Long Live Walk Up and Use!

I bought Fruit Ninja ($0.99 iTunes), produced by halfbrick, for my iPhone last week, and so far, it’s more than paid for itself. What’s struck me most about it is its simplicity. It’s truly “walk up and use” design. When presented with the app, everyone can play the game and be successful enough to get… Read More

Facebook Should Go Freemium

A lot of ink has been spilled lately about Facebook and its privacy changes. Some key people have deleted their accounts, and not one, but two so-called open projects have started. This is all noise. Even if all the people who rail against Facebook’s privacy changes, do actually quit (they won’t), that will only be… Read More

Adventures with Android

About a month ago, Google announced they were giving away Droids and Nexus Ones to Google IO (@googleio) attendees, which is next week. Droids go to attendees registered with US addresses. Nexus Ones go to international attendees. The Droid comes with 30 days of complimentary 3G service on Verizon, so it’s fully functional. Android will be a… Read More

Found Business Models

I found Cultivated Play, an essay about Farmville and why it works, absolutely fascinating. I’ve never been a fan of games on Facebook, even when all they involved were throwing sheep or biting someone. So, I’m dimly aware of Farmville and its ilk, but never really cared to know how they worked. After reading Cultivated… Read More

Follow Friday: Clay Shirky

I’ve been staycationing this week, in case you were wondering why it’s been quiet here. It’s Friday, so I thought I’d extend a Twitter tradition and do a follow Friday of my own, in longer format. At SXSW in March, Paul and I both attended Clay Shirky’s keynote, “Monkeys with Internet Access: Sharing, Human Nature… Read More

How Do You Get to Facebook?

This blew me away; Hitwise reported that “facebook” was the top search term across the three major search engines (Google, Yahoo, and Bing) in March 2010. Dig deeper and you’ll find that some variant of “facebook” accounted for eight of the 30 total spots. I guess I shouldn’t be surprised, since we saw glaring evidence… Read More

Tweaking WebCenter

We joined the WebCenter development team back in late September of last year, and since then, one of our major projects has been redesigning the internal WebCenter 11g instance used by employees. I’m happy to report that our first round of changes went live on Monday. More on that in a minute. Coincidentally, the latest… Read More

Designing for “Not Us”

The release of the iPad and the subsequent debate around who would use it and why has me on a personal crusade to design simpler software. Technology inspires nervousness and fear among everyday users, and frequently, geeks don’t help the uninitiated, as we saw when ReadWriteWeb was mistaken for Facebook. Prowess with code puts us… Read More

When is a Hole not a Hole?

At Chirp last week, there was a lot of talk about filling holes. As background, this is the term Fred Wilson (@fredwilson), an investor in Twitter, used in a post that sent understandable shockwaves through the Twitter developer community, erm, ecosystem. Oh, and the release of a Blackberry app and the acquisition of Atebits (@atebits),… Read More

More on @Anywhere

So, Rich (@rmanalan), Anthony (@anthonyslai) and I (@jkuramot) are at Chirp (@chirp), the Twitter developer conference in San Francisco. One of the many tidbits from yesterday’s sessions was the general release of the @Anywhere platform Evan Williams (@ev) announced at SXSW in March. If you’re not already familiar, @Anywhere integrates Twitter into any website with… Read More

@anywhere @here

Fresh out of @twitter’s oven is @anywhere, one of the big features they announced recently.  The service is now live at http://dev.twitter.com/anywhere.  @jkuramot and I (@rmanalan) just implemented it on this blog.  To see it in action, hover over any of the @twitter names.

We’re Gearing up for Chirp

Next week is Chirp, the inaugural Twitter developer conference, and as I mentioned, Rich, Anthony and I are attending. Safe to say, we’re all pretty excited, although it looks to be a marathon, with the conference running pretty much 9-6 on the 14th, the hack day starting right after and running for 24 hours, and… Read More