Posts with tag Propeller

Headline Links

As we continue to explore ways to improve the Propeller experience, we sometimes come across decisions that benefit one group of members yet hinder the experience for another group. We try to minimize this hindrance whenever possible. However, as of today the behavior of the story headline link is changing, and we anticipate that it will cause temporary discomfort for some.

Here's what changed: Going forward, all logged-out visitors that click on headline links will be sent to the story source, instead of the Propeller discussion page. Logged-in members will also be sent to the story source, but can adjust a "Browsing" preference to restore the Propeller Discussion page as their headline link destination.

You can adjust your preference on your Edit Profile page (login required). Scroll down to the section titled "Browsing" and choose your preference. Your options are "Read Full Story", with which clicks to headline links will take you to the source story, and "Propeller Discussion", the previously default behavior, which takes you to the Propeller Discussion page for the story. Once you have made your decision, scroll to the bottom of the page and click "Save Changes". Your preference once saved should be immediately reflected on Propeller.

Regardless of your headline link destination preference, you can always go to the Propeller discussion page by clicking the "Discuss" link below the story description, and you can always go to the story source by clicking "Read Full Story at ...", directly to the right of the Discuss link. This is an important change being made, but by no means does your choice of headline link destination cut off access to either page.

The Propeller staff debated whether or not to automatically update member preferences for all active members to keep the experience the same and send those clicking on headline links to the Propeller discussion page. However, in the end, we decided not to update member accounts preemptively, as we wanted members to choose the behavior most appropriate for them.

Please let us know if you encounter any issues with headline links or with setting the new preference.

Happy Propelling,
Tom (tdrapeau)

Continue reading Headline Links

BREAKING: Gorilla Wins Halloween Avatar Contest



Congratulations opiczka2 on winning the 2009 Propeller Halloween Avatar Contest! The field was particularly strong this year, and our celebrity panel of Netscape and Propeller staff, both past and present, were up to the challenge. Celebrity judges included former GM and Editorial Director C.K. Sample III, now of CrowdFusion, original lead developer and Propeller Member #1 Alex Rudloff, now of Emurse, and James Marcus, who took a pause from his editorial duties with AOL News to cast his vote.

Voting was spread fairly evenly across many great submissions, including these top runners up:

Member epiphannyy had a strong 2nd place showing (and certainly did better than the witch):



Member StevieGee came in 3rd, with this:



Other strong finishers included the "Scarecrow Moon" by STONERS and the most popular vote for the scariest avatar, sent in by fiftynine.



Congratulations and thanks to all who entered this year's contest. Don't forget to claim your rewards opiczka2!

Have a Happy Halloween all.
Tom (tdrapeau)

Continue reading BREAKING: Gorilla Wins Halloween Avatar Contest

Meet the Contestants of Propeller's Halloween Avatar Contest

As the deadline for submissions approaches (5pm EST today), we thought it would be fun to take a look at all of the submissions thus far. Which do you think is deserving of this year's crown?







Thanks and good luck to all for entering! The winner will be chosen tomorrow--let us know who it should be.

P.S. A few entries have come in since this morning's post. There is still 90 minutes left to enter, get your entries in!



P.P.S. Here are the stragglers, looks like this will be the lot.


P.P.P.S. A few more for consideration:



Continue reading Meet the Contestants of Propeller's Halloween Avatar Contest

Latest News From Our Friends

Friends and Fans of Propeller--

As you may have already noticed, over the past few days we have been testing a new module on Propeller's home and category pages with the header "Latest News From Our Friends". The module will be populated with the latest news from sites both inside and outside of the AOL network, and will be updated regularly throughout the day.

This module will be viewable within the story list on the home and category pages, although you might have to scroll down a bit to see it. We hope that this module will serve as a consistent place for timely news--as always, let us know what you think.

Tom (tdrapeau)

Continue reading Latest News From Our Friends

Propeller Halloween Avatar Contest

The Propeller team invites all Propeller members to submit their entry for the 2009 Propeller Halloween Avatar Contest! Entries are being accepted right now, and the deadline for entries is October 29th. The winner will be chosen on Friday, October 30th, and will receive tons of great prizes, including:

-Featured Member status
-A haiku written about your avatar by Richard (no quality guarantees)
-9,000,000 Propeller points, redeemable only for a coffee at Blaine's favorite coffee shop 2nd Moon Coffee in Minneapolis (no deliveries, must redeem in person!)
-Shrimp from Bubba Gump's on the Santa Monica pier (travel not included), courtesy of Ryan
A note about the entries... they'll have to at least be better than mine (I carved the pumpkin myself):



To enter: Send an email to us referencing your avatar at feedback at propeller dot com--you can attach your avatar picture to your email, but you must also update your avatar on the site to win.

Good luck to all!
Tom

Continue reading Propeller Halloween Avatar Contest

Another Comment Filter Update

After last week's comment filter update, we received numerous reports from the community that the filters weren't quite right. Many were not interested in filtering comments at all, and the consensus was that the "Neutral" comment rating unnecessarily hid initial reactions to posted comments. I am pleased to say that we've worked on addressing these concerns, and hope that today's update alleviates them.

Here is a look at the latest iteration of the comment filter box:


Choosing the new "No Filter" option will show all comments (down to second level replies, as the system did before the comment filters were put in place), and will save that preference for future story viewing. In other words, if you don't want any part of the comment filter, choose the No Filter option once, and you should not have to deal with it again. Also, the "View All Comments" link has been restored, and, as before, leads to the comments page with all comments shown.

We fixed the comment rating bug that was reported last week, where rating a comment caused the "Neutral" placeholder to appear, instead of the rating percentage. We have also changed the role of "Neutral"--now, only comments without any ratings at all will show up that way.

We hope that these updates allow both those who want to filter comments, and those who don't, to be able to exercise their preference on Propeller.

Thanks to all for submitting feedback--it is much appreciated.

Tom

Continue reading Another Comment Filter Update

Comment Filter Update

As a follow-up release to the moderation features launched a few weeks back, today we have released new comment filters. These allow members to choose to see all comments for a story with 25% or more, 50% or more, or 75% or more positive ratings, as well as an option to see all comments. Comments that have less than 5 ratings are considered too new to filter, and are now marked as "Neutral".

A look at the new comment filter:


The first time a story page is loaded, the default filter of 25% is selected. The system will remember your latest chosen comment filter and reuse it for all stories you view.

We hope that these updates make reading comments on Propeller a more enjoyable experience.

Tom

Continue reading Comment Filter Update

Reporting and Moderating Content on Propeller

Active members on Propeller have seen the temperature rising in comment threads over the past few months. Hot button topics, such as health care reform, Obama's birth certificate, conservative and liberal pundits, and of late, Ted Kennedy's passing, have served as fodder for some very unpleasant exchanges. We have for the most part stood back and allowed members to talk it out amongst themselves, although it has become clear that we have fallen short in our duties to police the worst of the worst. This failure has hurt our active members, as well as passive readers who would consider becoming members but decide against it after reading the comment threads. We want Propeller to be a place where people can argue the merits of a story, while feeling safe from undue personal attacks in retaliation for one's point of view.

Towards this end, we are releasing a few new features that will be transparent to most but will help Propeller staff to respond more effectively and promptly to member reports. Also, we'll review the rating aspects of the site and discuss the ways to use each that best help Propeller.

At some point tomorrow, we will release a new version of the site with a few minor changes. One will help speed up the delivery of member reports, to help get them into the staff's hands faster. We need to be more aggressive and timely in triaging member reports--and we will do so. Also, the system will start closing stories automatically once a story receives a certain number of reports. When the system closes a story, it will also send a message to the staff on the closing. We hope that this new feature will allow for comment threads to be frozen on stories that are getting out of hand, while alerting the staff to them to review to make sure that closing the story is the right way to go.

Lastly, we are going to collapse comments that have less than a 50% approval rating, once they have accrued enough total comment votes. The collapsed comment will look like this:



Notice that even though the comment is collapsed, it can be expanded if desired to show the original comment text. We hope that these new features, and increased attention to member reports, will help take the edge off of the most heated exchanges on the site.

Let's also take a look at the rating aspects of the site:

-Propping (voting a story up): Props are a crucial factor on the site--they help in calculating what stories are popular. An article should only be propped after it is read and felt to be particularly newsworthy (or at the very least, funny or quirky). Members should not engage in blind propping (propping a story without reading it) for any reason. Do not prop a story just because you like the submitter, or the author. Doing so leads to behavior indistinguishable from sock puppeting, which is forbidden by the Terms of Use (available here).

-Dropping (voting a story down): Drops are also critical on Propeller, as they help to separate the wheat from the chaff. An article should be dropped if it is pointless, not factual (with the obvious exception of satire, when submitted to the Humor category) or in general, when it is not newsworthy. Just as with propping, members should not engage in blind dropping (dropping a story without reading it) for any reason. An article should not be dropped because the member doesn't agree with the point of view of the author.

-Comment Rating: On Propeller a member can rate a comment up or down. Up rating is meant for comments that are informative, funny, poignant. The top rated comments appear on the home page under "What People Are Saying" and the Propeller Facebook application, so please, take the time to give kudos when deserved. Down rating is meant for comments that are unnecessarily argumentative, irrelevant, or contain ad hominem attacks. We have seen too many comments in this vein go unmoderated. We hope the use of down rating in conjunction with the comment collapsing feature will short circuit comment thread meltdown--however, we need everyone's help to make this happen.

Also to remember: there is no shame in reading an article or a comment without rating it afterwards. The rating system is designed to promote the best of the best--on a given day, you might read 50 stories on Propeller and decide to Prop just a few.

-Reporting: Stories, comments and members can be reported using the "Report" button on a story detail page, the "!" button on the top right of a comment, and the "Report" link on the top right of a member's profile page. Stories should be reported if they clearly violate the Terms of Use, be they spam or containing exceedingly objectionable content. Comments should be reported if they are excessively abusive, profane or spammy. Members should be reported if they are using their account primarily for abuse, spam or objectionable content. To all those members who have been faithfully reporting stories, comments and members, we thank you, and encourage you to continue. To other active members, please use the report feature instead of fanning the flames--we will all benefit from this.

Thanks for listening. I hope that these changes, with the community's help, will help improve everyone's Propeller experience.

Tom

Continue reading Reporting and Moderating Content on Propeller

Join Us On Facebook!

Fans of Propeller-

I'd like to cordially invite you all to become fans on Propeller on Facebook! Facebook, for those living in a cave (with internet access), is the wildly popular social network that is connecting friends and family the world over. We have written about Facebook previously, in our post about Propeller's use of the Facebook Connect platform.

We have recently created a fan page on Facebook where we will post interesting links we find on Propeller, and general news about the service. Please show your support for Propeller and become our fan!

Here is the link to our brand new fan page on Facebook:

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Propellercom/97972566876


Thanks to all for your continued participation on the site, you make reading the news more fun.

Best,
Tom (tdrapeau)

P.S. There will be punch and pie.

Continue reading Join Us On Facebook!

Shortening URLs, Creating Categories: All in a Day's Work at #propeller

Friends of Propeller-

I wanted to let you know about a few additions to the Propeller web site today, designed to better serve our community. The first affects the URLs that are added to our Facebook and Twitter share feature. Up until now, we have been using the TinyURL shortening service to encode Propeller story links to better fit into the message length restrictions of Twitter. As of today, we are using our own URL shortening service, which uses the domain http://pplr.us.

The pplr.us service is different from TinyURL and other shortening services in that pplr.us links will only point to Propeller story pages (we may extend this beyond Propeller story pages in the future.) For those who have used our Facebook or Twitter share already, this change will be fairly transparent--you will notice that the links that end up in your Facebook/Twitter feed have the new pplr.us domain. Beyond that, nothing has changed with story sharing.

Additionally, thanks to a great suggestion by a relative newcomer to the Propeller community btatman22, we now have 2 separate Politics categories: Political News and Political Opinion. Since its initial launch 3+ years ago, the Propeller community has been interested in both the play-by-play and the color commentary of politics. Adding this new category will help distinguish between news reporting and opinion, and (we hope) reduce any related confusion. All existing Politics posts now appear in the Political News category, so that old links can be preserved, and the Political Opinion category is now open for business--members, please begin to use it for your opinion posts.

That's all for now--let us know how we're driving.

Live Long and Prop It!
Tom (member tdrapeau)

Continue reading Shortening URLs, Creating Categories: All in a Day's Work at #propeller

Editing Stories on Propeller

One of the most common member requests we receive on Propeller is for members to have the ability to edit stories they have posted. Specifically, to be able to fix typos, small grammar mistakes, and errant category choices. I am pleased to announce that we now have such a feature! For all stories you have posted, you will now see an "Edit" link wherever the story is displayed. Clicking on the link will bring you to a page where you can edit the story title, description, category and/or the story tags.

Let's take a look--first, the story listing with Edit link:



Notice the Edit link at the bottom, between the Discuss and Read Full Story links. And now, the edit page:



Once the edits are done, click "Save Changes", and you should see your edited story. That's it!

As always, let us know what you think.

Happy editing,
Tom (member tdrapeau)

Continue reading Editing Stories on Propeller

Submitting Shortened URLs to Propeller

In its article on TinyURL, the first widely used URL shortener, Wikipedia defined the service as one "that provides short aliases for redirection of long URLs". The launch of Twitter in 2006, with its 140-character limit on posts, prompted the development of many new URL shortening services such as bit.ly and tr.im.

Some content publishers and aggregators have followed suit and integrated URL shortening into their own service to facilitate sharing of links to their content. Examples of these are tcrn.ch (TechCrunch) and digg.com (Digg). Web sharing services have also joined in the fun, a recent example being shar.es (ShareThis).

Here at Propeller we have secured the domain pplr.us and will be launching our own URL shortener shortly. However, up until today, we did not accept shortened URLs as Propeller story submissions. I'm happy to report that we now accept shortened URLs. Story submission has not changed at all to accommodate this--simply submit the shortened URL, and we will save the original ("lengthened") URL as the source of the story.

So for example, a recent Propeller Week In Review blog post has the following URL:

http://blog.propeller.com/2009/06/05/propeller-week-in-review-greatest-hits-edition/

Using the tr.im URL shortener, the alias for the above URL is:

http://tr.im/nyv6

As of today, you can now submit tr.im URLs (as well as any other URL shortening service). Simply enter the shortened URL (in this case, http://tr.im/nyv6) into the URL box. Propeller will then save the story with the lengthened blog.propeller.com URL.

And that's it! Let us know if you have any questions.

Happy shortening,
Tom (member tdrapeau)

P.S. Follow Propeller on Twitter!

Continue reading Submitting Shortened URLs to Propeller

Share Propeller Stories on Twitter

I am happy to announce that Propeller can now speak Twitter! Twitter is a wildly popular micro-blogging platform that allows for broadcasting short (140 characters at maximum) messages to everyone in your Twitter network. Its popularity has risen sharply of late with exposure on major TV networks such as CNN, as well as with celebrities such as Ashton Kutcher and Oprah Winfrey. Much like our integration of the Facebook Connect platform announced a few weeks back, our Twitter features are designed to encourage new member signups by allowing accounts to be created using Twitter usernames and passwords, and to facilitate sharing of great content with your Propeller and Twitter networks. Let's take a look:

Sign in via Twitter



Clicking "Sign in with Twitter" redirects you to the Twitter web site, where you are asked to verify that you do indeed authorize Propeller to access and update your data on Twitter. The authentication protocol that allows this is called OAuth, which allows users to approve an application (in this case Propeller) to act on their behalf without sharing their password.The verification screen looks like this:



If you click "Allow", Propeller will then ask you to associate your Propeller account with this Twitter account. If you are new to Propeller, you can use this Twitter information to help you create a new Propeller account. The link (or create) screen looks like this:



And that's it! It should only take a minute to do this. Once you have connected your Twitter account to your Propeller account, you can take advantage of two great new Twitter-related features:

1. Submit story via Twitter

You can submit a story to Propeller simply by sending a direct message ("DM") to the official Propeller twitter feed, @PropellerDotCom. Your direct message should just include the URL you would like to submit to Propeller. Here's an example of a direct message that leads to a story submission:



Make sure to add @PropellerDotCom to the list of feeds that you are following, and please be patient, it can take up to an hour for your direct message to be transformed into a story post. The above direct message created a story submission looking like this:



2. Share story to Twitter

You can "Tweet" a Propeller story by using the Share Story feature on a Propeller story page. If you have associated your Twitter account with your Propeller account, you will see the following share window after clicking "Share Story":



Make sure that the "Tweet on Twitter" checkbox is checked, and click "Share It!" Clicking "Share It" will add a link to your Twitter feed that looks like this:



We are excited to invite the Twitter community to check out Propeller, as well as to offer these great authentication and sharing tools to existing Propeller members. Let us know if these features don't work for you.

Happy Twittering-
Tom (member tdrapeau)

Continue reading Share Propeller Stories on Twitter

Propeller Notifications Update

In addition to the great news about Facebook Connect, I wanted to detail some new enhancements to Propeller Notifications. We have been making small improvements to the system for some weeks now, and as of today, they have been deployed throughout the Propeller community.

Notifications fall into the following categories:

Member Activities: Related to your own activities on Propeller, these notifications contain your submissions, props, comments, replies and props on your submissions
Group Activities: Related to activities within groups you are a member of, this notification tells you about stories submitted to any of your groups
Private Messages: Tells you about any new messages you have received on Propeller
Week in Review: Weekly summaries of the latest and greatest on Propeller by James Marcus
News about Propeller
: Occasional updates about the Propeller web site
In your Propeller settings area, there is a "Manage Notifications" page, available here. On it, you can manage your preferences for each type of notification message, choosing to be notified (or not), the method (via email or Propeller's messaging system) and the frequency (immediate, daily, weekly). It looks like this:



You can also turn off all notifications at once by clicking the "Disable All" button (which requires one extra confirmation). You may start seeing email notifications from us (from the address noreply@propeller.com) almost immediately, depending on the level of activity within your Propeller network. We have tried to guess at the ideal settings, but encourage you to go to your Manage Notifications page and tune the settings to your liking.

If these notifications alert you to stories and conversations you might have otherwise missed, then they have done their job. I hope they have, and will be watching my inbox eagerly. If they haven't, let us know how we can do better.

Happy Propelling,
Tom (member tdrapeau)

Continue reading Propeller Notifications Update

Propeller: New and Improved, and With 100% More Facebook!

Greetings-

I am thrilled to announce that Facebook Connect has been added to Propeller! Facebook Connect is a platform that allows web sites to offer authentication, friend linking, and content sharing through the wildly popular Facebook social network. As of today, new members can join Propeller by logging in with their Facebook username and password. They can invite their Facebook friends to join them as friends on Propeller. Also, Propeller stories can be added to a member's Facebook News Feed, via the Propeller Share Story feature. Let's see what we mean:

1. Sign in via Facebook


Clicking "Connect with Facebook" shows a second pop up window which confirms that you want to log into Propeller using your Facebook credentials, and wish to share information with Facebook (looks like this):



If this is the first time you are signing into Propeller using your Facebook account, you will be given the option to either create a new Propeller account from your Facebook information, or to link to an existing Propeller account. Here is what the "create new account" version of the screen looks like:



And that's it! It should only take a minute to do this. Once you have connected your Facebook account to your Propeller account, you can invite your friends to join you on Propeller, and you can share stories that you like with your Facebook News Feed. To invite your friends, click the "Invite" button located on the homepage under the header "Invite Your Facebook Friends." To share a story, simply click on the story's headline, and click the Share Story link at the bottom of the story description. The Share Story pop-up looks like this:



Here is an example of what the shared story looks like when it hits the News Feed:



We are excited to invite the Facebook community to check out Propeller, as well as to offer these great authentication and sharing tools to existing Propeller members. As always, if this does not work as advertised, let us know.

Happy Sharing-
Tom (member tdrapeau)

Continue reading Propeller: New and Improved, and With 100% More Facebook!

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