lacroni.ca and Sweetcron.  The popularity of such niche services show what people want to do with the technology, and now, OSS is going to let them do that.

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Sunday, August 31st, 2008 Internet

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