14 New Cities on Happn.in

Posted by Matthew Thu, 10 Sep 2009 15:26:42 GMT

Happn.in added 14 cities over the past week to the ranks. Now lovers of the following cities can receive & express their love in 140 character bursts:

Like all Happn.in cities, the above will display the top local Twitter trends as well as the recently announced Happn.in Feed – the ability to talk directly with your city over the Twitters.

We add cities based on Twitter activity and user feedback – so if you would like to see your city on the Happn.in list, let us know and get others in your city to Twitter about it.

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Talk to Your City: Twitter and Broadcasting

Posted by Matthew Thu, 03 Sep 2009 14:43:00 GMT

We recently rolled out a new feature at Happn.in called the City Feed (or, as we also call it: Talk to Your City). On each city page, in addition to the top current Twitter trends, you now have the ability to send a tweet directly to your city. You also have the ability to recommend tweets that other people have sent to the City Feed. Those tweets and users that are recommended more often will be displayed more prominently, which gives each city the collective ability to decide on the content that is shown in their feed.

Screen shot 2009-09-02 at 10.55.25 PM.png

This new feature is just one part of a larger roll-out that includes our upcoming iPhone application and Twitter’s recent geo-location announcement. The importance of this feature can best be explained by the difference between broadcasting and reception.

Broadcasting and Reception

Broadcasting is “to tell (something) to many people”. It’s mostly used in reference to Radio and Television – two communication devices that allow one signal to be sent to many people at once. In his book Here Comes Everybody Clay Shirky calls this type of communication, “one-to-many”: “I talk, and talk, and talk, and all you can do is choose to listen or tune out” (pg. 87).

Tools like Twitter and Blogger, however, change broadcasting from a one-to-many relationship into a many-to-many relationship. If you have a connection to the internet, you can not only receive signals from lots of sources, you can send them as well. You are a broadcaster.

All of that is good and smart and interesting. Using Twitter, we all have the ability to send and receive information. The problem we’ve experienced recently, however, is that while Twitter has become a good way for people to receive relevant information (trends, hashtags, searches), it’s not nearly as effective a way to send information. Twitter is still a pretty poor broadcast machine. Currently, when you send out a tweet, you are sending it out to no one in particular. You may have a couple hundred followers, but the chances are that those followers have no real cohesion among themselves. A tweet sent to your followers is a little like shouting out to everyone who is on the bus with you – there is some similarity to all of you (you are all on a bus); but the similarity is random and tenuous. The connection between you and your followers is indirect.

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When you receive your tweets, however, they all seem to come directly from each individual person you follow. When you look at your Twitter stream, you see all the little messages with user names and profile pictures; it looks like these people are talking to you. The connection between you and the people you follow is more direct.

twitter-reception.png

Combined, you can see why Twitter overwhelmingly feels like a good place to receive information, but a bad way to send it. Each of your tweets is sent to no one in particular, while you are inundated by messages from specific individuals.

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The only cases where this isn’t true, of course, is when you have a way of sending a tweet to a cohesive group. In those cases, you send information to a group you know is looking for it. Famous people are able to do this out-of-the-box with Twitter. Their followers are a cohesive group already. When they tweet, they know to whom they are tweeting; and the people who follow them do so actively. But that’s just using Twitter like it was a radio station – just another example of one-to-many communication.

Some groups form through the use of hashtags. A bunch of Twitterers all at the same event, for instance, might all use the same hashtag to send their tweet specifically to the group at that event. And those same people can then search for that hashtag to see all the tweets being broadcast to that event. In that case, the group is cohesive and is also many-to-many. But it’s also ephemeral. After the event is done, the use of the hashtag ceases as does the group.

The Importance of Broadcasting to a Group

The problem with a communication tool more suited to reception than broadcasting is that it’s not sustainable; eventually, you’ve got a lot of people listening and no one talking. In order to become sustainable, Twitter needs tools that make it a better broadcast machine for many-to-many communication. One way to do that is to give people more opportunities to broadcast their tweets to a cohesive group. You become a more effective broadcaster when you know to whom you are tweeting. Location provides an obvious way to do this. With Happn.in’s new City Feed, you can not only receive information from a particular city; you can send information to that city as well. Communication works better when you are talking to a particular group rather than to a group of no one in particular.

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International Cities on Happn.in

Posted by Matthew Mon, 13 Jul 2009 04:43:00 GMT

Some preamble before I get to the main point

Happn.in collects local Twitter trends (as you hopefully know if you are reading this blog). While conceptually this is straightforward, in practice there are a number of interesting problems, not least of which is the spam problem. Twitter, like the rest of the internet, is covered in non-nutritious spam. We have a number of methods to rid the Happn.in updates of spam. Most effectively, we have human editors who review the local trend lists and identify spam-like tweets and users. Once they identify spam, Happn.in knows phrases and users that are likely spam and our trend lists get better and better—with one glaring caveat. The people behind Happn.in only speak English.

The Main Point

We have started to add more and more non-english speaking cities to Happn.in. At first, because of the spam problem, we only included english tweets in the local trend lists. We realized that this was a pretty poor representation of a lot of non-U.S. locales, so recently we decided to include any and all languages in which people are tweeting. We are excited to do this; this is a good thing.

BUT: at the moment, those cities tweeting in languages other than English are going to experience more spam. We apologize for this; and are working to fix it. We are actively recruiting non-English speaking volunteers to join our editorial team; and help us rid our local trend lists of the evil spam that wants to take over everything. If you are interested in volunteering, please contact us. We would be extremely appreciative; and are coming up with ways to make it worth your while (ways including but not limited to T-shirts AND MAYBE STICKERS).

BUT MOSTLY: we are excited to bring Happn.in to more of the world – and for more of the world to bring their conversation and community to Happn.in.

AND A SIDENOTE: If any software developers are interested in a listing of non-human Twitter accounts, we’d be happy to send you ours.

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Advertising on Happn.in - New Developments

Posted by Matthew Wed, 01 Jul 2009 15:58:00 GMT

You’ve been able to advertise on Happn.in since the beginning, but today we introduce two developments that make advertising easier and better. In addition to sponsoring a Happn.in list (as you know, Happn.in compiles top local trends for 67 cities worldwide and sends out the current list four times a day), you can now also now buy a Full Tweet Ad, an entire targeted tweet to the city (or cities) you want. We’ve also made the process of purchasing ad space on Happn.in way simpler and streamlined.

See the Advertising Overview to get started.

NOW, at the risk of sounding like those people, we actually, truly believe that advertising on Happn.in offers something unique and cost-effective. We know that ads can be gross; and ads on the internet can blink and dance; but ads can also be helpful and successful. We serve up ads to a local Twitter audience, something you can’t do anywhere else, and we try/want to do it in a non-obtrusive, non-annoying way.

Full Tweet Ads

Once a day, we send out a full ad to each of our 67 cities. When you buy the ad slot for that city, your message gets sent out to a targeted localized list of Twitter users. Advertising on Happn.in is the only way to tweet directly to a local Twitter audience.

Again, we only do this once a day, so your ad gets great exposure without annoying the Happn.in audience.

Full Tweet Ads cost $5

List Sponsorships

Four times a day, Happn.in sends out the list of top local Twitter trends to over (at the time of writing) 130,000 people in 67 cities. Each of these lists offers sponsorship space. Your name or business is included in the list that is tweeted out and stamped onto the full list that lives back at Happn.in.

List Sponsorships cost $2

Buy Credits in Bulk

Starting today, instead of buying advertising slots one by one, you can purchase advertising credits in one transaction; and then just pick the advertising slots you want. 1 credit = $1. And we throw in free credits the more you buy. These credits get stored with your account, so you can use them up all in one go or over time.

Any questions or feedback from the perspective of an advertiser or a diehard Happn.in user, please let us know

See the Advertising Overview to get started.

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BET Awards Show Takes Over Happn.in

Posted by Jay Tue, 30 Jun 2009 02:35:00 GMT

One feature of Happn.in we haven't mentioned previously is how we hide phrases that are trending in many cities.

Why? Because our mission at Happn.in is to capture local news and events. Global and National news is available other places (Twitter's own trends, for example), so we've made the decision to hide these trends on the main Happn.in pages, although they're still available in some of the labs sections.

Last night, as the 9:30 PM (EDT) round of Tweets was going out, we noticed that some of the top-10 lists were a bit short. This meant that so many cities were talking about the exact same topics that local news and events were being hidden. This was the first time we'd seen this behavior. It wasn't just a single phrase that was repeated everywhere (which happens often: susan boyle, swine flu, et al.), it was a large group of phrases that were identical across the world (mostly the US, to be fair).

And what was the event that brought the world together? The BET awards, with phrases like: new edition, keri hilson, jamie foxx, michael jackson, joe jackson, travis barker, red carpet, bobby brown, amber rose, and, appropriately, bet awards. You can see more phrases that were popular across many cities last night in the popular phrases section of the labs. The only other event that has come close to total Happn.in domination over the past two months was the E3 trade show on June 2nd, 2009.

In any case, what at first seemed like a problem made us realize, again, that this tool can show us the collective consciousness of the world, and it's just up to us to present it in meaningful ways.

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100,000 Followers

Posted by Matthew Sat, 13 Jun 2009 19:43:00 GMT

Happn.in recently reached 100,000 followers across all its cities. To celebrate the milestone, we awarded the 100,000th follower—@craftydame of Vancouver—10 happn.in sponsorships and will be giving Vancouver the chance to sponsor the entire Happn.in site with a phrase of their choosing this upcoming Wednesday.

Thanks @craftydame; and thank you Vancouver :-)

DID YOU KNOW? You can sponsor a happn.in city for as little as $2. Advertise your blog, your restaurant, your multi-million dollar corporation to a localized twitter audience. We send out your name and link to our over 100,000 followers across 63 cities worldwide.

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