Posts tagged facebook

Notes

Who does brainstorming for new psychological locks and keys? Not very many people do that, and that’s something worth thinking about.

Super Mario, cub reporter: Carnegie Mellon University Professor Jesse Schell on what the game industry could teach the news industry | Nieman Journalism Lab

Notes from Schell’s presentation:

> touches on micro-transactions, lead generation vs. direct payments in Farmville

> overview of all the unexpected successes of the games industry (Wii, Webkinz, Mafia Wars etc)

> the thing the unexpected successes have in common is the use of psychological tricks (e.g. the elastic velvet rope, rationalization…)

> spilling over into actual reality…

> quotes Gilmore and Pine’s Authenticity; there’s a real hunger for reality. So, for example, you don’t just want vegetables at the supermarket, you want real organic vegetables.

> technological convergence isn’t how it’s going to be… technology diverges it doesn’t converge (iphones are the exceptions to the rule; but only because it’s the swiss army knife that needs to fit in your pocket)

> games have crept out everywhere. Examples: weight watchers, Simpsons scavenger hunt, virtual ‘pet’ plant in your car to change your fuel consumption behaviour, new education gaming structures to increase attendance etc

> future: connected objects, points for brushing your teeth for long enough :), points for getting to work on time, tricks to make you pay more attention to ads etc etc 

One warning is the potential for an ad-saturated future. However, we could also look forward to the benefits that living within a digital panopticon could bring; will the awareness of our legacy and data trail motivate us to be better people?

1 Notes

In a conversation today at Facebook headquarters, spokesman Brandon McCormick said the more users complain about new features, the more data reveal they’re actually using those features more. “We’re a social network,” he said, “we have a natural feedback mechanism. People use our product to complain about our product. People hated the Newsfeed when we launched it, now it’s the core of how they use the product. If we changed everything the second they started complaining, we wouldn’t have the data.

Notes

How a new social media system rolls out is of critical importance. Your understanding of a particular networked system will be heavily shaped by the people who introduce you to that system. When a system unfolds slowly, there’s room for the social norms to slowly bake, for people to work out what the norms should be. When a system unfolds quickly, there’s a whole lot of chaos in terms of social norms. Whenever a network system unfolds, there are inevitably competing norms that arise from people who are disconnected to one another.

Notes

From Social Media Screw Ups - a History