Q&A with Tatango’s Adrian Pike

I first learned of Tatango after receiving a message from them on Twitter. At the time, Tatango’s service hadn’t been released, but it was accepting emails for its beta. Being of curious nature I decided to sign up. After using Tatango, I was quite surprised at how well it works. Tatango, in short, is a super easy way to text message large groups of people. Example, a soccer team has had a reschedule a game and instead of calling everyone on the team, you can send text messages to everyone with a click of a button.

I was lucky enough to ask Adrian Pike, Tatango’s CTO, a few questions. Even more surprising is some of the new features that are in the works for Tatango.

R3FRESH: Like Twitter, I’m having trouble explaining what exactly Tatango is/does. Could you explain?

PIKE: Tatango, quite simply, offers a way for groups to communicate through their mobile phone. With Tatango, a leader of a group, large or small, can send one message directly from their computer or mobile phone to all of their members updating them on meeting times, changes in schedule, alerts, or any message that needs to be delivered to group members, instantaneously.

We initially started with it as a tool for groups with a younger demographic (Greek organizations, sports teams, college clubs, etc.) to replace the age-old phone tree, but pretty quickly we realized that it works for all types of social groups, from artists to zoo employees.

R3FRESH: To receive text messages from Tatango you need to be invited. Will there be a way to send text messages to people that haven’t been invited? If so, will you be able to import your contacts from Facebook or Google?

PIKE: We’re right now working on a Facebook application that will help in bringing in users from Facebook, and users can send email invites to their contact lists from Gmail and other webmail products. We hope to have the Facebook app launched within a month.

One of the central things we kept in mind when we were designing and building Tatango was how to keep it from being abused. In some early tests, we tried the ability of sending SMS-based invites, and unfortunately they raised a few problems.

Firstly, a lot of our less technically savvy users were confused or caught off guard getting an invite on their phone, and wouldn’t join a friend’s group that they might otherwise have joined if contacted through a method that they were more comfortable with. SMS is still new to a lot of people in the USA, so we’re having to make it as comfortable as possible for them.

Secondly, and this is the more serious reason why we didn’t do an SMS invite feature, is the potential for abuse - an unscrupulous user could use it to blast out spam invites to random phone numbers. We could of course place limits and watchguards in place, but there’s always the worry that someone can sneak their way around it, and even the smallest bit of SMS spam is still SMS spam, which, at least in the USA, is all the more heinous for those who don’t have unlimited SMS plans.

It was a difficult decision to make, but we feel that at the current state of SMS, taking a more strict stance on fighting spam is the right choice. At some point when unlimited SMS plans are more ubiquitous, or when messages receivers are no longer charged, we’ll reevaluate, and of course we’ll be paying attention to users’ feedback and thoughts, but for now we’re going to keep the control in the users’ hands.

R3FRESH: Tatango is perfect for people that don’t use Twitter on their mobile phones, but still want to receive updates from their favorite sites. Did you mean for Tatango to be a notification service for websites and services?

PIKE: Initially we meant it just for connecting social groups, teams, clubs, but pretty quickly we realized that it can be a great marketing and social building tool as well as a communication platform.

A popular blog used one of our widgets, and had a huge percentage of it’s reader base sign up overnight to receive a text for breaking posts or news - it was one of the fastest growing groups we’d ever seen. I think the team’s done a great job of keeping the service very easy to use, but at the same time very versatile, so it can fit into a wide variety of possible uses.

A neat little feature we’ve got in the pipe is an RSS feed watcher, so a text will be automatically sent out when the linked RSS feed is updated.

R3FRESH: Finally, will Tatango be exclusive to text messages or will user be able to send pictures or other media?

PIKE: At the moment, we’re focusing on text messages only, but in the future we’re definitely looking into other media - pictures first, then eventually video.

One neat feature that we’re rolling out in the next month or so is group voice messaging - basically leaving a voice message for your whole group, for those situations when a text message is too short to fit what you want, or for when you want a more personalized touch.

From the Q&A it sounds like Tatango has a lot of new stuff on the way. I have set up a R3FRESH Tatango group where anyone can receive updates on their cell phone. Enter your cell phone number at the very bottom of the page to receive updates (or to just give Tatango a try). I also have 3 invites to Tatango, just leave a comment asking for a Tatango invite.

I wanted to thank Adrian Pike and Tatango for their time.

Posted in 2.0, tech, the web, tools | 9 Comments

NO PIRATE BAY FOR YOU

This is what I get when I try to go to ThePirateBay.org from my home. From the looks of it Qwest, my ISP, has decided to block access to the popular foreign torrent site. This block irks me as there was no warning that I would no longer be able to reach this site. It’s like someone telling me I can’t go into a store because I could steal something. This will be the first time I’ve had problems with Qwest, but it won’t surprise me to see more torrent services mysteriously stop working.

Thanks Qwest!

Have you found more ISP blocked sites? Leave them in the comments.

Update: I’ve gotten it to work. Looks like there was a problem with my browser. Pirate Bay’s up and running.

Update 1: It looks like Pirate Bay will only work during certain parts of the day. Qwest has to be invovle with this somehow.

Posted in 2.0, rants, the web | 2 Comments

InterfaceLIFT: Sleek and Nimble

InterfaceLIFT, the Flickr of desktop wallpapers, has recently freshened the site up. The new design is very simple and is far cleaner than the previous design. With the new look brings faster navigation and fixes the long load times that once plagued the site. The redesign has only been applied to the “Wallpaper” section of the site, but I would expect to see it expand across the entire site very soon.

I’m a sucker for a new look.

InterfaceLIFT

Posted in 2.0, design, free, the web | No comments

r3fresh and Outbrain: We’re All Good

Picture by Macwagen
This post is an update to a previous post about Outbrain’s recommendation system.

Previously, I had come to the conclusion that Outbrain had been (unknowingly) selling links in their recommendation widget. After talking to the Outbrain guys, this is (fortunately) false. The Outbrain widget is the first recommendation widget of it’s kind and goes against most web 2.0 practices. The recommendations widget finds the best posts on the entire Internet and puts them on your site. With alternative recommendation engines you would only have recommended posts from users using the same service, which may lower the quality of recommendations on your site.

Outbrain is the first web company that isn’t greedy with their service. They don’t have any advertising in their widget, anyone can use the service, and recommendations come from everywhere, not just from bloggers using the widget.

After this experience I wanted to publicly apologize for my outburst towards Outbrain. I should have contacted them before posting anything on the Internet. Outbrain is different and every blogger should give their service a try.

Vist Outbrain

Picture by Macwagen

Posted in 2.0, blogging, tools | 5 Comments

Outbrain Recommendations are Advertisements in Disguise


Outbrain, an embeddable rating and “recommendation” widget for your blog or website has found a place at the end of each of my posts. The guys behind Outbrain have been great; allowing me to try out new features and even helping me with formatting issues. I have been extremely happy with Outbrain and what they are offering until I noticed that the “recommendations” portion of the widget is not what it seems.

Before something drastically changed at Outbrain, the recommendations widget would show similar blogs at the end of your blog post. In exchange for putting the recommendations on your blog, you would expect to have your blog show up on other Outbrain users. This in theory would give you a little more traffic, but it’s not true anymore. The Outbrain recommendations now include more popular blogs like Engadget and Gizmodo, but neither Engadget or Gizmodo have the recommendations widget on there site. (Where’s my part of the deal?)

So I am involuntarily putting free advertising on my blog without ANY chance of getting ANYTHING beneficial in return? Yep. Outbrain has either made an error (I hope) or worse they’ve been selling recommendations links. If they’ve done the latter, expect my use of the widget to cease. It’s too bad to see something like this happen and I’m hoping it’s a mistake.

I have currently turned off the recommendations portion of the widget until this conflict is cleared up.

Readers, what do you think about Outbrain’s new recommendation/advertising widget?

Update: An explanation post.

Posted in 2.0, blogging, rants, the web | 2 Comments

What the Hell is Lexicon Digital?


In the beautiful Seattle airport last weekend and I decided to purchase the most current issue of WIRED. Browsing through the countless hard liquor ads I found a celebrity startup section about half way through. To my surprise, the beloved David Caruso of CSI: Miami fame has a startup called Lexicon Digital. Now if you watch CSI: Miami you’ll know David Caruso plays a total cheesebag investigator who has difficulty keeping his shades on. From what I’ve come to know of Caruso, I was expecting Lexicon Digital to be very interesting.
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Posted in 2.0, funny, rants, tech, the web, tv, video | 7 Comments

4 Reasons Why I’m Done with Digg

A Popularity Contest

Digg has changed. And not for the better. I’ve hit my breaking point with the popular, “democratic” news site and I’m nearing the end of using it. There isn’t one reason for ending my time with Digg; it’s been a mixture of four main problems I’ve been having with the site.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in 2.0, rants, the web | 2 Comments

Pance: Kevin Rose’s Newest Startup

Kevin Rose\'s Newest Startup

Kevin Rose, founder of Digg, Revision3, and Pownce, is at it again with Pance. Similar to Pownce, Pance lets you share pants with your friends around the world. How does it work? Pance is working with the postal service to offer discounted pants shipping (DPS). With a super cheap way to send pants, the idea of sending and receiving pants will revolutionize web 2.0.

The service is still in private beta and is only allowing pants sending in the United States. Kevin Rose has promised Pance integration in Pownce and Digg; giving Pance a huge network at it’s finger tips. Revision3 is also in talks to create a Pance related web show showcasing new and interesting pants.

Levi’s has given Pance $12.7 million in funding and has shown interest in offering a “one size fits all” pair of pants. The new communal pants will be durable and long lasting where ever they are in the world.

I also was able to grab a shot of the Pants website. It’s very simple and takes many design queues from Pownce. Click picture for larger picture.

very simple, very blue

 

Posted in 2.0, design, funny, the web | 4 Comments

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