My Photo

recent mobile pics

  • www.flickr.com
    twofones' photos More of twofones' photos

subscribe / connect

Find Me on Facebook

  • Greg Clayman's Facebook profile

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

« April 2007 | Main | June 2007 »

May 20, 2007

I Heart Facebook

Facebook2 When Friendster launched almost five years ago, I jumped in with both feet.  As did almost everyone else I knew it seemed.  Within months of signing up I'd managed to reconnect with old friends from high school, college, summer camp, previous jobs, etc. 

The issue with the site was that after signing up and assembling your friends there wasn't a whole lot else to do.  You could send people messages but one-to-one messaging quickly migrated to email. 

Of course, MySpace came to market in July of '03 and we all pretty much know the story from there.

But MySpace never caught on amongst my Friendster freinds.  It was too much work.  We were all too old.  And while it seemed a great platform to market yourself, your band, your book, your film, etc. it wasn't really the clean, easy, personal, semi-private, connection to real-life friends that I was looking for.

One year later, Facebook came along.  Facebook looked like it made good on the Friendster promise but it was limited to college students.  Growth was explosive and we all know the story there too...

Last September Facebook opened up its doors to anyone with an email address to much sturm and drang and the objections of many active college users.  At the time I was pretty skeptical that Facebook could make the leap as well.  It seemed like the user-base had been well-defined as college students, and that letting in the unwashed masses ran a real risk of disturbing the delicate balance that is an online community.

Turns out I was wrong.  Facebook isn't one community.  It's a million communities, some big, some tiny.  And more than anything Facebook is an extremely powerful tool-set (and even more powerful open API) for managing your communities and articulating your connections with other people.

I've been using the site for a few months now and am really impressed by the the web 2.0 openness of it all: I RSS my blog into the site, I RSS status updates out of it, I one-click import pictures from Flickr, I use a firefox plug-in to manage my friends.  I'm also impressed by all of the privacy features and functionality - pretty much anything can be made private or public and there are tiers of whom you allow to see what.

I don't think I'm the only grown-up who's discovering this.  I was a little uneasy at first signing up for a "college" site but the growth of non-collegiate users has been so great as to moot that concern.  And I think other people in my demo/psycho-graphic are finding the same thing, if the exponential rate of Facebook invites I've been receiving these past few months is any indication.

Eric Eldon over at Venture Wire recently wrote a good post summing up some of Facebook's recent growth story:

Facebook is now at more than 20 million registered users, up from 7.5 million users last July, the company told me. (In coming months, Facebook told me, it will begin reporting the number of actual users, or those who have logged into the site in the previous 30 days.) As mentioned, it now has about 1.5 billion page views a day, up from 1 billion page views day last month, it told me. Finally, it has more than 1.3 billion photos on the site, more than the 1 billion last month.

The caveat here of course is that this game is constantly changing.  UK social networking leader Bebo has been on a tear lately and is rumored to be in acquisition talks with Yahoo.  Korean juggernaut Cyworld has come to storm the US.  MySpace has launched video channels.  Even Friendster is back on a roll (especially in Southeast Asia, where they all but own the social networking market...)

But for this snapshot in time and from a purely personal perspective (as is everything on this blog, of course) I'm making camp at Facebook for now.  Come find me there and we can write on each other's walls.

May 14, 2007

The Avett Brothers

Img_5331741826

They've been called punk-country, grunge-grass, alt-rock-folk.  Someone behind me at their show last night called them the Sonic Youth of bluegrass. 

However you want to classify their music, The Avett Brothers are my new favorite band.

A few months ago I was reading this New York Magazine article about the cast of Spring Awakening (directed by my old friend Michael Mayer and definitely worth checking out if you haven't already...)  In the article, cast member John Gallagher, who plays wild-haired Moritz, talked about being obsessed by a band called The Avett Brothers.  I figured he looked the kind of guy who'd like music I was into so I picked up their album, Four Thieves Gone, from eMusic.  I haven't been able to stop listening to it.

The band is from North Carolina and two of them are in fact brothers (the guitar and banjo on the right in the picture above...)  The brothers had an up-and-coming punk band called Nemo and played country and bluegrass on the side.  At some point the band went bust and the brothers hooked up with an upright bassist and stuck with their banjo and acoustic guitar, at which point The Avett Brothers was born.

They play with an energy I've never seen in country/bluegrass and rarely even in rock as of late.  Scott Avett does things with a banjo that are just out of control.  He thrashed the thing so hard last night that the roadies just had to keep bringing out new ones for him song after song to keep repairing strings and keeping in tune.

At one point they brought out gravel-voiced local guitarist Paleface, along with a bow-toting cellist, and a drummer to join the fun; you're talking three guitars at this point, bass and cello being attacked with bows, two harmonicas going, beat of the drum barely keeping up with the beat of the crowd stomping on the ground - it was just bliss.  Here's a great review of a show they did in Philly two nights ago (and where I snagged the pic on this post from...)

They also have a slower and more mellow side, as evidenced by their latest album, Emotionalism, which comes out this Tuesday.  They're on tour to promote the CD, and did a gig on Conan Friday that I wish I'd caught.

I like the new album a lot, although Four Thieves Gone is still my favorite.  Here's the link to their page on FoxyTunes which features everything Avett from Google, YouTube, Last.FM, Hype Machine, etc. all in one place for your easy consumption.  And catch these guys the next time they play in your town.  You won't regret it.

Twitter Updates

    follow me on Twitter

    Recent Posts

    Neighborhood News

    thisnext shopcast

    • Shopcast
      powered by
      ThisNext