new media

Tumblr Surging as Content Publishers Adopt Channel

By Andrew Davis | Published December 4th, 2009

Back in March, I wrote a very provocative post about Twitter versus Tumblr. I predicted that Tumblr might very well surpass Twitter as the next big thing. Now, it hasn’t happened yet, but Tumblr is evolving nicely. We’ve seen the demographics shift from more than 40% of the audience under 24 to an even spread across the demographic spectrum.

Twitter, Facebook vs. OpenID: Identity Management Made Easy

By Andrew Davis | Published November 30th, 2009

As Facebook Connect and Twitter grow so does single sign-on The more I experiment with new platforms the more I find myself trying to manage my online identity. With the huge adoption of both Twitter and Facebook, I find myself having the option to sign-in with either Facebook Connect or Twitter’s API. Could Twitter and…

Google Wave Feels Like a Chat Client, But is it?

By Andrew Davis | Published November 22nd, 2009

I don’t know how many people have received Google Wave invites. In September, we were told 100,000 users would be invited to participate. I opened my Gmail account last weekend to find my invitation awaiting my attention and with great excitement I clicked through to start my Google Wave experience. I am ready to change the way I communicate online. There’s only one problem: with so few early adopters invited to participate I don’t have anyone to communicate with.

That being said, I’ve had my first valuable interaction on Google Wave and feel confident in telling you what I think about my initial experience.

FourSquare and My Personal What-Now Factor

By Andrew Davis | Published November 16th, 2009

I’ve been using FourSquare for months now. I can’t recall where I heard about it, but I immediately signed up and started using it on my iPhone. If I was pitching FourSquare as a television show I’d pitch it like this:

FourSquare is Facebook meets Twitter meets Google Maps meets Yelp meets the Boy Scouts.

Micro-Apps Emerge as Immersive, Connected Experiences

By Andrew Davis | Published November 9th, 2009

Okay, so I just made up a new term “micro-app.” That’s the only way I can describe TheHotlist.com — it’s a micro-app. Basically, TheHotlist uses Facebook Connect to deliver a rich interface for your Facebook events. The interface is intriguing, delivering you a map and a calendar and showing you who’s attending what, where. It’s interesting and it may highlight something we’re going to see more of: deeper web applications built as massive mash-ups using networks like LinkedIn or Facebook as their core.

Amiando Makes Event Creation and Management Easy

By Andrew Davis | Published November 1st, 2009

Conferences, seminars, mixers, even fund-raising event management On September 10, 2009, all around the world, thousands of people gathered at restaurants and bars to support a local charity. All of these events were coordinated locally and attended internationally. Of course, a bunch of smart developers could have gotten together to build a complicated ticketing and…

Yelp! Where Niche Experts Can Reign Supreme

By Andrew Davis | Published October 26th, 2009

Remember Citysearch? Well, Citysearch is dying. Four or five years ago, Citysearch was where I went when I needed to find something new to do in Boston — or in any city I was visiting, for that matter. It was a great resource. But it wasn’t consumer (or visitor) focused and it didn’t evolve fast enough.