So Couple had this for April fools

They posted this and the corresponding blog post on March 31 but the email announcement didn’t arrive in my inbox until this morning. Almost a week late. In the meantime, on April 2 they put up another blog post saying that Alice, and her male version Alex, had discovered each other and ran away, leaving only a chat record of what happened.

You can go to http://couple.me/alice to see the intro. The whole thing does look straight out of the movie Her, except you don’t get Scarlett Johansson’s voice.

That’s cute.

commodifiedsouls:

ecumenicalseeker:

cryaotichiddles:

I found this, so I thought I’d chime in on this.

YOU HAVE GOT TO BE KIDDING ME

Yup, it really happened.

darecrow:

darecrow:

are you guys okay

I didn’t mean for this to get this many notes I’m just genuinely concerned for these people

Messaging Apps I Use

I had this drafted for a Path post but what the hell, I’ll put it here instead. Probably going for a longer post some other time.

Messaging apps are a dime a dozen and there’s zero financial cost of switching or adopting one app over the other although it’s always about who’s on which service. My latest post on DailySocial about the subject addresses this fact. It’s so easy to sign up to and use each one, it’s no big deal to have multiple messaging apps installed although some people may prefer to stick to one or no more than two or three to keep things simple.

Me, I try almost any of the major apps and each app has different groups of people using it. For most work contacts I use email while Facebook Messenger, Path message, and Twitter DM are used interchangeably depending which one is the easiest to use to contact the other person. iMessage and FaceTime are for people who also use iOS. I also use Couple with my girlfriend, it’s a fun little app just for two.

Funny thing is the supposedly more popular apps like Line, KakaoTalk, and WhatsApp don’t see that much use from me but they do get used regularly with certain people who are on those services. I also use Telegram with a limited set of contacts. Kakao is getting more interesting though. I’m thinking of exploring it for group chats and coordinating things with people. Apparently it even has a voting feature which is really neat and surprising. Considering it for communications for future projects.

For internal comms at work, we use Slack. It’s really easy to use and practical, but perhaps due to the tech it uses to connect, it has connectivity delays that forces me to wait for up to a minute before I can send a message or sometimes it even freezes, forcing me to kill and relaunch the app.

So yeah, that’s the list of messaging apps I use. It changes over time depending on priorities and practicality obviously. For example, I used to use Google Hangouts until last year but not anymore. The app on iOS is unstable and just terrible to use. I’m also weaning off Skype, that horrible, horrible app that’s completely unreliable.

In the world of ad-supported media, traffic volume is everything. Too often that means sacrificing quality for quantity and prioritising stories that generate clicks. In the subscription world, quantity doesn’t move the needle. Quality does.

What I think about social media and the upcoming Indonesian elections

The Australian Associated Press emailed me asking my views on the role of social media in this year’s Indonesian elections and the role of digital natives as first times voters.

My long answer below

I don’t think social media can make or break a candidate by itself. Presence on social networks certainly help raise their profiles but it also opens them up to attacks.

While use of social media in Indonesia seems massive, the majority of things I see about this upcoming election and even Indonesian elections in the past, is about making fun of elections and candidates.

The primary driver of political campaigns remains television. The influence of TV is still significantly much larger than the likes of Twitter or Facebook but TV and other “traditional” media also take their news from social media, therefore social media presence and activities can help spearhead the image or intention that the candidates want to project. Television can amplify what is being said or what is happening on social media.

Look at the publicity on Aburizal Bakrie’s trip to the Maldives for example. That trip from four or so years ago first made the rounds on YouTube and Twitter a few days ago and within hours it was picked up by television as well as online news media and became a national talking point by the end of the day.

That being said, conversations on social media are also being driven by what is happening on TV so you have that full circle of coverage and talking points from both media amplifying each other until the masses are tired of the subject and move on to the next topic.

Another example is Farhat Abbas. The one time presidential hopeful and legislative candidate was on Twitter until recently, perhaps to deliver his campaign promises, to create a more popular image of himself, and to address people who talked about him. Ultimately it was a failed experiment because everyone saw right through him. His actions that had been reported across all media were amplified and ridiculed on Twitter so much that he eventually shut down his @farhatabbaslaw account, although as it turns out he reactivated it several days later.

The success of Jokowi and Ahok may have been driven by social media but to my eyes, the real driver was the relentless coverage on TV and newspapers about their campaigns and activities. Perhaps the final kicker was the flashmob at Bundaran HI shortly prior to the gubernatorial election day in 2012.

What’s good about this election is that the rise of software developers taking advantage of Pemilu API, which is the publicly available access to the KPU data about all of the legislative candidates and their parties. Spurred on by Perludem, these mobile applications and websites may not be massively popular but they provide far more useful and easier to access information so that the voters are better informed about their options.

The digital natives, in other words, people who are far more comfortable with the internet, mobile devices, and appications, most of which happen to be first time voters, apparently are increasingly looking for election information from the internet. They will scrounge news and info not just from social media but also from news websites and other sources including applications. It’s up to them to decide how to filter and process all that information.

Google is known to have provided a central repository of election news and information for other countries in the past and it’s just a matter of time before they launch an Indonesian version of it. It’s a bit of a shame that they haven’t so far with the election being so close now, just a matter of days. – Read on Path.

camh:

Welcome to the future.

Turn your hand over, dummy, you have an email.

Why are you looking at your watch while you’re holding your goddamn phone you dipshit. Look at your phone. Not the watch. The phone.

Fine. Be that way. Touch the watch with your only hand without technology. Consider buying another phone for your non-phone hand. Perhaps it’s lonely without a phone to hold.

You recorded this with your Google Glass, didn’t you?

Why am I even asking, of course you did.

The First National Bank of GameStop

jkottke:

An anonymous user of 4chan has come up with a brilliantly harebrained scheme for their personal banking. They use video game retailer GameStop as a bank.

Gamestop Bank

Here’s how it works: whenever a paycheck comes in, this person goes to GameStop and pre-orders a bunch of upcoming video games….

The First National Bank of GameStop

Non-Stop star Liam Neeson: ‘I was asked to be James Bond but chose marriage instead’ | Hull Daily Mailbox

Probably an ordinary story and premise for an article but the approach and the storytelling here somehow fascinates me. The article is a profile of Liam Neeson, with him telling how his choice to marry the late Natasha Richardson cost him the chance to be James Bond but it wasn’t that big of a deal after all.

I’m just gonna leave it here for my writing reference.

Non-Stop star Liam Neeson: ‘I was asked to be James Bond but chose marriage instead’ | Hull Daily Mailbox