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Why We Support App.net

22 points| aaronpk | 13 years ago |social-igniter.com | reply

11 comments

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[+] badclient|13 years ago|reply
I think App.net is a gigantic communication screw up. If you already knew where Dalton was coming from, you know what he is talking about. But still to this day, if you only read app.net-related blog posts or info on the site, you come away feeling confused about what it is until you rely on other folks not officially connected to App.net--such as this blogger--to translate Dalton's vision in a way that can be understood by people who don't already know where Dalton's coming from.
[+] shazow|13 years ago|reply
Quote:

  [...] Perhaps that's biggest flaw with how App.net was presented thus far.
  Perhaps if Dalton had promised one or more of the following...

  * The primary codebase will be open source
  * A light weight client will be open source
  * The infrastructure will follow at least one federated standard (oStatus,
    Webfinger, Salmon, Activity Streams)
  * App.net will federate / push / syndicate data to Diaspora, Status.net, etc...
  * Each paid user of App.net can sponsor friends (5, 10, 25, 50, etc...) to
    use the service for free
  * If you donate Dalton will personally hand deliver to your doorstep 1
    flying unicorn ninja who has been raised on grass fed organic bacon
+1. Those things would push me over the edge to contribute $50 or more. Even without the unicorn ninja thing.

I don't want to pay for another "platform" that someone will be struggling to raise funding to replace in a few years. I want to pay for technology. And I want to bring my friends with me.

[+] aaronpk|13 years ago|reply
This is the first reasonable argument for app.net that I've heard. I'm not sure why, but until now I've only been hearing people talk about it as a "better Twitter".
[+] millan|13 years ago|reply
I find it funny how, in the article, Brennan Novak asks, "Will App.net last into the next decade and provide the backbone of the federated web?"

There's being ambitious, and then there's talking gibberish about something that hasn't even been built yet.

[+] brennannovak|13 years ago|reply
A large amount of App.net has has been built and I've tested it out- it works great https://alpha.app.net Additionally, in the past I used to use PicPlz and iMeem, so i know the quality of products Dalton has engineered.
[+] taligent|13 years ago|reply
Can someone explain the point of App.net. Is it not just a clone of Twitter which I pay to use instead of seeing ads ?

Because the obvious question is then if Twitter offers a similar payment model doesn't that mean App.net has no differentiators ?