Join Us for a Realtime Super Bowl Party

Super Bowl Image Gallery

Realtime Super Bowl Image Gallery

We’re hosting a super bowl party of sorts. One of our products from Realtidbits is on display during the Super Bowl. It’s a live streaming photo gallery of photos from Indianapolis. We’ve been running the stream since Wednesday and have captured 972 images so far. We predict another 2,000 images might come in on Sunday as festivities ramp up.

We welcome you to visit the demo on Sunday during the game to see the Super Bowl’s realtime photo gallery in action. Below I’ve posted a little screencast I did to show how to interact with it. But the real fun is going to be in visiting the gallery on Sunday during the game.

In addition to our demo, you might also visit the Realtime Forums over at ESPN.com also powered by Realtidbits. The NFL forum is the most popular forum on the site (with over half a million posts). It’s often a vibrant forum with lots of off-topic conversation, but it’s a great example how a realtime experience can inject life into a static paradigm.

NFL Forum on ESPN.com

NFL Forum on ESPN.com

Posted in our products | Leave a comment

What’s Live Got to Do With It?

I’m watching the BCS Championship game live on ESPN3 right now. At the same time, I’m also watching their forums update in realtime.

ESPN3 Live

ESPN3 BCS Championship Game Live

This is what our forums product looks like during a live event.

ESPN Forums Live During the BCS Championship Game

ESPN Forums Live During the BCS Championship Game

And this is how it’s better than a typical forum (watch the video).

ESPN Live Forums Example from Kelly Abbott on Vimeo.

A pass is made and seconds later users are posting comments about it in our forums. You don’t even have to refresh the page. Talk about a true second-screen experience. It’s hard to know which game to watch: ESPN3 football or the ESPN forums verbal gymnastics on their forums.

Walk on over to the forums now and join me, yeah? (BTW, if you’re reading this after January 9, 2012 at about 8PM PST, you’re probably too late. But I’ll post some more videos later.)

Posted in our products | Leave a comment

On Streaming

A Stream

A Stream

We’re testing out a new wordpress plugin developed by one of the @realtidbits customers. If you look at the right of this page, you’ll see a stream of comments throughout the site. It’s based on our previous wordpress comment plugin we developed (which you can see below).

Posted in our products | Tagged | Leave a comment

Google Indexing Ajax?

A certain rumor started circulating a week ago about how Google is now capable of indexing rendered Javascript. I received a notification from a customer of ours. My immediate reaction was skepticism and then optimism. If any company could pull that trick off it’d be Google. However, our own @jonnyjon did some research on this and it turns out that the claims, while accurate, are not precise. Here’s what Jon found.

  • Google is not currently indexing Echo stream client content (which is how we built all of our products at realtidbits)
  • Google is indexing Facebook comments when the comment widget is embedded via <iframe> or XFBML (which creates a dynamic iframe)
  • When you embed the Facebook comments widget via iframe or XFBML setting the content is rendered within an iframe as HTML not dynamic javascript AJAX
  • I don’t see any evidence that Google is in fact indexing Facebook comments served up via AJAX only static html that is rendered from an iframe
  • Google’s recent statement that they “can now index some dynamic comments” is true but very misleading they can only crawl javascript that creates a dynamic iframe
  • Displaying echo in an iframe was debated a while back but eventually rejected in light of backplane and having multiple widgets on a page all work together.
This last point is a good one and points to our philosophy on how and why we built our realtidbits products the way we did. By tapping into backplane, we may lose SEO bump but gain an engagement bump. Backplane-enabled apps allows us to break down the barriers between content silos from a widget-level to site-level and indeed to web-level. I’ve written more about realtidbits’ reason for being here where you can see how the products are envisioned.
One last note, we realize that SEO is important. We’re prototyping search engine indexible components for all Echo stream content. It’s a simple process, really. And one we have in beta with a few customers already. When we’re confident it does as it should, we’ll release it for all Echo ecosystem partners to license. Stay tuned.
Posted in lessons learned in the trenches, our products, product development | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

My Steve Jobs Moment

Gave a 2-minute talk today about our launch partnership with Echo. I got to present our pithy case study about how we invented and went to market (profitably) in less than two months. I’m told it went rather well. The video has not been posted yet, but will embed it when I it is. For now, mosey on over to the E2 launch site and see what the hub-bub is all about. You can also see the realtidbits site where our newest products are available for sale. Follow the twitter #e2 hashtag for the event to see what people were/are saying.

Posted in our products | Leave a comment

3ones is E2 Launch Partner – Event Next Week

Join 3ones, Sports Illustrated, Universal Music, Reuters, The Washington Post and other major publishers to unveil the next generation in Real-time – Echo e2! They will be showing live real-time experiences that win big ad deals, dramatically increase brand awareness, and deep social engagement, all leveraging e2!

VIP invitation, here http://e2launch.eventbrite.com, if you are outside the valley RSVP to the Live Stream, here: http://e2launchstream.eventbrite.com/
In attendance will be industry luminaries such as Brian Solis (Author & Thought Leader), Louis Gray (Leading tech blogger), Markus Nelson (Director of Social Media, Salesforce), Ben Metcalfe (Helped develop the BBC and MySpace platforms) along with top press & leading VCs.

February 8, 2011
Philips Wattis Theater
SFMOMA
San Francisco


Posted in about us, our products | Tagged | 1 Comment

Bland beauty or interesting ugliness?

It went down like this. Jon and Tricia and I were working one day and we started brainstorming ideas about games we’d like to develop. We had an itch to scratch about creating something for Twitter at the same time. Naturally, where the two worlds collided, the byproduct was inspired. That was a year ago. The idea we came up with was this:

A or B

@aorb is a twitter handle we set up where people can send in questions like Chocolate or Vanilla? Donuts or Petit Fours? Vigorous health or profound wisdom? Six of one or half dozen of the other? (That one’s from as far back as last May.) Forget for a moment why anyone would want to ask or answer one of these absurd questions. It’s a game. It’s just another trivial something that says a little bit about who you are and what makes you tick. We wanted to simply create a place where people could tune in to receive these absurd questions and then reply with their answers. All in good fun.

We abandoned it a year ago though because we realized that there was a lot of work in creating a system that would actually do anything with those responses. Which is to say, we imagined a hundred of our closest friends actually replying to our absurd aorb’s. What then? How do we count the winner? How do we handle responses that include both or neither? How do we track how that original tweet propagated throughout the twittersphere?

It turns out that Gina Trapani had the same dilemma not too long ago. And she built a product that did some of that analytics work on tweets. She called it twitalytic. Not it’s called ThinkTank and it’s a sponsored open source project that will be used by the White House to crowdsource greater social innovation. It’s a far cry from our absurd little game, but when it comes down to it, ThinkTank is exactly the kind of app we would have built to analyze our aorb’s.

The ThinkTank app and our aorb game are both in their infancy, but we’re going to grow together. Given that it’s an open source project with greater good attached to it, we’re happy to participate as both developers and promoters of the app. Watch this space for more updates.

Below is a sample output from our most recent @aorb tweet “Bland beauty or interesting ugliness?” It’s updated dynamically from the ThinkTank app installed on our server and integrated with our wordpress install. It’s a humble beginning.

No replies found for status 9242886703.

If you want to play along, please start following @aorb on twitter and replying to our tweets from there. We send out just one a day. And all the results will be displayed on our @aorb ThinkTank.

Posted in our products | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

What the world needs now…

What the world needs now is love, sweet love
It’s the only thing that there’s just too little of
What the world needs now is love, sweet love,
No not just for some but for everyone.

What the World Needs Now Is Love” lyrics by Hal David.

Lovahs

Lovahs.com is a side project we started a while back. It came about when Trish, Jon and I were talking about building things that people could really sink their hearts and souls into. Call it social media. Call it user generated content. So much talk of that these days. So much of it to take seriously; or not. We wanted to contribute something light-hearted, fun, useful, and lasting. What better subject than love? Specifically, love letters on demand.

We’re going to have fun with it. We hope you do too. But first, some background.

Lovahs.com was built originally by Gina Trapani, designed by Patricia Forest. We had contributions to it from Adam Bronte and Jon Cianciullo. Jon Gallagher is managing the system. It was built voluntarily and as such we don’t really have any ambitions to make it a for-profit venture. The worlds needs love, after all. Enjoy!

Read, Write, Code

What separates Lovahs from any other project we’ve done (and from any other social media site for that matter) is that we’ve made the code open source as well. Which is to say, we don’t just want people to come to the site to read love letters, we want them to share them. We don’t just want people so share them, we want them to write them. And we don’t just want people to write letters, we want them to write and share our code on which the site is running. We’re taking social media to the next level. Or not. Who knows what comes of our effort to get others involved. But the experiment is worth trying.

Love in all its forms

Lovahs.com is really designed as minimally as possible. It allows people to peruse the site, read letters and send them to others. If you want to contribute a letter or make comments on a letter you can – just sign up and those features will be available to you.

We purposefully left out many features (some of which we put on our wishlist). We wanted to launch with the simplest possible product and then see where the community takes it.

Some samples

Last but not least. Here are some sample letters right from the site. Please share freely!

by Mary

by Mary

by splash

by splash

Famous Love Letter

Famous Love Letter

And a little nonsense

And a little nonsense

Posted in our products | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

The Complete Guide to Google Wave – the eBook published by 3ones

Book Cover

Book Cover

With much pride in our work, we announce the arrival of our first published eBook, the Complete Guide to Google Wave, by Gina Trapani with Adam Pash. It’s the first book published about Google Wave. The book is also free to share. Free as in freedom. Free as in, download, share, copy, recycle, re-mix and re-factor. It’s  yours, yours, yours, and yours. You’re all welcome.

Published the Wiki Way

The guide went live a few weeks ago as a wiki first. Gina and Adam continue to write it and edit it. Which is to say, it’s no longer just a book but a truly collaborative book that exists online. If you buy a PDF copy, download it to your kindle or desktop and enjoy. If someone loans you a copy, do the same. But remember…

Credits:

If you think our work was valuable, show it by contributing to the wiki, buying the eBook, or both.

Watch this Space

We’ll be using our site to tell the complete story behind the Complete Guide to Google Wave. We have planned releasing four editions over the next twelve months. As we explore the economics of this open publishing model during that time we’ll share our insights into the business of book publishing in the eBook/Wiki era.

Enjoy!

Posted in our books, our products | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

q1 @ 3ones – The Gratitude Index

Q1 at 3ones: off to a good start

I should prefance this post by telling a quick story. It’s a quick story about a client meeting. I had that meeting today. The meeting was a lunch meeting. It was somewhat improptu. We found ourselves out and about town and while talking on the phone we realized we should just meet up for lunch instead.

It turned into a wrap-up meeting where we evaluated the prior work completed and a review meeting for the proposed work presumably forthcoming. We ended up chatting for a while about other things: life, kids, money, and the start-up life. For me, a typical meeting amongst friends. For the client, perhaps surprisingly and refreshingly atypical.

At the end of the meeting the client makes a point out of stopping me, as we leave our separate ways, in the parking lot to say, “Thanks.” It was understood that thanks meant more than “glad you paid for lunch.” It meant, “I couldn’t have done it without you.” It meant, “Damn, am I glad we started working with 3ones.” It meant, “I trust you.” 

I’ll take one sincere expression of gratitude like that each quarter. 

New clients

  • Retail: 1
  • Social Media: 2
  • Traditional Media: 1
  • Entertainment: 1
  • Mobile: 1

In production

  • SMS apps: 2
  • Facebook app: 1
  • iPhone apps: 5
  • Drupal site: 1
  • Community/Retail Site PRD: 1
  • Web 2.0 Product/Business Development consulting: 2
  • community content site: 1
  • developing business between our clients: 2

Publicly Deployed

Privately Deployed

  • ReSTful API’s: 4  
  • Web service validator: 1  
  • Wiki installation/customization: 1
  • Disaster Recovery Plan: 1
  • Data center design and installation: 1 
Posted in about us, our clients, our products, product development | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment