DISQUS

louisgray.com: louisgray.com: The Danger of Changing The Baseline

  • Louis Gray · 10 months ago
  • Jesse Stay · 10 months ago
    I don't like it, and I think it's damaging to brand image, but I expect to see much more of this as the economy tanks.
  • Jesse Stay · 10 months ago
    Let's just say this means opportunity. No one is safe.
  • robdiana · 10 months ago
    Jesse,
    I agree about the damage to the brand and that the economy may trigger more of it. With the recent update of Identi.ca the competition is heating up. If some of the third party tools start failing due to the API limits, we may see some more movement to other services like Identi.ca.
  • Dominic/IRWebReport · 10 months ago
    I was hoping tonight to start using Identi.ca to feed to FriendFeed and then publish to Twitter. Two problems: 1. Indenti.ca isn't being picked up in FF. 2. If people respond on Twitter, I can't see it in Indenti.ca (or FF). It feels like the days before IM platforms could talk to each other. Are we going backward?
  • Rob Diana · 10 months ago
    Dominic, Identica's problem is with their recent update. I believe there were some problems, but they are working on them. I made the IM analogy when Identica was first released. IM's still do not talk to each other, but we do have standards and multi-service clients. Microblogging will probably go the same way.
  • Koffee · 10 months ago
    And Facebook hasn't changed the rules a hundred times to screw (some) developers, come on, get real, Twitter should act in its own interests and its alone taking into account all pros and cons of its actions, but to worry excessively about its dependants is not right, they took the risk and they should suffer/gain based on how they act/respond.
  • Rishabh Mishra (possible248) · 10 months ago
    That's why I prefer very low baselines that gradually rise up. Though, after a significant amount of such rising, there is always a danger that the baseline will fall again.
  • LaSean · 10 months ago
    I agree with your core argument and the comments here, but isn't all of this the risk of betting on a service you're not paying to use? You mentioned that companies should want to keep their customers as happy as possible. While these changes may come to the detriment of Twitter (and Google Apps) growing their business and market share who is the real customer?