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5 Tips for using Google+

July 22, 2011 by  
Filed under Choosing Lingerie

With almost 20 million users, Google+ has got off to a great start, even if it’s still mostly tech geeks discussing Google+ with other tech geeks. With Facebook now at 750 million users, and Twitter at 200 million, Google+ is still too underdeveloped to be worth a lot of investment, and it’s not ready for corporate use: it’s not open to users of Google Apps, and Google is actively discouraging companies from setting up shop there, pending the arrival of Facebook-style “fan pages”. But it’s still a good idea to try the system, and here are my top five tips for getting off to a good start.

1. Set up a new Gmail account specifically for your Google+ account.

If you don’t do this (and I didn’t), you may be snowed under with emails about people adding you to their Google+ Circles, and by Google+ emailing you copies of every comment added to every post you make. You could turn off email acknowledgements or filter out emails from plus.google.com, but if you do, you will have trouble keeping track of things. Also, these emails may be vital if Google decides to close your account or close down Google+ the way it closed Google Lively, Wave, Google Labs and other properties. It’s even more important to use a different email address if you already have a lot of data in Google’s cloud: documents in Docs, photos in Picasa, a blog at Blogger, Google Adwords, Analytics and so on, in case you are hacked or Google closes your account. Remember, Google is its own policeman, judge, jury and hangman. There is no court of appeal.

2. Create a Google+ profile with a good picture/icon.

Google+ is like MySpace and Twitter in that the aim of the game is to accumulate as many followers as possible. To be successful, you must present yourself as someone worth “adding” to a Google+ Circle. If you appear as a grey outline with an unfamiliar name and no other details, not even your real friends will want to add you. Google+ email notifications only show your icon/mugshot, name, and a few words of description, so you must make them count. Yes, people can go to your G+ home page and click your Facebook-style About tab to learn more about you, but this takes a lot of time. Someone dealing with dozens or perhaps thousands of friend requests probably isn’t going to bother.

3. Incoming: Create a “key people” Circle to minimise how much you read.

Google+ uses Circles to organise groups of friends. The theory is that you know different groups of people with different interests, so you can put them into different circles. Google+ provides Circles for Family, Friends and Acquaintances as defaults, and invites you to add your own. These could be work colleagues, celebrities, people with special interests (photography, cooking etc), and so on. The important point is that no one knows which Circle you have put them in, so you can create a circle solely for the people whose posts you actually want to read. If you are “following” thousands of people, all their posts will appear in your Stream, making it unreadable and unmanageable. However, you can just read the posts in your “key people” Circle and ignore the rest.

4. Outgoing: Create Circles for groups of users you want to reach.

The simplest way to organise the bulk of the people you follow is to put them into two groups: “key people” and “the rest”. However, Google+ lets you direct your posts — comments, blog posts, newsletters, special offers or whatever — to one or more specific Circles. If you want to reach, for example, photographers or health freaks, you can collect them in different circles and send specific messages only to the appropriate circle. (Yes, this is why Google+ looks like becoming a spammers’ paradise.) However, success depends on users reciprocating and putting you in one of their circles. If they don’t, your posts will only appear in their Incoming stream, which is basically the same as unsolicited email. They will probably never see it, let alone read it.

5. Don’t post anything you would not want made public.

One of the selling points of Google+ is that it is “more private” than Facebook. In fact, you could achieve the same results on Facebook using friends lists and closed user groups, but Google+ prioritises its tagging system and uses fancy graphics (Circles) to make it simpler. Ultimately, however, both sites have the same problem: anybody can share anything, whether you like it or not. Even if you block sharing, people can copy-and-paste texts, or take screen grabs and circulate those. And they will.

Google is publicly in favour of privacy, of course, but ultimately it’s in the targeted advertising business and would prefer your data to be publicly searchable on Google. As former chief executive Eric Schmidt famously said in an interview on CNBC in December 2009: “If you have something that you don’t want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn’t be doing it in the first place.” Thanks, Eric.

@jackschofield

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt on privacy

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Gekko Brings Personalized Travel Booking to Facebook: New App Turns Friends …

July 22, 2011 by  
Filed under Choosing Lingerie


Click to view news release full screen



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The First all-in-one Facebook Travel App With a Social Twist

Featuring “Request a Deal” and Highly Personalized Special Offers

SAN FRANCISCO, LONDON and AMSTERDAM, July 19, 2011 /PRNewswire/ –

 

Gekko, the personalized
international hotel booking service, today unveils a one-stop
Facebook application that simplifies travel planning and purchasing
- with the help of friends and trusted sources- via the world’s
leading social network.

The Gekko Facebook app collects and organizes travel
recommendations from friends; introduces a one-click
“Request-a-Deal” button which lets hotels, restaurants and bars
reply directly with personalized offers; allows Facebook-only deals
targeting travelers based on their tastes; and allows users to book
at the best available price.

“Gekko is evolving the hotel discount model,” said Gekko CEO
Michel Cassius. “Consumers get the best price and are offered
highly personalized deals by hotels worldwide and by restaurants,
clubs and bars. And with our full Facebook integration we add the
social layer to the booking process, making it both engaging and
fun.”

The Gekko app optimizes what travelers have always done: turn to
well travelled and like-minded friends for insider information and
tips. According to polling site
Toluna
, 40 percent of consumer travel decisions are based on
input from friends and family.

“Gekko understands that the advice of good friends is
invaluable,” said Bas Lemmens, Gekko director and a former partner
at Booking.com, part of Priceline.com. “Now, over 750 million
people on Facebook can turn to their friends for travel advice and
immediately gain access to the best prices available based on these
recommendations.”

More than just a powerful booking tool, Gekko is a fun and easy
way to exchange useful tips and track great travel discoveries.
Members can share lists of favorites and offer personal insights on
any topic, from the general (beachfront hotels) to the specific
(midtown Manhattan sake bars).

Find Gekko here: http://www.facebook.com/gekko

About Gekko

Gekko was founded by Internet entrepreneur Dino van Es, the
co-founder of Zecco, one of the fastest growing online stock
brokerage firms. Gekko is led by CEO Michel Cassius, who co-founded
YoYo Games and has held senior positions at Microsoft’s Xbox and
Electronic Arts.

Gekko has partnerships with Booking.com, Expedia, TripAdvisor,
Hotels.com, TravelIntelligence.com, LateRooms.com, TravelNow.com,
LastMinute.com, Venere and Hotels Combined. Gekko is a
venture-backed company; its initial funding was led by Velocity
Capital.

More information about Gekko on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/gekko
and on Twitter at http://twitter.com/#!/gekko.

SOURCE Gekko.com

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