Earlier this week I received an invite from Danny Brown to join him on Glass. Being perpetually curious about tech and web applications I headed over and signed up. The last few days the application has really piqued my interest because it creates a new community layer over the internet unlike anything that has been available previously. It achieves this by combining side-wiki like features with a virtual social network. It also allows comments and conversations to occur on any website but privately with the connections of your choice or publicly with any Glass users. It caps all that off with a community streaming function bringing your Glass, Facebook and Twitter content that contain links into one place.
Reasons Glass is usefull
- Transcends the boundaries of social networks and websites
- Allows private or public conversations about any site or page
- Creates a community stream of your Glass, Facebook and Twitter
- Potential to integrate any social network, blog comment systems
- Enables you to share any website or page via Twitter, Facebook and Email
How about a video?
This video that takes a tour of the features and describes in more detail what you can do with Glass and why it may be a helpful tool for you.
Don’t see the video? Try this link instead.




Recently Danny Brown to joined me for a discussion about blogging ethics and transparency. Danny Brown is co-founder and partner at Bonsai Interactive Marketing, offering integrated marketing, social media, digital and mobile marketing solutions and applications. His blog is featured in the AdAge Power 150 list as well as Canada’s Top 50 Marketing Blogs, and won the Hive Award for Best Social Media Blog at the 2010 South by South West festival. After reading Danny’s blog for a while I learned two things that compelled me to invite him to join me for this episode:
This is a new monthly feature on my podcast where I will be interviewing “interviewers” in this case 



I had a great serendipitous experience this month, it all started when I noticed a great blog post that had some un-answered comments. The author happened to be someone that I have now learned is exceptional about responding to comments but there had been a technical challenge making it difficult for her to do so. If you want to hear the rest of that part of the story you can view 








Bring more readers to your blog with the LiveFyre comment system
In my recent post about tagging people on Facebook there was a robust discussion that occurred that was largely not related to the post but was actually centered around the Livefyre comment system itself. In this video I explain how and why that occurred and how you can use the system to bring more readers to your blog.
What comment system do you prefer and why?