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Has the influx of Social Based Sites hit critical Mass?

Posted by Darrell Long on February 5th, 2008 — Posted in Web 2.0, Social Media

Over the course of the past year or so, social media based sites have exploded and taken over what was then known as the internet. Social based sites took the power away from major conglomerates and placed it within the hands of the individual. The time has finally come where the individual has an opinion that can’t be ignored. In 2007, 38% of all people used some form of social network and that percentage is suppose to double in 2008.

Last week I had the pleasure to make the Social Networking Conference held in Miami Beach Fl, which I will go into more detail about very soon. The reason I reference this is due to the amount of individuals whose main concern was that there are too many social based sites and it’s saturating the market place.  It is true there is a massive growth in the number of social based sites. You can see a pretty detailed list of social and web 2.0 based sites at go2web20.net. I currently haven’t seen the bottom of the list yet, but I am trying.

The interesting thing to note here is many of these social based sites are becoming very niche. The day of Digg and Facebook knockoffs are coming to a close, and as time goes on these social based sites will have a very specific subject matter. What does this mean? It means the amount of people actively involved in these communities will be much smaller but the involvement level will rise. 

To answer the question I purposed at the beginning of this article. Has the influx of social based sites hit critical mass? The answer is no but, the time of newly developed general social based sites has. The sites that make it will have understood the need to be more focused and provide their users with someone that will add some real utility to their online experience. 

StateofBrain.com is the new kid on the block

Posted by Darrell Long on May 29th, 2007 — Posted in Social Media, Interviews

I had a chance to sit down and talk with two individuals by the names of Josh Manuel and Justin Oswald, who are the brains behind StateofBrain.com.   The website takes the same approach as Digg.com does, by allowing users the ability to approve or deny a post. This would allow the more likeable stories to rise through the ranks. However, this is where the two differ. State of Brain is a user run news site with voting based on emotions.  Here you can discover what is important, new, and popular on the internet.  Users control the site with link submissions and the power to vote.

I asked Josh how he came up with such an innovative idea and this is what he had to say. “ I was a regular digg, del.icio.us, and reddit user but had a really tough time digging a story on the death of Steve Irwin.  I didn’t like only voting up or down on the story as I felt it was important to get out. That’s when the idea of developing a site where users could vote based on how the story made them feel came to mind. ”

From that point the both of them got together to develop the idea of voting based on emotion. Josh and Justin were going to college full time and working part time jobs, but any other time they had was towards developing StateofBrain.com

The website officially launched March 1st 2007 and has since picked up steam.  The first week Stateofbrain.com reach over 3000 unique visitors and sitting on over 200 registered users.  The website is growing at an alarming rate, and if you haven’t been over there yet I would suggest you check it out.