Ning LogoFor those who have been asleep, educate yourself on Ning, the up-and- coming social network platform. It allows anybody to create their own free full featured network and it’s no harder than creating a blog on blogger. Of course, as people find out, the mere act of creating a space doesn’t mean you will instantly be the monarch of a thriving community, any more than creating a blog guarantees that you’ll have thousands of adoring fans worldwide and rake in the chips. is in its infancy. I built a network a few months ago with a local focus, but it wasn’t my primary focus, and I’m not stupid enough to have expected it to grow exponentially without serious marketing. My primary focus at the time was my own home-grown aggregator.

But then everything changed…

announces
About two months ago, came out with support for . Think about it. Here’s little old me, all alone with no money, out in the sticks where angel funding rarely happens, and never to someone like me. I was beavering away diligently on my project — built on a tiny home grown lightweight framework, with rather gnarly coupling problems, and stuck on PHP4 until just recently. On the other hand, here’s , with millions in funding and up to 20th place already in social networks

Reinventing the wheel is dumb
I’m a girl. I much prefer to make the engine work. I am painfully aware that usability is critical, but it’s just not my forte. Usability takes ages. Usability testing takes dollars. Usability takes resources, which I’m clearly short on. And for , usability is a solved problem: already has general usability going for it. I’d much rather use theirs than make my own from scratch.

Leveraging is smart
Admittedly, in raw functionality, ’s initial offering was not a patch on my custom system, namely, quite skeletal , a very dodgy system for cataloging venues, and no repeating support. NOT YET. I had feeder buttons, includer buttons, and even was working on a color customization feature. But my system, for all its power, never caught fire, due mainly to usability issues. So why not the tested usability of and meld my calendaring features into their platform? It’s a win/win. I get to work entirely on the back end where I like to be and let deal with those pesky usability issues.

Not the world’s easiest
’s (Application Programming Interface) has quite a learning curve. Each time you delve into the “exchanging bodily fluids” level with a new software platform, there is going to be some pain, but no matter how painful it is, it can’t compare to the overwhelming task of doing everything from scratch. When I have built something that works, I’ll post the links to my project. Please leave a sympathetic comment or offer some encouragement if you have any tips to offer. Peace,

Colleen

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