Facebook Memorial

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Holy Cow.  I was just thinking about this and wondering what would be done.  

A student at BYU passed away last week.  This has unfortunately happened twice while I have been here at school.  I saw an invite to the memorial service on facebook and I clicked on the link to the students profile.  His wall was full of thoughts from friends and family.  An impromptu memorial to his memory.  I loved the idea.

But it got me thinking.  What will happen in the future?  How does Facebook deal with someone who has died?  Can the family ask for the profile to be taken down? or changed?

Then I saw this post from the facebook blog.  

I think it is a sensible solution.  Have the option to turn the profile into a memorial.  

However I think there is still some discomfort here.  Will facebook in 100 years (if it is even around in 100 years) become a huge collection of digital memorials? 

What do you think?

Facebook Fan Page Popularity

Now that I am part of a Facebook fan page (http://www.facebook.com/funne) I care about things like this.

A New Look at the Path to Popularity
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by Eric Sun

]How do certain celebrities, movies, or bands become really popular? It’s a mystery that intrigues everyone from high school students and academic researchers to ad agency executives. Some people, like author Malcolm Gladwell of "The Tipping Point", contend that popularity is driven by a few key influencers who get everyone else to join them. Others, like sociologist Duncan Watts, give less credit to individual trendsetters, arguing that the key lies in vast groups of closely connected people who are easily convinced to try something new.Facebook is a great place to test these theories. 

If you have ever become a fan of a Facebook Page that grew to be wildly popular–or that never attracted as big a following as you expected–you've probably wondered how that came to be. Several of us on the Facebook Data Team have been analyzing the ways fan support has mobilized across thousands of Pages, covering topics as diverse as TV shows such as “Battlestar Galactica,” musicians such as Snoop Dogg and even philosophers such as Plato. After identifying Pages that attracted a lot of fans, we analyzed how each new wave of fans arrived. Thanks to Facebook’s News Feed, people constantly learn what Pages their friends are “fanning,” creating the opportunity to check out those Pages and become a fan, too. For example, I might fan a Page after noticing my fiancée fanned it first; three of my friends might follow suit after seeing that I’ve fanned that Page; and so on, creating a longer chain of connections each time. This sequence of connections is like a domino effect created by News Feed, enabling fan actions to evolve into ultra-long chains.What’s even more striking is how a flurry of fanning or short chains, all started by many people acting independently, often merges together into one gigantic group of friends and acquaintances. This merging happens when one person fans a Page after seeing two or more friends fan that same Page. A case in point is a Page devoted to a popular European cartoon, Stripy. The diagram below shows the cartoon's close-knit communities of fans in both Bosnia (blue) and Slovenia (yellow). A few fans serve as the “bridge” that brings the two groups together. A third cluster of Croatian fans (green) hasn’t yet found its connecting bridge. Finally, there are a few fans from other countries (grey), perhaps Bosnian and Slovenian expatriates!

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In fact, more than 90% of a popular Page’s fans can be part of a single group of people who are all somehow connected to one another. Typically, each of these large, close-knit communities contains thousands of separate starting points–individuals who independently decide to fan a particular Page. No single person is accountable for the popularity of a Page; instead, we consistently see that roughly 15% of all fans arrived independently and started their own chains (which merge together as the rest of the fan base takes shape). These patterns hold for Pages with a few thousand fans and for those with more than 50,000.Eventually, we hope to gain an even deeper understanding of the ways that popularity spreads. From our work so far, it appears that the most explosively popular Pages catch on as closely connected groups of like-minded people contact one another. Individual influencers aren’t nearly as crucial to a Page’s success: Pages grow if people are easily engaged by the content, not because of the actions of a couple trendsetters. That may also be true in other areas–such as the ways that new Platform Applications catch on–or a different dynamic might apply. We’ll be analyzing word-of-mouth (or should we say, word-of-mouse) referrals to find out.

Google, You Ask To Much

Ok.  So Google is an amazing company with amazing technology.  And then something like this happens.

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Are you kidding me?  You want me to copy some crazy code, go login to some support site and report a problem?  You gave me the code.  Why not auto report?  We will do a lot for you Google.  We id pictures, translate stuff, create pages, sign up for all your services, but if you can do something yourself, why not do it?

Email is Killing Me

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2 missed calls. 1 text message.  And 50 emails?  I love how anything and everything can send you emails as notifications, but that is anything and everything that demands a little bit of my time.  It gets to be too much sometimes.

Is there another way of notifying that doesn’t require the end users attention if he doesn’t want to give it?

 

 

Why Cripple Your Software…

I was trying to take a screenshot of a necklace that my sister liked in a movie and Apple gave me this error.

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Why? Every other screen capture program can do this? Obviously some movie company didn’t like the idea of pictures of their movie being available. Why? It is a free advertisement for your movie if I post a picture or if a little girl makes a necklace like the one in the movie. Don’t make it hard for consumers.

On An iPhone?

I got this photo during the Ragnar Relay when the cell switched over to Rogers the Canadian carrier.

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I almost laughed after I quickly switched off data roaming. 15 bucks a megabyte? I could rack up a 300 dollar bill in about half an hour. 🙂