In KickApps, KickApps Communities, Online Video, Photos, Tutorial, mobile
By Michael Chin
October 29, 2007
Last week we launched a new feature that allows members of KickApps powered communities to upload photos and videos taken on a mobile device directly to their KickApps powered community (check out the press release here). Most of you probably have a phone that takes photos and/or videos–it’’s the one device that most people have on them most of the time– and this new mobile UGC feature lets people share their images and video with greater immediacy, i.e. you don”t have to go through a PC, etc. Great thing is that it’’s available automatically for all KickApps sites and members. Here’’s a tutorial about it that Josh wrote for KickDeveloper. Just let your members know about the new feature and that they need to activate their own upload email address (see the way 19 Action News promotes it on their community site’’s homepage).
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In Happy Holidays, KickApps, The CW
By David Hertog
October 22, 2007
A few months ago our VP of Business Development, Matt Bijur, moved to LA to address the increasing demand for KickApps among major media companies. Needless to say, Matt’s done a great job of getting the word out, including securing a bunch of high profile clients that we can’t even talk about yet. But who knew he had star power?
Matt recently appeared on The CW’s weekly trend-watching show, CW Now, where he showed host Chris Balish how we can all stay in touch with our family and friends during the upcoming holiday season by setting up a ‘Yule Blog.’
Check out the full video here.

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In Adobe MAX, Flash, KickApps
By David Hertog
October 17, 2007

It’s been a great three days in Barcelona, and we’ve had the pleasure of speaking with Europe’s top web designers and developers about what they do and how KickApps can help. The show’s been a blast, and there’s no shortage of brands looking to enhance their sites and further their business objectives with social media.
Adobe definitely knows how to put on a great conference. The show’s had dozens of interesting panels on everything from developing slick Flash apps to designing eye-popping visuals in Creative Suite 3. Don’t ask me to make sense of it all, though, I’m just a suit.
Here’s Graham doing his thing at the KickApps booth…

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In Alex's Notes, Chris Anderson, KickApps, Long Tail
By Alex Blum
October 15, 2007
Last week I had the pleasure of sitting down with Chris Anderson the editor-in-chief of Wired Magazine and the author of The Long Tail. As most of you know, The Long Tail first appeared in Wired in October 2004 and was also recently published as a book. His thesis about the Long Tail touches many of today’s industries, marketing strategies, technological developments, even culture and politics, and is the basis for the KickApps business model. I hope this guy knows what he’s talking about…:-).
The catalyst for us getting together was a blog post that he wrote in late September entitled, “Social Networking is a Feature Not a Destination.” It’s a very interesting read but the point that resonated most with me was his closing paragraph:
“I think focused sites that serve niche communities will extract the best lessons from Facebook and MySpace and offer better social networking tools to the communities they already have. I’m sure huge and generic social networking destinations will continue to do well, but I’m placing my bet on the biggest impact coming when social networking becomes a standard feature on all good sites, bringing community to the granular level where it always works best.”
When we met, we naturally talked about KickApps and I was delighted to hear that he shares much of our vision when it comes to how we see the world and social media. KickApps’ raison d’être is to eliminate barriers to entry for any web publisher and developer wishing to create online communities using social media applications on their existing website. Social media is an audience engagement engine and there are few things in a web publisher’s arsenal that can deliver audience growth and engagement the way social media can—according to comScore the fastest growing website in August 2007 was a niche user-generated video site called GodTube.com (1.7M visitors in its first month!). From a publisher’s perspective the “biggest impact” comes from audience engagement on ‘niche’ sites which translate to highly targeted and desirable advertising inventory. A Long Tail advertising network, so to speak. We call our version of this the KickApps Intelligent Ad Network.
Another thing we talked about was that there are a few fundamental features that a hosted white label solution like ours should have to enable publishers to create a social media powered community that plugs right into their existing websites. The obvious ones are to provide a platform that our customers can use to deliver a branded experience to their community, these ‘baseline’ features include brand look and feel, DNS masking, and contextual integration of community content within their existing site using things like Widgets. Other important features include giving traffic attribution to the site owner and total ownership of content and member data.
There’s also a fundamental philosophy that a ‘white label’ provider needs to be able to deliver upon. The value of a white label platform like KickApps’ is that it’s ‘your’ community, ‘your’ content and ‘your’ brand; we’ve created KickApps to meet those guidelines. Our client’s audience shouldn’t have to sign on to someone else’s network—you might as well create a group on Facebook or MySpace if you had to do that. Instead, we’ve architected KickApps to enable our clients to create ‘silo’d’ networks of their own that allow their members to have a single sign-on throughout.
This is particularly interesting for our larger media and entertainment clients who have a network of properties, each with a separate community that link to an ‘uber’ site and with it each other, a parent-child relationship if you will. Many of our current client base who initially started with just one site community are now looking to utilize KickApps’ ability to support their own social media network of sites and I learned that this is a feature desired by Chris.
All this to say, I really enjoyed my time with Chris and I look forward to engaging more with him as one of our industry’s leading thinkers.
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In Developers, Joomla, KickApps, Single Sign-On
By Michael Chin
October 11, 2007
One of the most frequent requests that we get from publishers using KickApps is for single sign-on (SSO) functionality with their existing websites. Of these, many ask for integration with Joomla!. In response to this, we’ve developed an SSO plug-in that enables this functionality automatically.
Using the SSO plug-in, affiliates will enable a seamless login and registration experience for their members between their Joomla! installation and their KickApps powered community. Additionally, live Joomla! instances with existing members do not need to do an initial member export into KickApps; existing members will be registered into KickApps passively as they sign in to Joomla!. This results in a smoother experience for the community member and further deepens the white label relationship between the publisher and KickApps.
As a first, Austin based PowerKicker, Haylie McCort of DotcomCowgirl, and Joomla! developers Pixel Praise, implemented the SSO plug-in for Training for Warriors earlier this week.
Also, if you’re in New York and want to learn more about Joomla and KickApps, Mitch Pirtle, Chiefspacemonkey at spacemonkeylabs, and a co-founder of Joomla, will be speaking at tonight’s New York Joomla User Group meeting and at Saturday’s (October 13) Joomla Day here in New York.
To download the integration plug-in, please visit: http://www.kickdeveloper.com/tutorials_joomla.html.
What’s next you ask? Drupal, Wordpress…? What do you think?
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