Image via CrunchBase
There is no denying that after all the hype Buzz failed badly, but good things are still being said about Google’s latest project – Google+. Rather then encouraging you to add as many people as possible, from close friends and family to people that your friends know, Google+ is a more intimate affair.
Using circles, it allows you to segment your friends into family, close friends and acquantainces, and limit different posts to different circles. Your posts appears like a wall, and it is exceptionally easy to use – sharing posts and pictures is very fluid, and Google will even pinpoint your location and ask if you want to include this too.
Celebrities seem to be flocking to the new networking, with the CEO of Dell holding 22 video conferences over Google+ recently, and even Facebook creator Mark Zuckerburg himself has created an account. When compared, many celebrities have posted on Google+ more then double the amount of times they posted on Facebook during a two week period.
10 million people have also joined the site, and visited at least once since, and it is rumoured this is due to its simplistic, inituitive nature: much like Google search engine. Others have claimed it is due to Google managing privacy correctly: Facebook appears to be in a never ending storm about users privacy, and the constant changes to terms of service which often give all rights to Facebook.
By combining the parts of Facebook and Twitter that work, and making them both simpler, more inituitive and more stylish, Google+ seem to be on the verge of becoming a serious contender for Facebook, something which has not really happened since the demise of Myspace.
