As long time readers will know, I have been a champion of Friendfeed for quite a while. I have almost two and a half thousand subscribers there and have connected with some amazing people.
Friendfeed after Facebook’s acquisition
However, following Facebook’s acquisition, Friendfeed has been left to gather dust. Certainly, many of the users I used to connect with, have either left Friendfeed or hardly use it now. Take Robert Scoble for instance.
Scoble is the most followed or ‘subscribed to’ user on Friendfeed. Here’s what he said recently;
“I can’t keep focusing on a site that isn’t getting developed. Sorry. That’s not what I do.”
Friendfeed co-founder Paul Buchheit talking in riddles
Scoble is not alone! Last weekend, a number of other high profile users started openly debating its future. This was Friendfeed’s opportunity to kill the rumours. Instead, a PR-Speak message was left by Friendfeed co-founder Paul Buchheit. Sadly, Buchheit has raised more questions than he answered.
Here’s what he said:
There was a lot of chatter about the future of FriendFeed this weekend. The short answer is that the team is working on a couple of longer-term projects that will help bring FriendFeedy goodness to the larger world. Transformation is not the end. Consider this the chrysalis stage — if all goes well, a beautiful butterfly will emerge :)
Friendfeed users ignored
After that comment, Buchheit was obviously asked to clarify what on earth he was saying – ya know, in English!
Sadly, he declined. In fact, at the time of writing this, he’s not replied to a single question. It’s worth remembering here that most tech commentators saw Facebook’s acquisition of Friendfeed as a ‘talent grab‘ – a way to buy great quality people. Few people believed Facebook had any interest whatsoever in the Friendfeed platform.
For example, is his reference to “bring FriendFeedy goodness to the larger world” saying, as some suggest, that they are exclusively developing Friendfeed as an ‘add-on’ for Facebook (the larger world) now?
Equally, these riddles and the silence that followed, are of no help to the developer community, who have asked if they should still be investing their time, developing apps for Friendfeed. Again, no reply.
Friendfeed – Not so ‘friendly’ any more
It’s sad that many of the users that Paul Buchheit (and his colleagues) are now ignoring, are the same Friendfeed users, who helped him build the platform’s user base – A platform they have reportedly sold for tens of millions of dollars. Way to treat your users guys!
Whilst I now spend hardly any time on Friendfeed, I’m NOT deleting my Friendfeed account. I am going to keep my fingers crossed and hope for the best. Who knows? Like most people, I have no idea what Buchheit was talking about and the future of Friendfeed remains to be seen. It is still an amazing platform.
Do you speak Buchheit’s language?
I’ve spoken to half a dozen people about what Buchheit has said and none of them could agree as to what his actual message was.
What’s YOUR take on this. Get in touch!
I stopped using friendfeed within a week of the buy out. Its dead.
Ronnie, it’s certainly not dead. I have no doubt that the servers will be left running for a very long time yet. The challenge, is will Facebook allow the guys to continue developing for Friendfeed? Is it a growing platform or a shrinking one?
Anyone?
WAKE UP GUYS!
This is the end of friendfeed. Period! There’s no other reason for them to let the place fall apart, without giving a concrete assurance that they developing it.
How hard’s it for them to say that they are moving forward with freindfeed and stop the exodus? They cant say it coz it’s a lie. Thats why the guys talking like a politician. Thats not pr talk, it’s political talk to dodge giving an answer.
Your point about them not giving a clear reassurance is a good one.
It would have taken seconds for them to point-blank say that they were 100% committed to the development of Friendfeed.
Such a pity, Friend Feed was very attractive in its current incarnation and was pulling at me to indulge in it a lot more until the uncertainty arose over its future after the Facebook buyout.
The reply you quoted is also less than satisfactory.
I guess the only thing left is a name change to FriendFED…
Th answer was a mixture of a riddle and bad poetry.
Friendfeed’s Paul Buchheit talking in riddles over future plans http://j.mp/4yhzDH
Friendfeed’s Paul Buchheit talking in riddles over future plans http://j.mp/2B9IOd
Friendfeed’s Paul Buchheit talking in riddles over future plans http://ff.im/-adztG
Paul emailed me back and said he’s been very sick this week, which might explain some of his answers (or lack thereof). We are going to do an interview soon on the future of FriendFeed where I’m sure we’ll talk more explicitly about the future.
Hi Robert. Whilst I obviously wish Paul a speedy recovery, the silence from the co-founders has been deafening. I’m pretty-much certain that if they were not simply letting Friendfeed gather dust, someone would have said before now.
I await your video with fingers crossed. Sadly, I’m not sure I will know it’s been released; as I used to get all that info from (ironically) Friendfeed!
RT @thetechnewsblog: Friendfeed's future plans? http://bit.ly/2s3W8b :- a good read
Friendfeed needs a purpose I think RT @thetechnewsblog: Friendfeed's future plans? http://bit.ly/2s3W8b
Friendfeed’s Paul Buchheit talking in riddles over future plans http://j.mp/1xS5hA
Friendfeed’s Paul Buchheit talking in riddles over future plans http://bit.ly/3J6ihy
RT @tweetmeme Friendfeed's Paul Buchheit talking in riddles over future plans | The Tech News Blog http://retwt.me/1cyei
RT @thetechnewsblog: Friendfeed's future plans? http://bit.ly/2s3W8b [[Ouch. Friendfeed Feud?]]
[...] next ‘big’ new feature coming to Friendfeed, will be the last. This comes a day after Buchheit issued a confusing statement about the future of the platform he [...]
Never give up, never surrender (oh sweet Galaxy Quest).
The awesomeness in friendfeed wasn’t just the tech for me Jim, which was fantastic. It was meeting folks like yourself. Let’s keep in touch no matter what social networks we chat on. Our blogs will live on, we can connect them with more federated/distributed networks.
I’ve commented about what friendfeed could do to raise revenue on your follow on post, as that could create new developers passionate about it’s successful evolution. Simple opt in ads, contextually matched to what users chat about, it’s a no brainer.
Tech news @l8rs: #friendfeed confirms there will be no new features. http://tinyurl.com/yl5pstb
[...] depopulation of FriendFeed after its purchase by [...]