by Brian Solis
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It’s inevitable. As Twitter experiences growing pains, new entrants will seize the opportunity to provide a more complete and open experience to communicating with and at the people you may or may not know.
The Twitterati are frustrated, worn, and impatient. At this point, any and all alternatives are starting to look attractive. For example, when you’re starving, all food appears appetizing, including the options that you wouldn’t normally consider consuming.
Every now and then however, new applications emerge that offer hope. And with that hope, we also experience confusion, thinning attention, and new communities where interesting conversations transpire between people we know and most likely people we should know – well, and some we shouldn’t.
The latest micromedia/microblogging network to launch is indenti.ca, introduced to us by Marshall Kirkpatrick at ReadWriteWeb.
I’m here: http://identi.ca/briansolis
Evan Prodromou, creator of WikiTravel launched Indenti.ca via the CreativeCommons blog and supports CC licenses for the content that flows through the stream.
Identi.ca is built using Open Source, CreativeCommons framework for a distributed network of federated microblogging services according to Kirkpatrick.

Like Twitter, it supports Jabber, except on Identi.ca, it works today. It also provides OpenID support which is a feature every social network should support.
However, the list of things it doesn’t support, even the most basic features such as replies and direct messages, is long and potentially dissuading.
The most important story surrounding Identi.ca, is that the platform for which its hosted is open, meaning that we could place the Laconi.ca software on our server to host a dedicated community of our own.
While Identi.ca is extremely promising, the conversation continues to further fragment, which thins our attention and ultimately impacts the girth of any one community – which isn’t always a bad thing.
With every new service that appears, unless of course, you’re already on FriendFeed, our attention is further segmented and distributed. Since Identi.ca feeds can export into FriendFeed, then we contribute to the aggregation and concentration of focus and activity. FriendFeed though, can resemble a firehouse and depending on who you follow, can overwhelm many – especially those seeking conversations in bursts of 140 characters.
If adoption is any indication, Identi.ca is then incredibly promising. But at the very least, it demonstrates that communities are only as loyal as hosts who support them.
More at:
SheGeeks
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VentureBeat
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SeanPercival
ConversationalMediaMarketing
WinExtra
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