Google's failure to capitalize on the growth of social networking online has been notable over the past few years. Google's Buzz service, a sort of Twitter-mimic, was a failure and only seemed to annoy most GMail users. Google's position as the web's heavyweight giant is under threat as Internet users change the way they use the web, and the reasons why they do.
The failure of the search giant to really tap the new resource has been a put off for investors, and a frustration for a company that is accustomed to success. Enter Google+! Google revealed detailed information on its new social network experiment this week on its blog, and in a few videos which I've included here (warning: prepare for some cheese!).
The Google+ project aims to make it easier to connect with other users online, while maintaining the subtlety of real-world interaction. "In this basic, human way, online sharing is awkward. Even broken. And we aim to fix it," Vic Gundotra, Senior Vice President, Engineering at Google, wrote in the company's official blog.
Google+ targets your relationships and interests in an intuitive way. It recognizes that not all relationships we hold with other people are the same. The information we share with certain friends and family can be vastly different to what we'd consider appropriate to share with others.
So Google+ lets you organize your contacts with Circles, a fast and easy approach to choosing groups of people to selectively share information with.
Video: The Google+ project - Circles
Google points out the problem with today's online services turning friendship into "fast food." It negatively effects sharing between people according to Google, explaining...
- It's sloppy. We only want to connect with certain people at certain times, but online we hear from everyone all the time.
- It's scary. Every online conversation (with over 100 "friends") is a public performance, so we often share less because of stage fright.
- It's insensitive. We all define "friend" and "family" differently—in our own way, on our own terms—but we lose this nuance online.
Finding and sharing things of interest with others is a huge part of social networking, and Google+ attempts to make it much easier with Sparks.
Video: The Google+ project - Sparks
Sparks lets you build feeds of highly contagious content from across the Internet easily, on pretty much any topic you want and in over 40 different languages. "Simply add your interests, and you’ll always have something to watch, read and share—with just the right circle of friends," Google's blog states.
When it comes to instant messaging and video chatting, Google+ is looking to take a new direction on those interactions as well, with Hangouts.
Video: The Google+ project - Hangouts
Google refers to our "unscheduled time" in its blog post. Basically, what we do when we are simply bored, like going to a bar for a while to hang out. With today's instant messaging and chat programs, the subtlety in signaling that we have "free time" and are available to just hang out is lost, according to Google. It says today's communications tools are...
- They're annoying, for starters. You can ping everyone that’s "available," but you’re bound to interrupt someone’s plans.
- They're also really awkward. When someone doesn't respond, you don't know if they're just not there, or just not interested.
Of course, social networking is nothing without the hoards of multimedia data that users flood easily onto services like Facebook. Google+ realizes the importance of this aspect, and particularly content captured with mobile devices. Google+ utilizes an "Instant Upload" feature to aid in gathering a torrent of material online.
Video: The Google+ project - Instant Upload
With your permission, Google+ will automatically add photos you take with your phone to a private album in the cloud. Individual photos or collections of material can later be shared with anyone you want online, and will always be available across all of your devices.
The idea is to make getting photos from your phone as easy as possible. Google+ also wants to make it easier for a group of friends to keep up to date.
Video: The Google+ project - Huddle
A group of friends often use social sites to coordinate plans and keep up to date with what is going on. With Google+' Circle feature, organizing the gang into one entity is easy. Google+ then helps with keeping everyone up to date with a group-messaging feature called Huddle.
A Google+ App is available on Android Market now, and is heading to the App Store soon. For now, the service (like GMail was) is invitation only as it is just starting a field trial, which will undoubtedly expose problems and rough edges with the service.
Written by: James Delahunty @ 29 Jun 2011 13:26