I'm still absorbing this trend - sometimes I feel like it if walks like a duck, quacks like a duck - it's a duck (YAPR "yet another press release"). Other times, I see examples where a narrative is woven into the user experience but maintained loosely in the background (re: not so intrusive) and find perhaps some value in SMPR.
It’s been a week since we announced the Digital Snippets social media release platform and shared the template that explains its functionality. The news spawned quite a bit of discussion online, which is fabulous! We’re really hoping that interested parties will dig into the work that we’ve done and improve upon it further - it’s very early days for all this stuff, and as we have stood on the shoulders of giants in our work, so we hope others will do as well.
I’d like to take this opportunity to deepen the conversation and spark a discussion about functionality and use. It’s been brought to my attention that the best way for me to do this is to get granular and explain the detailed workings of Digital Snippets and just why we (and others) feel it’s so innovative.
Social Media Group » Blog Archive » Digital Snippets - how it works
Hi Mike, thanks for joining the discussion, I like your perspective, "a narrative is woven into the user experience but maintained loosely in the background (re: not so intrusive) and find perhaps some value in SMPR." In my opinion, that very well sums up the difference between old and new.
Posted by: maggie fox | January 31, 2008 at 12:48 PM
I see examples where a narrative is woven into the user experience but maintained loosely in the background
Posted by: Cancer awareness bracelets | May 27, 2011 at 01:57 PM