The Great App.net Mistake

The Great App.net Mistake

A year into its grand experiment, App.net may finally be ready to change the world. But first it has a lot to overcome — not the least of which are the many misconceptions about what the hell it is exactly.

    

App.net Passport for iOS finds third-party clients, allows condition-free sign-ups

Appnet Passport for iOS finds thirdparty clients, allows invitefree signups

Despite App.net’s positioning as a Twitter alternative, it hasn’t had either an app to call its own or a way to sign up without at least an invitation. The social network has just crossed both of those items off its list with its new App.net Passport for iOS, albeit through an unconventional path. Passport is a gateway app, not a client: it lets users manage their profiles, but it really exists to point users to third-party apps and people they’d want to follow. Don’t write off Passport as a promo stunt, though. It also represents the first place where the curious can sign up without either an invitation or paying up front. CEO Dalton Caldwell warns that the wide-open registration is an experiment, not a guaranteed change in policy — if it doesn’t work out, the company may return to business as usual. Whether or not the strategy bears fruit, Passport should both serve as a fast track for newcomers and a launchpad for App.net development beyond iOS’ borders.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Via: iMore

Source: App Store, App.net

App.net gives users 10GB of cloud storage, its File API to set social data free

Appnet gives users 10GB of cloud storage, its File API to set social data free

We thought App.net had eyes only for Twitter when the project was funded and garnered its first 20,000 customers. Today, a post on the company blog reveals that its sights are set much higher than mere messaging. Rather than provide just an ad-free alternative to Twitter, it turns out App.net plans to become a social app platform through its new File API and cloud storage services. The API gives devs the tools needed to build any and all social applications they can dream up — from photo sharing apps to collaboration tools.

Additionally, App.net is giving annual and dev accounts a 10GB cloud locker. That storage can, in turn, be leveraged for simple file sharing by users and as a repository for social data that can be accessed by apps built with the API. So, photos, messages and other info from an App.net account can be fully controlled by users and can be accessed by any social app they choose. This is a stark contrast to Facebook or Google+, where access to such data is controlled by those companies. Of course, the new platform’s only as good as its apps, so interested devs should head on down to the source, grab the API, and get started building the next-gen social network.

Filed under:

Comments

Via: The Verge

Source: App.net API Documentation, App.net Blog, Github

App.net edges closer to 20,000 users, drops subscription prices to $36 to fuel the social fire

HooHa App.net client for Android

When App.net kicked off its Twitter rivalry, the $50 yearly subscription fee was based on the assumption that the ad-free social service would maintain 10,000 customers. Founder Dalton Caldwell may have underestimated year-one adoption by just a tad: he now has nearly 20,000 customers on his hands in less than two months, which throws the previous economies of scale out the window. The pain for Caldwell’s business model is a pleasure for fans, however. App.net’s price of entry has dropped to $36 per year, with existing memberships’ durations extended to match the new yearly rate. Anyone on the fence also has a chance to try the service for a short stint through a $5 monthly plan. While it’s hard to know if the price drop will sustain the early runaway pace, it reflects a determination to play for keeps in the social media game — an important trait when the chief opponent isn’t sitting still.

Filed under:

App.net edges closer to 20,000 users, drops subscription prices to $36 to fuel the social fire originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Oct 2012 03:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink GigaOM  |  sourceApp.net Blog  | Email this | Comments

App.net causes a HooHa with its first Android app

Image

It’s a good time for confusingly-named App.net, hot on the heels of smashing its funding goal and cooking up its first terms of service, the paid-Twitter startup now has an Android mobile client. HooHa chief Deniz Veli told The Next Web that he cooked up the software after seeing a “thriving developer community” surrounding the new service — with many presumably encouraged by Twitter’s recent API changes. Like the service itself, the app is only an Alpha release, but you can download it for free at the Play Store, no need to causes a hoo-hah (geddit?).

Filed under: , ,

App.net causes a HooHa with its first Android app originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Aug 2012 08:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Next Web  |  sourceThe Modern Ink  | Email this | Comments

App.Net posts terms of service, asks for feedback

AppNet posts terms of service, asks for feedback

Against all odds App.Net met its funding goal, which has allowed the fledgling social network to shift its focus to the next phase of its founding. That means putting together all those essential documents that will govern its operation, including a terms of service and privacy policy. Creator Dalton Caldwell has posted first drafts of several docs and asked his backers for feedback, offering them an attempt to shape the rules that will guide how the site is run. Those policy documents are also going to be subjected to a quarterly review, which should allow the service to remain nimble if some rules turn out to be controversial or cumbersome. For more info, check out the source link.

Filed under:

App.Net posts terms of service, asks for feedback originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 24 Aug 2012 12:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Next Web  |  sourceApp.Net (GitHub)  | Email this | Comments

Tencent reveals how it gets users to pay for its service

Tencent reveals how it gets users to pay for its service

We’ve all seen those “OMG! Don’t make us pay for Facebook” fake petitions, but App.net and The Social Network raise questions about how our social services raise their moolah. Tencent’s Sophia Ong has revealed that it’s in the unique position of having users happy to pay for services that we take for granted. While signups for QZone (Facebook equivalent) is free, users have to use QBs, the site’s virtual currency, to buy and clothe their avatars. While 1 QB = 1 yuan ($0.16), there are 30 million paying customers on the site — meaning that the company can count on around $50 million in monthly payments. It’s not stopping there either, sensing a slowdown in the local economy, the company has an eye on opening up its eCommerce platform to ensure it can continue to rake in the cash.

Filed under:

Tencent reveals how it gets users to pay for its service originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Aug 2012 09:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcePaidContent  | Email this | Comments

Paid Twitter wannabe App.net hits $500K target with time to spare

DNP Paid Twitter wannabe Appnet hits $500K target with time to spare

Paid Twitter-style service App.net has achieved its self-imposed $500,000 funding goal with almost two days still left on the clock. The social platform is the brainchild of Dalton Caldwell, who said he wanted to spawn a service dedicated to users instead of advertisers. It was originally pitched to Facebook, but the two companies came to loggerheads when it clashed with the social network’s own App Center — inspiring Caldwell’s Kickstarter-style campaign. Though the software is still in alpha, over 10,000 backers have paid $50 for an annual membership or put down $1,000 for support, developer tools and a meeting with the founder. The company will now start working on its terms of service, letting users offer feedback and discover new features — and if you wanna be @John instead of @JohnFDoe99427 on the new service, you may want to pony up, quick.

Filed under: ,

Paid Twitter wannabe App.net hits $500K target with time to spare originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Aug 2012 09:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TechCrunch  |  sourceApp.net  | Email this | Comments

App.net achieves $500,000 target plays role of Twitter rival

For the many of you who have used Twitter, what would you say to a rival service that requires you to pay for it? I suppose it will take a paradigm shift to be able to adapt to such a situation, but before we continue, let us take a closer look at what App.net is all about. Having hit its $500,000 fundraising target, Dalton Caldwell, the person behind App.net, figured out that ordinary folks would be willing to fork out money for an ad-free real-time social networking service, where this widely touted Twitter clone is said to be a virtual place where “users and developers come first, not advertisers”.

The San Francisco-based developer might be on to something here, where around 7,448 people are willing to fork out $50 for the minimum fee required to post to the service, while another 2,010 can pony up a Benjamin to be developers with access to back-end functionality, and another 59 did hand over $1,000 for “pro tier” access that includes phone support and a personal meeting with Caldwell. Are the 10,000 folks who backed this project financially the critical mass required to get App.net off the ground? Perhaps, but as with many other things, only time will tell and we do look forward to App.net’s commercial performance in the real world.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: iCloud account of Mat Honan hacked, Underwater camera that can tweet photos of swimmers used in London Olympics,