tollie.org/blog thoughts and reflections of Tollie Williams

19Mar/090

Facebook Fail

Excepted from myself on Facebook:

The social graph model had a 10x more interesting Home feed. The twitter-clone home stream is almost completely uninteresting and not Facebook.

The highlights preserve some of the interesting aspects of the old home feed, but they are too few, too cluttered, and no longer able to be "tweaked" with sliders or "less of" links.

Additionally, the new home stream lacks filters for profile changes like groups, relationship statuses, and interests.

Basically, my iPhone has become my only interesting way to use Facebook, as it still gives me the social graph model of the Home feed-- don't screw it up, and you should *really* consider revamping the "new" twitter clone to be less of a clone, and more true to what kept Facebook interesting.

Go here for ways to take action: http://bit.ly/2Oz3i (links to Facebook note).

And don't forget to use http://iphone.facebook.com - maybe, hopefully, they'll see the spike in traffic to that website from non-iPhone browsers.

UPDATE: In my continuing campaign to get Facebook to fix the "great mistake of 09", I ended up writing out my thoughts in bullet points. Here they are:

*** 1: The new design didn't add significant functionality. ***

1a- The old design already had live updates (actually live though), and filtering by friend group, status, photos, etc.

1b- The only "new" functionality was to filter by 3rd party applications - most of which are rubbish.

1c- Indeed, the old functionality of being able to dial up or down what and who you found interesting - it's gone.

*** 2: The new design is dumb, rather than intelligent. ***

2a- The old "social graph" algorithm worked for me. It digested hundreds of friends and thousands of "data" into a digestible, interesting, useful home page.

2b- The new stream is always the last hour, and if I didn't block every 3rd party app I find, it would probably be littered with quizzed and sheep throwing. Further, since I check Facebook late at the end of the day, my home stream is almost exclusively west coast people, instead of my local friends who are most interesting to me.

2c- Twitter is about the "stream", it was founded as a micro-blog. Facebook is NOT about the stream - it was founded as, and ought to be, an intelligent address book that functions like a yearbook, collecting memories with photos, and your friends scribbled notes on the inside "walls" of the book.

MOST IMPORTANT TO ME:
*** 3: The new design reverts Facebook back to 2005. ***

3a- Profile changes (groups joined, relationship status, interest changes) are left completely unpublished, and thus we're left having to go profile to profile, and trying to remember what was and was not there, in order to find out some of the most interesting aspects of our friends (for me, namely, their relationship statuses - completely and totally obscure now).

3b- The new highlights section has SOME group joins, and you can even hack the URL to filter by groups, but neither are nearly as sufficient as the old Home Feed. And of course, it's cramped, minimal in number, and absolutely not customizable, so I don't count it.

***********

15Jan/090

Quick review of Twitter apps for the iPhone

Here's a very short blog comparing Twitter apps for the iPhone:

Executive summary: Tweetie wins. Tweetsville in a very close second.

  • Hahlo - web app. Slightly slow, and slightly weak on the timeline view.
     
  • Twitterrific - basic and minimalist. I don't like the way they update your location to GPS coordinates. That was a gimmick in the early days to show off the 3G's GPS, IMHO. They may have changed this behavior in later versions. Still might be best choice for very very light (non-techy) Twitter users.
     
  • Twinkle - the best feature of this app was its nearby feature and the posting of photos, but the nearby is very, very spotty - missing hundreds of tweets - and the photos are only visible to Twinkle users.
     
  • TwitterFon - when I was trying Twinkle, I had to use TwitterFon as a backup for when Twinkle got moody. TwitterFon is as basic as they come. Update: TwitterFon has added what is essentially threading and context-specific views- like Tweetsville has. Useful, but not enough to beat out Tweetie.
     
  • Twittelator Pro - paid for this app because it was the first one that offered multiple Twitter account integration. Wasn't worth it. It feels like the UI was designed by an elementary student learning Visual Basic. Just an emphatic "no."
     
  • Tweetsville - has been my staple Twitter App for a while now, and will remain on my phone alongside Tweetie. Tweetsville has the best Timeline view of all the apps, IMHO. The timeline view is minimalist and concise making it easy to quickly read. Unfortunately, it's rather prone to sluggishness when dealing with massive amounts of tweets. And except for multiple accounts, it matches Tweetie feature for feature. It displays direct messages like iChat, grouping them by person rather than Inbox / Send. So if you're only responsible for one Twitter account and don't care about location based discovery, Tweetsville is probably the app for you.
     
  • Tweetie - If you have multiple Twitter accounts, Tweetie wins by a mile over Twittelator Pro. It also feels a bit snappier than Tweetsville. Everything else ties with Tweetsville, except for the Timeline view, where I prefer the simplicity of Tweetsville's view. I also prefer Tweetsville's Direct Message view. However, like Tweetsville Tweetie does have trends, search, and the whole feature set, but it does it for multiple accounts. So if you're responsible for more than one Twitter account, Tweetie for the win. Update:I almost forgot: Tweetie also includes "nearby" search that works (unlike Twinkle), which helps set it clearly ahead of Tweetsville.

Please add your thoughts or cover anything I missed in the comments. (You can now log in with your Facebook account.)

Update 2: Tweetie clearly pulls way ahead, now with a compacted Timeline view.