This here is the most recent article, but you can browse all other sections below.

Sunday, January 09, 2011

The Next Generation Web: Facebook | Twitter

Web 2.0 was a term that caused a lot of controversy amongst the laymen, the web designers and the i-do-knows. At a point it referred to the design style of buttons, fonts and layout in general. Then it moved to the types of interactions that occurred on the various websites.

Today, the web has changed drastically. From the layouts and presentations to functionality. Almost gone are the times when your web pages were that: pages. Now, the adventurous power play of engineers’ knowledge of javascript has totally turned around the way we interact with these…pages. Websites are now more like desktop applications. Right now, browsers are turning from just website viewers to cloud computers.  Ladies and gentlemen, it’s the end of the world as we know it!

What fascinates me most in this new era(let us call it that) is the way we identify ourselves using social media tools on the websites we visit most.  Companies have turned to Facebook and Twitter for their interaction with customers. They have slowly given up using their domain names as main contact points on media outlets. It’s even like they have removed the http:// and replaced it with facebook.com/ and then some also have started adapting the @ style.

Facebook has always claimed to be a platform and a utility, and this is the most obvious manifestation of this goal. The real threat to the open web is not from proprietary protocols and closed networks, but from ‘facebook.com/’ and the ‘@’ screen name prefix becoming another well-known prefix like ‘http://’ and ‘www.’. -Eran Hammer-Lahav

How many times do  you watch a program segment on CNN and then see CNN.com? Watch BackStory and you hear Michael Holmes  direct you to facebook.com/backstory.

I was even surprised when my favorite band put their own breaking news on Facebook rather than their website whose feeds I receive in my feed reader.

Give me a random list of 10 of the most popular websites you visit on the regular and I can guarantee that on all 10 you have the ability to log in through your Facebook or your Twitter account.

Facebook recently introduced a new product, the Facebook Messaging which allows for you to chat and email @ facebook.com. Many people I have talked to have confessed that they will not sign up for the email facility. Others have declared that  they don’t see themselves dropping their proprietary emails  for a Facebook email. They’d rather have a Facebook email on the side.

But here is what I see: I see people slowly but surely leaving their yahoos and gmails and hotmails to clench a Facebook mail. Know why? In the near future, Facebook will be the online representation of who you are. Job hire companies will scrutinize your Facebook pages, the companies you work  will require your Facebook address. A good level of e-commerce transactions will have a root from Facebook. Most multiplayer games will be plugged in on Facebook.

What about Twitter? There is most likely going to be a new dimension in tweeting. But of course, the bulk of your quick news will jump out of Twitter feeds. Your name will be written online with a Twitter hyperlink. In fact that has already started. For instance, I integrated a feature on my website which allows  typing @ + anything to automatically link you to a Twitter user. Take for example @seyekuyinu. Putting your mouse over that will give you information about my Twitter.

The future is almost here and I still wait for the perfect hologram that will allow me to be at two places at the same time. A real world and a virtual world in a real world.

Ladies and gentlemen, it’s not the end of the world as we know it! It’s just the beginning; and we know it!


Friday, November 26, 2010

Chat For Facebook Free on Blackberry

Searching for a Facebook Chat application for Blackberry has mostly led to search results yielding  3rd party applications like ebuddy or trillian for the Blackberry and most of the others come with a price tag.

Most of these come with multiple chat clients like yahoo, gtalk, AIM, and Skype and don’t capture the perfect Facebook experience.

In testing out the ‘better’ facebook chat application, I have stumbled upon Chat On Facebook 2.0.24 by Smarter Apps Inc. I must say, it looks good and work well. The popular pop sound when someone sends in a message got irritating for me, thank goodness you can turn it off from the options screen.

For OTA(Over the Air) download of Chat On Facebook, the application, click here http://seyekuyinu.com/downloads/FacebookChat/COF.jad(directly from your phone browser)

Written for OS 4.3 to OS 6.0

For every application I did not build myself, I take no responsibilities for any mishaps.


This article was written by Seye Kuyinu. My name is Seye Kuyinu. My daily job is to write and draw with languages that translate to 1010101010s. By so doing I give people a better image on the web, and also make life easier for them. You can click here for more about me.


Article Browser