Corante

Authors

Clay Shirky
( Archive | Home )

Liz Lawley
( Archive | Home )

Ross Mayfield
( Archive | Home )

Sébastien Paquet
( Archive | Home )

David Weinberger
( Archive | Home )

danah boyd
( Archive | Home )

Guest Authors
Site Search
Monthly Archives
Syndication
RSS 1.0
RSS 2.0
Just Released the 2008 Tribalization of Business study - an in-depth look at how 140+ organizations are managing and measuring online communities

Many-to-Many

« acquaintance spam | Main | initial impression of Yahoo 360 »

March 23, 2005

How could your TV set become social?

Email This Entry

Posted by Kevin Marks

Tom Coates, fresh from his etech tour de force where he showed how you might tag songs playing on the radio, has written up a lot of interesting thoughts on how to have social software on a TV. Lots of food for thought there.

Comments (2) | Category:


COMMENTS

1. Tom Coates on March 23, 2005 6:56 PM writes...

I should remind everyone that the paper at ETech was a joint piece of work between Matt Webb, Matt Biddulph, Paul Hammond and I. Otherwise thanks for the nice words! Really appreciated (and yes I know about the post two steps down on the page - what bloody terrible timing).

Permalink to Comment

2. Diane on March 23, 2005 9:37 PM writes...

Hi, I am writing to you on this site since I couldn't find any other way to reach you. I saw your postings at DK that were under hidden comments and felt very sorry for the way you were attacked. I think your whole diary has disappeared due to all the 0's. It appears that DK is getting very intolerant of a lot of things and getting to be a group think kind of place.

So I want to invite you to come to this site where people are a little more tolerant.
http://www.boomantribune.com/
If you do look for me, I am diane101 there.
Bye

Permalink to Comment

TRACKBACKS

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference How could your TV set become social?:


EMAIL THIS ENTRY TO A FRIEND

Email this entry to:

Your email address:

Message (optional):




RELATED ENTRIES
Spolsky on Blog Comments: Scale matters
"The internet's output is data, but its product is freedom"
Andrew Keen: Rescuing 'Luddite' from the Luddites
knowledge access as a public good
viewing American class divisions through Facebook and MySpace
Gorman, redux: The Siren Song of the Internet
Mis-understanding Fred Wilson's 'Age and Entrepreneurship' argument
The Future Belongs to Those Who Take The Present For Granted: A return to Fred Wilson's "age question"