Tuesday, October 28, 2014

What's the Deal with Facebook's New Rooms App

Just a few days ago, Facebook unleashed its newest app to users, Rooms.

This unveiling comes on the heels of what seems like a retreat from Messagner, the FB app for using the sites Chat feature which has undergone scrutiny since it was released and forced upon users. It appears now, users can once again message friends through the native Facebook app.

Rooms, Facebook's much-anticipated anonymous social app, hit the iTunes store last week. The app allows people to create a "room" on any topic, similar to a message board. The room can then be customized with colors, icons and photos. Text, photos and videos can be posted to a room's feed, creating an ongoing multimedia conversation.


The goal, according to the app's blog, is to transfer the utility of message boards to the mobile world.

The app embraces anonymity, allowing users to sign in with "whatever name makes you feel most comfortable and proud." Users can create different names for each room they join.

Rooms can be shared through invitations that look like QR codes. You take a picture of the invitation, and the app scans your recent photos for the QR code and signs you into the room.


The invitation process means each room can be as public or private as its owner and members wish. The invite codes can be posted anywhere online or share just among a select group of people.

Each room can also be customized to a certain level of privacy, including whether or not the room's post can be discovered on search.

Going Nostalgic
The app, which was created by a team led by Josh Miller over the last six months, introduces a new twist on the chat rooms of yesteryear. To anyone born before 1990, Rooms will feel very familiar. Essentially, it's a retro reboot Web 1.0 platforms where people gathered to discuss their interests or like-minded topics. It's the first Facebook-designed app that has taken a page out of the history books to alter the way we communicate today — to the web we used to have, before Snapchat and Twitter and Facebook itself changed the way we communicated. The similarities are not an accident. Miller says he consulted with the proprietors of Web 1.0 communities while building Rooms in an attempt to capture some of the atavistic intrigue of those early boards while keeping the space safe from trolls and harassers.

Copycat?
Although Facebook claims to have had Rooms in development for quite a long time, other outside developers are claiming Facebook stole this idea. There is a long history of alleged idea-stealing on Facebook's part however we may never know for certain if that is the case here. Damien Rottemberg, an app developer launched his app, Room, in September. That's right, the singular form of room. Both apps are inspired by chat rooms and message boards popular in the early days of the internet. Rottemberg claims he and business partner Frank-David Colon have been developing Room since December, and met with venture capitalists in New York and Silicon Valley in March. Rottemberg applied in March for a trademark for Room, and the application is still pending. Coincidence?

Future of Anonymity on the Internet
The new Facebook app is a place where you can chat with other like-minded people about most anything, from theatrical stage shows to wearable technologies, and because users are not required to use their real name, everyone has the freedom to express themselves in ways they wouldn’t have on the main Facebook app. But at the same time, Facebook has committed to policing these rooms at the lowest level possible and if anything offensive appears within a room—hate speech, threats, spam, or graphic content—moderators or Facebook can take it down. Although this may seem like a powerplay against other popular anonymous message boards like Reddit, due to it's monitoring and policies, Rooms is blazing a new trail for online anonymity. Hopefully this will prove to be a safer trail. 

I have only started to dip my toes into these new communities. I look forward to providing a comprehensive review once I've been able to get some hands-on experience.

Thursday, October 23, 2014

MichBusiness: One Person Wonder


I am very excited to announce that in a few weeks I will be honored as the recipient of The Michigan Business and Professionals Association's the Best of MichBusiness award, "One Person Wonder," for my work/life balance between my career at Ford Motor Company and Team Detroit in Corporate Communications, freelancing in social media and public relations, owning and designing for Urban Solstice (my jewelry company), and my volunteer and community work as a 313Dlove Board Member and a Girl Scouts of Southeastern Michigan Troop Leader.

I'm really just thankful for all the amazing people I've been able to surround myself who are passionate, who never look at me like I'm crazy, and who are always there to lend a hand.

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Too Bad Michigan's Auto Industry Isn't Listening to Socrates

Today I was inspired by a Socrates quote which is helping me to deal with some feels I'm feeling.

"The secret of change is to focus all of your energy, not on fighting the old, but on building the new."

Sounds so simple, right?

Yesterday Gov. Rick Snyder signed a bill that ensures Tesla Motors, the Silicon Valley automaker, can't sell cars directly to consumers in Michigan, which was heavily supported by Michigan's powerful auto dealer lobby.

There are a plethora of "reasons" however the main thorn in their side comes from Tesla wanting to sell cars through "stores" instead of franchised dealers, which today is the standard of the automotive industry. No other automakers do this. Supporters argue Michigan should have a business environment where all participants play by a common set of rules.

This is the silliest thing I've ever heard.

A "common set of rules" will suppress competitiveness, which is the backbone of businesses. It will suppress innovation based on fear of the same banishment and because innovation and change have now been made unnecessary for a successful business. And without a culture based on innovation, Michigan has just suppressed the automotive industry, its pride and joy.

Just because we didn't do it first doesn't mean it isn't a good idea. 

Business and the industry need to keep up with the needs and lifestyles of a new generation, a generation that is far different and complex from anything else we've seen. Those who are unwilling to change to meet their demands, will be pushed aside.

Just because we didn't do it first doesn't mean we can't do it better.

If the industry spent half as much time, energy, resources, and money on change as they have on fighting the new model, maybe they would have been able to develop a competitive solution that could have, once again, put Detroit's auto industry on the map.

In the words of, Detroit billionaire, Dan Gilbert on the ban: "Why don't you man up and compete like everybody else does?"

Saturday, October 18, 2014

Weekly Wrap Up: October 12 - 18


Here's what you may have missed this week:

  • Netflix Leads In U.S. Digital Video Subscriptions In Home And Among Millennials - A survey out on video viewing habits found that Netflix is the leading brand among U.S. households that subscribe to paid digital video subscription services, and it’s also the leading subscription service among the much-coveted Millennial, 18-34 year-old, demographic.
  • Mark Zuckerberg Drops $100 Million on Hawaiian Property - The 30-year-old Facebook founder recently purchased 700 acres of property on the North Shore of the island of Kauai, according to a Forbes report.
  • Skype Launches A New Video Messaging App For The Mobile - First Era, Skype Qik - Instead of focusing on live video calls and instant messaging-like chats, Skype Qik is designed around asynchronous video messaging – that is, mobile video messages you create and share with others who may not be online at the same time as you.
  • Stickers Launch on Facebook - Brace yourself: The stickers are coming to Facebook. Those adorable graphics or cartoons of special characters have, up until now, lived only in messages to friends on Messenger. But people will soon be able to share them in comments on posts from people, in groups, and on events, Facebook announced Monday.
  • Report: Thousands of Snapchat pics leaked online - It appears hackers have followed through on plans to leak thousands of pictures and videos from messaging service Snapchat. According to The Guardian, video and pictures from as many as 200,000 users were posted online over the weekend, after reports surfaced Friday that hackers were planning a leak.
  • Fitbit has new 'Charge' fitness trackers on the way - Gizmodo has obtained marketing materials that reveal a new Fitbit Charge, which looks more or less like a Force clone, and another model called Charge HR.
  • HBO is finally going to let you watch its shows without cable - Starting next year, you'll finally be able to watch HBO on the web without a cable subscription. In a dream come true for cord cutters, HBO CEO Richard Plepler has confirmed the company plans to launch a "standalone, over-the-top" HBO Go subscription offering at some point in 2015.

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