Over the last couple of days I’ve been wishing for a couple of Apps…
Idea #1:
Don’t you wish you were a fly on the wall? |
FLY ON THE WALL: an app that lets you share live video from webcams at a conference you couldn’t attend in person. You get a flavour of a conference by following the twitter feed, and you can even interact with it, but you miss the moment to moment ideas, and you’re ultimately limited to what other people consider important.
Fly on the wall creates a live stream that people can watch, similar to the Edupunk spreecast we did the other day. This doesn’t need to be a huge bandwidth deal, and multiple streams from the same location can be upvoted if they are better situated. If people wanted to see the conference through the eyes of a friend, then their choice to stay with them would keep the feed active. People could even offer voice overs or supporting commentary as part of their feeds.
The benefits to conferences would be obvious, they could even tier attendance and offer a discount rate through an official fly on the wall feed to conference presentations. Virtual presence in conferences would become a regular part of the process.
Anyone want to have a go at this with me?
Idea #2:
I’m the sun! |
Gravity: a web3.0 app that shows me as the centre of the system and social networking comments in orbits that are closer if they are more important to me.
Tweets that mention me are closer than general tweets, tweets that refer to demonstrated interests orbit in closer. Over time this app would get a sense of what my interests are and float in ‘interest comets’, making suggestions on items that should suit me. Facebook, twitter, Linkedin and Google+ (as well as other social networks) would be synced though Gravity to push objects of interest into your orbit.
A well trained Gravity system would feed you the must see and keep out the flotsam of your social networking feeds.
Idea #3:
Deep Reader: A web app that blocks distractions while you adopt a deep, meditative reading pose with online material. The interwebs are a distraction engine. Trying to read online is a difficult process with constant interruptions. Deep Reader holds off the onslaught while giving you the time and mental space to really grok an author’s thoughts as you used to on paper.
The problem with deep reading isn’t reading a screen, as any Kindle or Nook will show you, it’s trying to read while being in a medium that encourages a shallow surfing of information.
Deep Reader gives you a space to read as you are meant to.
I’d love to see those three. Got any more you’d love to see?