Posts tagged as:

personal

Suggestions for my Cloud

by Michelle Lentz on November 26, 2008

by Michelle Lentz

I need your suggestions.

I keep a lot of my older data on two external drives: a Seagate 250 GB hard drive holds all my photos from 2002 forward, music, video, and other personal files. A 1 TB Western Digital holds all my business-related items.

Some of this stuff is scattered between my two laptops as well, but mostly not due to space considerations.

This has always worked well for me – until yesterday.

I plugged in my Seagate to grab my holiday playlists only to discover that there is no data on my Seagate. It’s telling me I need to reformat my drive – that it’s a blank disc. What? I’ve tried it on several different computers at this point, both PC and Mac. I’ve accepted that my data is somehow, magically gone.

Now, my music is backed up on my iPod and my photos since 2005 are on Flickr. But everything else? Not so much. This has convinced me, more than anything else, the benefits of also having an off-site backup. You know, in the Cloud.

I know there are a bunch of companies out there, such as Drop.io. I have around 200 GB of data, and that will only increase. What do you recommend for price, capacity, and ease of use? Leave your thoughts in the comments. I hope to have found something by next week, and believe me, I’ll take your suggestions to heart.

Thanks, and happy Thanksgiving!

Photo Credits:
- Lost Data
– King Cloud


Contact Michelle with your news, apps, and events via email at michelle[at]writetech.net, Twitter, Pownce, or FriendFeed. Visit Michelle at Wine-Girl.net and Write Technology.

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Protect Your Identity During the Username Land Grab

by Brian Solis on November 1, 2008

by Brian Solis

New services launch seemingly every day. Where do you need to be? How can you be everywhere at once? As with all social communities, we will go where our friends, peers, and professional contacts congregate and communicate with each other.  But until we get around to creating an account in each network, which to date has proved to be an elusive process, how do we beat others who may wish to use the same username or those cybersquatters who horde brand names as ransome?

In the era of the socialized Web, brand and reputation management is now integrated as systematic process in our daily routine. We ARE responsible for our personal brand as well as the corporate brand we represent. Securing that online brand and investing in and cultivating an impeccable and influential reputation is critical to establishing and maintaining a consistent, strategic, and complementary presence from network to network.

Lucky for us, there is a helpful dashboard now available for to streamline the process of obtaining and creating online identities.

UserNameCheck cross references every major social network for the availability of your desired username. The results are displayed in one master dashboard, providing you with the ability to determine which networks require your attention and also a direct link to secure the username.

For more on the subject of personal, professional and corporate branding and reputation management, please read “In the Social Web, We Are All Brand Managers” over at PR 2.0.

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Facebook’s f8 Connects Us

by Brian Solis on July 24, 2008

words and pictures by Brian Solis

I attended the Facebook f8 developer conference yesterday in San Francisco and I’m still recovering from the overwhelming experience.

Thousands of developers flocked to the San Francisco Design Center to see their Social Sherpa in person and calibrate with his vision for the next year of propagating the social graph. It’s indeed a movement and his influence can not be underestimated. Comparisons to Steve Jobs were broadcast as freely as the ideas that were exchanged in almost every conversation.

I was lucky enough to get a front row view for Zuckerberg’s state of the social network and his plans for making Facebook more pervasive in the socialization of online content.

Facebook is aiming to become our dashboard for relationships and everything we do online, creating a cohesive and simplified connection between us to change and improve how we communicate.

Their mission is no small task, “Give people the power to share and make the world more open and connected.”

One of the many announcements that was made at the company’s second annual developer conference was Facebook Connect, and it just may well be the epicenter of our social activity.

With just a bit of code, Facebook Connect enables seamless integration between Web sites, pages, communities, and networks and the Facebook identity system. For example, if you’re commenting on a blog hosted on the Moveable Type platform, you can now login with your Facebook details and not only will your comment and link to your Facebook profile appear on the blog, the activity of commenting is also linked back into your activity feed for your friends and colleagues to see. Digg, another example that was shared on stage, also supports FB Connect, making it possible for Diggers to log on using their centralized Facebook ID and for each story they digg, the activity is documented back on their profile.

Not only is it an aggregated system for personal identity across social networks, it is also laying the foundation for Beacon 2.0, which will more accurately assess who you are and what you like. As Om Malik points out at GigaOM, “Each service adds a few more data points about you inside the Facebook brain, which is quite aware of your activities inside the Facebook ecosystem. The brain can then crunch all that information and build a fairly accurate image of who you are, what you like and what might interest you. With all that information at its disposal, Facebook can build a fairly large cash register.”

Moveable Type

DIGG

Facebook Connect partners include Amiando, CBS.com, CitySearch, CNET, CollegeHumor, Disney-ABC, Evite, Flock, Hulu, Kongregate, Loopt, Plaxo, Radar, Red Bull, Seesmic, Socialthing!, StumbleUpon, The Insider, Twitter, Uber, Vimeo and Xobni.

Yes, it’s practically a direct competitor to the important OpenID system that has invested over the years in the education and development of unifying the social web and personal identities – with one login. FB Connect however, assumes that you want a profile in its proprietary social network, which may or may not be a bad thing. It’s ambitious to say the least. And, unlike OpenID, Facebook is not only the keeper of your online identity, but as I’ve written about for two years, it is also the hub for your online brand. If Facebook is listening, I’m not alone in suggesting that the company should also integrate OpenID. It would be the right, and most promising, thing to do.

FB Connect transforms the social network into a portable profile that travels with you across the Web, placing you and your brand at the center of the experience.

This announcement is significant in my opinion, not just for the opportunity it represents today, but for the implementations and opportunities next month, next quarter, next year, and beyond.

The ongoing integration of support for social services in the Facebook NewsFeed is aggregating and expediting personal lifestreams and quickly becoming representative of our true online activity, painting a vivid picture of who we are and what we represent online and in the real world. With FB Connect the previously isolated silo distributes your identity and creates a direct link back to your profile, which ultimately, is a bright, powerful, and distributed beacon for your personal brand.

Facebook Connect also further socializes and unites the Web.

Now, for example, static Websites can socialize, creating a dynamic link between content and people. Businesses and communities can now directly connect corporate brands with personal brands, and more notable, the people behind them. Social networks can build and leverage expertise and reputation and carry thought leadership, preferences, causes, and relationships from community to community. Facebook Connect is a powerful catalyst for investing in and increasing Social Capital.

Remember, Facebook “public” profiles are indexed in online search engines and can be among the top results when your name is searched.

In the real world, your online reputation proceeds you.

More pictures from f8:

Mark Zuckberg Press Conference

Michael Arrington of TechCrunch

Nik Cubrilovic of TechCrunchIT

Justin Smith of InsideFacebook

Robert Scoble

Kristen Nicole of Mashable and Dave Morin of Facebook

Rafe Needleman

Randi Zuckberg

Eddie Codel

Sarah Lacy

iLike founders

Brian Solis

For more pictures from Facebook, please visit the following albums on flickr:

Mark Zuckerberg Keynote

f8

Mark Zuckerberg Press Conference

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