!obby session version="0.4.7" user_table user colour="ccccff" id="1" name="Hans" user colour="fbc759" id="2" name="arjen" chat system_message text="Hans has joined" timestamp="1281195533" user_message text="Yo bitch" timestamp="1281195741" user="1" system_message text="Hans has created a new document: Goodreads" timestamp="1281195765" system_message text="arjen has joined" timestamp="1281196316" user_message text="Chat venster?" timestamp="1281196512" user="1" user_message text="ja" timestamp="1281196532" user="2" document encoding="UTF-8" id="1" owner="1" suffix="1" title="Goodreads" chunk author="1" content="WHAT MAKES GOODREADS A GREAT WEBSITE? \n\n1. INTRODUCTION, WHAT IS GOODREADS?\nGoodreads is Facebook" chunk author="2" content=" and Wikipedia" chunk author="1" content=" for readers: a social network of people that love to read books, full of features that readers might like. It allows you to keep many lists (\"shelves\") with books that can then be shared with other people on the sites. It has reviews, hosts reading groups and aggregates user information allowing you to see the average score for a book.\n\n2. GREAT FEATURES\n\n* " chunk author="2" content="It's not a site which is only useful when you are a member, first of all it's just a pleasant site t" chunk author="1" content="o" chunk author="2" content=" read and browse if you are a book lover.\n\n" chunk author="1" content="* " chunk author="2" content="It allows me to keep track of my, my friends books and 'the crowds' books. Summarising:\n** If I see an interesting book I can put it on mu to-read shelf\n** If my friend read an interesting book he can recommend me\n** Statistics can suggest recommendations based on my shelves, reviews and friends ('the crowd') " chunk author="1" content="\n** There is a distinction between friends (a symmetric relationship) and followers (an assymetric relationship)\n** There is a book comparison feature: it finds the books you have both read and compares the scores you have given to those books\n** It is very easy to invite your friends into the site. You can put in their email address, or you can give Goodreads access to your webmail contacts (sometimes this is a questionable thing, but Goodreads isn't to pushy (it doesn't send out Tweets without you knowing it for example)).\n" chunk author="2" content="\n* They have a great 'universal' search box where you can search books on author, title or isbn from the same box.\n" chunk author="1" content="\n* It makes use of AJAX in the right locations, allowing you to update small things (\"liking\" a review, noting what page you've reached, handing out stars to a book) without having to reload the page.\n\n* The user profile page is related to the contents of the webservice: it allows you to say who your favourite authors are for example.\n\n* The site supports many different ways of viewing and sorting your shelves. You can look at covers or at titles and sort by author, by score, by last update and more.\n\n* " chunk author="2" content="Before building a great iPhone, Android or whatever mobile app, Goodreads made sure there website has a great mobile version of their WEBsite. So even if you are accessing the site with your Windows Mobile device you have a great experience." chunk author="1" content="When you access the website with a mobile browser it automatically redirects to a mobile version of the website. This mobile site does not have all the feature" chunk author="2" content="s" chunk author="1" content=" of the complete website, but it delivers the essence of the experience. \n\n* Not only is it very easy to put data into the Goodreads ecosystem, it is also very easy to get your data out again. " chunk author="2" content="[link http://www.goodreads.com/review/import]" chunk author="1" content=". You can download a CSV file with all your books (including the data you added like reviews, date read, your rating and the metadata about the book that Goodreads stores like the ISBN or the average rating). The smart import feature looks at a HTML page (like for example an Amazon wishlist page) and imports all the ISBNs it can find in the source code of the page. An easy way to seed your shelfs. Like any good webservice it imports export files from their competition (Shelfari, Librarything and Delicious library).\n\n* There seems to be an evolving business model. Initially there were only (onubtrusive) adds, but now they are starting to sell e-books, integrating this into the social network. \n" chunk author="2" content="\n* Always when I am reading a book there are sentences or passages which really impress or inspire me. Then I always forget them as well. The only thing I remember is that there was a great quote somewhere in a book by that author from country X. Goodreads allows you favourite and rank (and thus collet) quotes easily by author or by book. You can add and export quotes as well.\n" chunk author="1" content="\n* Sharing your Goodreads activity to other important webservices is built in. There are integrations with Facebook, Twitter, Wordpress Blogs" chunk author="2" content=" (another example of a recently added feature)" chunk author="1" content=" and MySpace. Goodreads also provides embeddable widgets that you can put on another website (e.g. a box with the most recent books you have read). There are simple integrations with many different bookstores. This allows you instantly find a book that you are looking at in Goodreads in your favourite online bookstore." chunk author="2" content=" Then of course there is the ubiquitous RSS." chunk author="1" content="\n" chunk author="2" content="\n* " chunk author="1" content="A site like Goodreads get is value from the data that its users put in. Goodreads does this at many levels. There are trivial ways of adding information (i.e. saying you like a review by clicking a single link, allowing Goodreads to display useful reviews first), but there are also ways of adding information that take slightly more effort. For example, i" chunk author="2" content="t is fairly easy to get 'librarian' status which shows the site trusts their users. As a librarian you can edit existing book entries. A low entrance level is key to crowd sourcing." chunk author="1" content=" Another way to involve people is to allow them to add their own trivia that other users can try and answer in trivia games.\n\n* It allows users to flag objectionable content.\n\n* Goodreads has its own blog" chunk author="2" content=" [link www.goodreads.com/blog]" chunk author="1" content=", keeping you up to date about the latest features and their direction.\n\n* It has an element of competition, you can see how many books are your shelf and how many books are on other people's shelf, but there are of metrics too: you can see who has written the most popular reviews" chunk author="2" content=", your rank among this weeks reviewers, reviews" chunk author="1" content=" or who has the most followers" chunk author="2" content="\n\n* It has a great and open API" chunk author="1" content=". This allows other people to build services on top of Goodreads. The very first Goodreads iPhone app was not made by Goodreads itself, but was made by a Goodreads enthousiast. The potential for this is huge and I don't think we have seen what will be possible with this yet. A lot of the data that Goodreads collects is accesible through the API in a structured and aggregated form. It should be very easy for other book related sites to incorporate average ratings from Goodreads on their own pages for example." chunk author="2" content="\n\n* " chunk author="1" content="It is in continual beta and their design process seems to be iterative: i" chunk author="2" content="t keeps evolving and adding new features at a high frequency like the recently added stats [link http://www.goodreads.com/review/stats/2610244-arjen-vrielink] feature" chunk author="1" content="\n\n* It is easy to delete your account, deleting all your data in the process." chunk author="2" content=" That makes for complete transparancy about data ownership, an issue e.g. Facebook has been struggling with lately.\n\n* It has a kind of update stream which let's you easily keep up to date with your friends, groups and favourite authors status." chunk author="1" content="\n\n* The service has ambitious and lofty goals: \"Goodreads' mission is to get people excited about reading. Along the way, we plan to improve the process of reading and learning throughout the world.\" [from: http://www.goodreads.com/about/us]. I do believe that this clear mission has led to many features that wouldn't have been there otherwise. For example, there is book swap economy built into the site allowing people to say that they own the book and are willing to swap it for other books. Another book lovers feature are the lists. Anybody can start a list and people can then vote to get books on the list. Examples of list are \"The Movie was BETTER than the Book\" [http://www.goodreads.com/list/show/104.The_Movie_was_BETTER_than_the_Book] or \"Science books you loved\" [http://www.goodreads.com/list/show/692.Science_books_you_loved]. Another feature are the book events. You can find author appearance, book club meetings, book swaps and other events based on how many miles away you want these to be from a certain city or in a certain country. Of course you can add events yourself, next to the ones that Goodreads imports from other sites, and you can say which events you will attend, plus invite friends to these events." chunk author="2" content="\n" chunk author="1" content="\n3. HOW COULD GOODREADS IMPROVE" chunk author="2" content="\n\n* As said Goodreads is continuously changing. Change is the first prerequisite for improvement. The second is to identify and dismiss bad change." chunk author="1" content=" Ocassionally the site feels a bit buggy. I have had a lot of grief updating the shelves of books using the mobile site with it not doing the things I wanted it do." chunk author="2" content="\n" chunk author="1" content="\n* It is not always clear what kind of updates are triggered by a user action. I am not sure what my friends see" chunk author="2" content=". Sometimes you find your Facebook Wall flooded with Goodreads updates because you found a box of long lost books in the attic which you entered in an update frenzy." chunk author="1" content="\n" chunk author="2" content="\n* I'm not sure about the 5 star rating system. Sites like Youtube ditched the 5 star system for the 'thumbs up', 'thumbs down' approach. Personally I'm often doubting between 3 / 4 stars or 4 / 5 stars. Like, when it's really not a bad book and actually quite good but just didn't fit my personal taste, I hesitate to give it 4 stars. I'd rather give it 3,5 stars then.\n\n* Usability/UX: Some features are hard to find. Like new stats feature discussed above, I looked for it a long time only finding it hidden away on the bottom left of a page in some obscure menu. " chunk author="1" content="Other features are hard to use, requiring many more clicks than " chunk author="2" content="are " chunk author="1" content="actually necessary." chunk author="2" content="\n\n* They could improve on locality and translation of books. In your profile settings you can select your country. But I don't only read books in Dutch. I also read books in English if the original language of the book is English or e.g. Japanese." chunk author="1" content="\n\n* The graphic design of the site isn't top notch. When people" chunk author="2" content=" (read: iPhone and Macbook users)" chunk author="1" content=" initially see Shelfari, it might have more appeal just because it looks a tad better." chunk author="2" content="\n\n* In-app mailing or messaging systems are always beyond me. Goodreads as well has an 'inbox' where you can send to and receive mail from your Goodreads friends. I'd much rather use my regular mail and use Goodreads as a broker so email addresses can be private. Something like a 'send message' or 'send mail' option or button when I visit a user's profile or click his avatar. LinkedIn has something like that I believe." chunk author="1" content="\n\n4. A SMALL DISCUSSION ON THE PROCESS\nHere we can discuss what we though" chunk author="2" content="t" chunk author="1" content=" of using Gobby and what we have done in te editing phase afterwards." chunk author="2" content="\n\n* it's very nice to have a real time, active spell and grammar checker.\n\n* you don't really need the chat window if you both sit on the same table. Question: does it make difference writing collaboratively sharing a location compared to being in different places.\n\n* This time we agreed on the topic and immediately started writing. I would also like to try a more elaborate preparation once."