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Reality Check

Quoted at SXSW, Vic Gundotra of Google+ responded to criticism about G+ and its popularity, or more pointedly, lack thereof.

“Make sure you’re using it correctly,” the man joked.

It’s not the public’s responsibility to use a service in a way it was designed to be used. It’s a service company’s responsibility to adapt to the ways in which its public uses a service.

By staunchly refusing to open its API to innovative pioneers who long to bring some sort of functionality to the service that already exists on other websites, by closed-mindedly limiting the few ways in which one can use the website, by refusing to bring uniformity to its layout and making people guess in what way they’re supposed to use something that’s presented, you’re really killing your own audience’s enthusiasm.

It’s been a year, Google. Do something while you still can. Otherwise, G+ is doomed.

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Google Minus

I deleted my Google+ profile. I got it about five months ago when it became available to the public, and I wanted to see what it was about. I added some of my Facebook friends, added other individuals I was curious about, and I waited to see if I’d grow as attached to that as other social networks.

I have to say that the service is redundant, offers nothing that another social network doesn’t already fulfill in my online pursuits, and their features are comparatively scrawny and uninspired. I posted this graphic after about a month of being on there:

I’d have to say that sums up my experiences. It was common to see friends’ updates from a month ago still hovering near the top of the page. Perhaps the friends I roll with just prefer Facebook, but nobody I was following updated very often. It was hard to entice anyone I knew to use G+ in addition to or instead of Facebook.

Nice try, Google. Next time, give us features no other website has. Sometimes Google really has their fingers on the pulse of what people want. Othertimes, like this, it leaves one scratching one’s head.

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Guess I’ll Make My Own

Recently, I’ve been digging around the WordPress Plugin Repository looking for any social “add me”/”share me” buttons that 1) incorporate the social networks and link-sharing websites I use most often, and 2) allow me to customize the display of such, the button images, where they are inserted. To a lesser extent, I wish any of the existing plugins out there had a complimentary widget that would allow someone to link to the site’s homepage, share the RSS feed, and again allowed me to choose which social networks would be featured.

Very few plugins out there currently incorporate Google+, which I would greatly like to add to my rotation of social networks. The few plugins that do allow G+ as an option have a very limited way of displaying G+, or do not incorporate the other networks I use often. Yes, I could adapt the source code, but every time the plugin updates, I would have to adapt it anew.

I’m thinking that the best solution right now, for me, is to code my own. I’d wanted an excuse to make my own WP plugin anyway. I’ll be using PHP, MySQL, and a bit of AJAX in option settings to make it purdy.

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Newfangled

As with many services made freely available in the past, I’ve become an early adopter of Google Plus, also known as G+. I become a lighthouse customer in order to reserve “my” username (the same one I use across as many websites as possible, for uniformity and ease of clients and friends to find me).

I’ve yet to figure out the “voice”, if any, that I will use there. Much like Twitter, I don’t see much use for G+ in my repertoire. I have Facebook for my personal output, this blog for my professional projects, I use Twitter to keep up with people, news, and companies who don’t have a strong presence on Facebook. I don’t yet know if, and where, G+ will fit in my usage.

Of all the social networks and services out there, Facebook is the one I view most often and spend the most time on, both reading and posting. I must admit that the availability of games do measure into my activities there. The news of games soon available on G+ piques my curiosity and gives me hope that G+ will have some pull on me in the future. It’s too early to say if it will replace Facebook as the place I spend the majority of my time upon.

Comparing the two, Facebook and Google Plus, Facebook has the very clear advantage of having existed and used by the public for a number of years. There is an established base of users who have registered with the website, update it with their photos, links of interest, personal information, and company profiles, who click on advertisements, and spend real life money on virtual goods and services, game currency and advantages. It will take time, perhaps years, for G+ to become as indispensable and essential to the average user’s daily online activities as Facebook’s status now enjoys. Time will tell if enough people will become accustomed to its interface and its offerings, enough to adopt G+ as their nexus of communication, amusement, and use, perhaps even to the detriment of Facebook’s current popularity.

G+’s only benefits at present are its newness, and adaptability to those issues plaguing Facebook, such as breaches of privacy. Such concerns are taken seriously by the Google Plus team, and belatedly and imperfectly addressed by the admin of Facebook. The emergence of games, and technologies yet to be unveiled, should prove interesting for G+.

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