Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Is Facebook the Most Popular Social Bookmarking Service on the Web?

Source: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/readwriteweb/~3/362092101/is_facebook_the_most_popular_social_bookmarking.php

sharethislogo.jpgShareThis reports that it is now.

How do website readers prefer to share stories they find with friends? According to the company behind the widely used sharing widget ShareThis, after emailing a link, the most popular method of sharing is now Facebook. The numbers are interesting - but there are also some big caveats to keep in mind.

The Numbers

sharethisscreen_aug_11_2008.png

In our enthusiasm for Web 2.0 style tools, many blog publishers may forget just how popular sharing by email is. It's clearly the favorite method. Email sharing does tend to be one to one however, having items shared on Digg or Facebook has the potential to reach many, many more people.

The big surprise here, though, is that Facebook and MySpace have emerged as hugely popular ways to share items from off-site. Have they found greater mainstream success in the relatively short time these sites have supported item sharing than dedicated social bookmarking sites that have in the years they have been online? It appears that may be the case.

We found these numbers via Amit Agarwal's blog, which is always a great place to discover new things about the web.

Why This is Important

When publishers add the ShareThis system to their websites, they can choose which services to include buttons for. It's an important detail to take into consideration and knowing which services are most popular can help make this decision. Here at RWW we don't use ShareThis, we use another service called AddThis. Looking at the numbers from ShareThis, though, would lead us to believe that sharing by email needs to be added and sharing by Facebook needs to be given higher billing in our widget. Other sites might make other decisions based on this data. GigaOm, for example, doesn't offer sharing by Facebook at all - something our friend Om might want to change.

Caveats

A few things to take into consideration, however, include the following:

  • Your site's audience may vary. Different communities around different content topics probably have different trends in the sharing tools they use. We assume, for example, that there aren't a lot of people sharing ReadWriteWeb stories on MySpace - but maybe we're wrong!
  • Some of these services use bookmarklets. These numbers aren't for all sharing, just sharing that goes on through the ShareThis widget. Delicious users, for example, don't necessarily think of what they are doing as sharing (it's often bookmarking for personal use) and that service has its own bookmarklet.

None the less, the take away here for us is this: email, Facebook and MySpace are very popular ways for people to share things online. Publishers neglect them at our own risk.


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High-End Retailers Forced Into Heavy Pre-Christmas Sales

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/AdvertisingAge/LatestNews/~3/OPm_OEKt2xw/article.php


NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- Wracked by recession, high-end brand retail chains have been forced to offer some of the steepest pre-Christmas discounts they've ever had to suffer. Ad Age retail reporter Natalie Zmuda and Brand Experience Lab chief David Polinchock take a tour of New York's swankiest Fifth Avenue stores. And what they find portends badly for the future of high-end retailing.

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Google Docs Gadget Offers Drag-and-Drop Uploading [Google Docs]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/qV4LLBdR8jM/google-docs-gadget-offers-drag+and+drop-uploading

Google releases a desktop gadget for Google Docs that lets you drag and drop spreadsheets, presentation, and word processing files onto it to upload it to your account.

You'll need to be running Google Desktop to get the gadget (available for Windows and Linux only), which lists all your account's documents for quick access to your files. Along with the recently-launched Gmail gadget, this one's making Google Desktop gadgets worth another look.

Access Google Docs from your Desktop [Official Google Docs Blog via Mashable]



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GMDesk Puts Multiple Google Apps in One Window [Featured Download]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/zi5-s_1XlF0/gmdesk-puts-multiple-google-apps-in-one-window

Windows/Mac/Linux (Adobe AIR): GMDesk is a single-window frame that can hot-switch between Gmail, Google Calendar, Google Docs, and other G-apps, but it could use a few tweaks to make it truly convenient.

The whole idea of apps like GMDesk is to get your web-based productivity tools onto your desktop, without the need for a browser, as with Mozilla's Prism, which we've explained in terms of distraction-free webapps. GMDesk does put all of the majorly helpful Google apps into a single window shell, lets you switch between them hotkeys (Ctrl+1 for Gmail, Ctrl+2 for Calendar, etc.), and switch to domain-hosted Google Apps versions of those webapps instead, which alone might make GMDesk worth it for anyone working both a personal and work-related Gmail account.

But GMDesk, last updated in June, lacks for customization options. You can't, as far as I can tell, change the hotkey switches. More frustrating, though, is the inability to change the font and text sizes on your apps. Google Calendar and Reader start off in decent sizes, but most serious users are going to get frustrated with Gmail and Docs pretty quickly, unless they're using their system's built-in magnification tools, and then that's kind of a pain. Maps has its own zooming capabilities, so that's pretty much a wash, and Picasa Web Albums kinds of sticks out for not being an everyday-use tool.

Still, if you're a Google app fiend and would like to keep them separated from your main browser window, GMDesk might be a step up. It's a free download, requires the Adobe AIR platform to run.

GMDesk [Robert Nyman via Online Tech Tips]


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Bypass Network Blocks with Remote Desktop [Tip Testers]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/VPAp6sTanxg/bypass-network-blocks-with-remote-desktop

Reader Bryan uses remote desktop to bypass network blocks at his work sites to get to Gmail and write his blog. Bryan writes:

In a world of virtual communication, having personal email, Twitter, and access to blogs, etc is critical and necessary for many of us. Therefore, it becomes a nuisance when our employers block us from the sites that we love and hold so close to our virtual-loving-hearts. Many of my client's networks do not allow me to access my non-work related email (Gmail, Yahoo Mail, etc.), Twitter, and Blogger. Google Reader is also blocked at several.

For this reason, I have set up a Remote Desktop connection on my home computer which I use as a proxy-ish means to access my Gmail and other sites from these clients. I use my Vista sidebar Remote Desktop connection gadget to click and log in to my home computer from my work laptop and have access to all that I need in a little minimize-able window on my desktop. I recommend this for anyone who has that tight network administrator who has blocked all your favorite sites.

Check out a screenshot of Bryan's setup above. He gives us a few links on how to set this up on your own:



Congrats to Bryan for snagging a signed copy of Upgrade Your Life! Tell us your best time saver of 2008 to win your own.



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ShareTabs Opens Multiple Links in Tabs [URL Hacks]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/CVEn0a9GsH0/sharetabs-opens-multiple-links-in-tabs

Web site ShareTabs is sort of like TinyURL when you want to share several links, allowing you to send one link that will open a number of links in separate tabs with one click.

Here's an example:

If I wanted to share all of the non-Lifehacker Gawker Media sites with someone, I could simply send the following ShareTabs link: http://www.sharetabs.com/?gawker

When you follow that link, you'll see the page below.
The thumbnails display each site, and clicking a thumbnail will open that site in one of the faux tabs you see at the top of the screenshot (they may look like Firefox tabs, but they're actually just a graphical element inside the ShareTabs site). You can either navigate the sites by clicking around the faux tabs, or you can click the Open all links link at the top of the page to actually open each link in a separate tab. If you're looking to share a lot of links without taking a lot of space to do it, ShareTabs is a great tool.



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Start Your IM App without Logging In with a Simple Shortcut [Instant Messaging]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/RglJuu1Zg7s/start-your-im-app-without-logging-in-with-a-simple-shortcut

You probably have your IM application set to automatically login to your different accounts as soon as it starts up, but what about when you want to chat without announcing your presence to the world.

Macworld details a simple keyboard shortcut that will launch iChat or Adium without logging into any accounts. The trick: Just hold down the shift key when you launch your respective IM app. Doing so will start the app offline. From there you can log into whichever individual account you want and control your status ahead of time. I tried this trick on Pidgin and Digsby to no avail and searched for similar shortcuts without luck. (If you know the proper shortcut, let's hear it!) It's such a smart and simple shortcut, and having been exposed to it, you can't help but wonder why all IM apps don't have this option.



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FeedMyTorrents Offers TV Torrent Feeds without Duplicates [BitTorrent]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/84pGWFSf01k/feedmytorrents-offers-tv-torrent-feeds-without-duplicates

Web site FeedMyTorrents publishes RSS feeds of torrents for popular TV shows. Just subscribe to your favorite show and let your BitTorrent client automatically download new episodes as soon as they're available.

FeedMyTorrents isn't the only web site of this kind—perhaps the most notable alternative being tvRSS—but it's a good deal more simple to understand and use than tvRSS. Where tvRSS has an undeniably larger collection of shows, FeedMyTorrents is strict about a duplication-free feed, meaning you don't have to tweak the feed or weed out downloads you don't want. Just pick the show you want to subscribe to, set it up in your BitTorrent client of choice, and you'll always have the latest and greatest episodes of your favorite shows as soon as they're available. Thanks Jason!



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FeedFlix Gets Your Money's Worth from Netflix [NetFlix]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/FCMZytSi1-I/feedflix-gets-your-moneys-worth-from-netflix

Netflix's subscription rental service makes it easy to get nearly any DVD delivered to your doorstep, but have you ever wondered how much you're actually paying per movie or whether you're getting your money's worth?


Web site FeedFlix aims to answer that question. It does so by tapping into Netflix's API and analyzing your usage habits. Once it does so, you can see how much each rental costs you and keep track of the average time you keep your DVDs. If you don't like what you see, FeedFlix can create alerts that will send reminder emails when you've kept a movie for too long. FeedFlix even takes Watch Instantly movies into account to give you a more accurate picture of your viewing habits.

FeedFlix is a great tool to help determine if your Netflix subscription is worth the money you're paying. If it's not, you can save the cash by canceling your account or let FeedFlix help you stay on top of your rentals so you're making the most of your account.



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