Entries tagged with “approval” from O'Reilly Radar

Tue

Jul 21
2009

Andrew Savikas

Can't Get Approval for your App? Sell the Source Code

by Andrew Savikas@andrewsavikascomments: 3

We just released 17 O'Reilly books as standalone iPhone Apps (The Twitter Book looks fantastic -- and as a bonus #hashtags in the text are clickable), and so I've been looking at various options for monitoring sales and popularity (AppViz, AppFigures, and MajicRank have proven quite useful), and was eager to find something I could use right from my iPhone.

I was happy to find MyAppSales, but because the App technically spiders the iTunesConnect site, it violates the Apple Terms of Service, you won't find it in the App Store. But rather than just give up, the developer has gotten creative -- he'll sell you access to the source code for $15, and you can compile the App yourself to load onto your own devices:

Unfortunately due to section 3.3.7 of the SDK Agreement I will never be permitted to sell this app on the App Store unless I rip out it’s heart and usefullness. But you can purchase a license to look at the source code, compile it yourself, put it on all the devices you like. For just $15 you can do anything you like with the source, just not sell it or use in any other way commercially.

Doubtful he's getting anywhere near the exposure as he would from the App Store, but it's a clever workaround until and unless Apple revises their approval process.

myappsales-008-200x300

tags: approval, appstore, iphonecomments: 3
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Tue

Jun 9
2009

Mike Hendrickson

Twitter Approval Matrix

by Mike Hendrickson@mikehatoracomments: 6

There is a lot of interest in figuring out how to most effectively use Twitter. The Twitter Book is a great start to put some of the of the puzzle pieces together. The book got me thinking about some of the people and tags that are popular. I was amazed at how Ashton Kutcher, @aplusk, surpassed 2 million followers relatively quickly. My curiosity led me to scraping his tweet archive and producing a Wordle of his tweets. I found very little substantive content as compared to Kathy Sierra (@kathysierra) or Tim O'Reilly (@timoreilly). Don't get me wrong, Ashton does tweet, but it's about boring stuff, IMO. But boring to me could be exciting to one of his followers.

This got me thinking further about tastes. We all have different tastes. I like to make sense of the world around me by collecting as much information as I can, analyzing it (in my head and in programs), and then visualizing it. So, that led me to the matrix idea. Why not plot Twitter activity, trends, users, tags on a matrix? For years, I've been reading the New York Magazine and always scanned its Approval Matrix. They describe their Twitter version as, "Our deliberately oversimplified guide to whose tweets are worth following." I thought I'd do the same, but with more than just who but also what is worth following. I decided to throw in some analysis and a user contributed component: you. The "you" part is for the future. That is, I would like you to contribute coordinates for where you think items should land on a future grid similar to the one below.

This matrix shows four quadrants used to describe tastes found on Twitter, or related sites such as hashtag.org, tweestats.com, etc. The Y-axis is partly analytical and shows popularity (mostly through scraped numbers) or perceived popularity (in the future nominated by you). The other part of the grid is more curated and subjective. The X-axis has been plotted based on my personal opinion. You may agree or disagree with my placements and that's all good to me. After all, it is about taste. The matrix and plots do not represent a thorough analytical treatment, but rather a view of the trends that could be found in data sources allowing me to plot with some sense of relevance.

TwitterApprovalMatrix.png

For this post, I've limited the data and activity to the month of May. I will make this a monthly post if I get enough feedback/help. So, here's how you can nominate topics or people for the matrix:

  • You can tag any of your tweets, RTs using #approvalmatrix and I'll find it.
  • Tweet to @mikehatora
  • DM mikehatora
  • Send email to mikeh {at} oreilly {dot} com

If you want to suggest where the tweet or subject belongs on the matrix, do this:

  • Notice the numbers on the grid, 1-10, in North/South and East/West directions.
  • Notice the quadrant tags NE, SE,NW,SW, on the outer corners of each quadrant.
So NE, 6,8 would put your suggestion between #jobs and #followfriday.

Here are a couple of examples that could end up on future ApprovalMatrix postings:

  • @mikehatora #wwdc, NE 5,9 Interesting new stuff from Apple, but seems to have NOT leapfrogged ahead again this year. The plot is hot [N], because lots of hastags have #wwdc and the comment shows it is interesting [E] but not at the 8-10 scale of smart but rather a 5-right, 9-up on the plot]. You could say a topic like this is hotter than it is smart/interesting/useful.
  • Starting new job on Monday, thanks to Twitter posting. #ApprovalMatrix This will be picked up in a scrape and added to the jobs/careers bucket. It'll likely will be a NE 5,8 aggregated with the other job data and comments.
  • #approvalmatrix NE 7,8 RT @timoreilly Three-part series on how Google does search quality evaluation, starts here: http://bit.ly/QIgwX Here the tweeter is Re-Tweeting someone (timoreilly) and indicating that it is an important item in the Hot and Smart quadrant (NE). I'd look to see how many RTs have happened after the initial tweet.
  • DM mikehatora SE 7,8 #hr Indicates the hashtag #hr, which is Human Resources, is not trending up, and is boring according to the sender.

Feel free to nominate people, tags, related news, etc. I can't guarantee your nomination will make it into next month's post, but it just might. This is a chance for you to put things on our Radar while letting us know what your tastes are.

I hope you enjoy this and see it as a potentially useful tool to monitor trends that your fellow readers are tracking.

tags: approval, hashtags, matrix, popular tweeters, trends, twittercomments: 6
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