Disqus, Seesmic and the Qwidget
Web entrepreneurs have begun to attend to the inherent problems and backwardness of the commenting system that most blogs use.
I am particularly excited about the potential of Disqus. I like having my identity follow me to different blogs. And if I ever feel the need to post something anonymously, I obviously can. I also like that people can begin following my comments as if I were a blogger that randomly dropped in and posted on everyone else’s blogs. As Fred Wilson pointed out, comments can be blog posts. So adding Disqus to this blog was a no-brainer. Any tool that encourages more fulfilling conversation is a good thing. It fits in with what we believe the web needs most right now.
What I think Disqus does best is make commenting more fulfilling for those who are already predisposed to leave a comment in the first place. It will make the person who leaves two comments a month leave ten. I think that is the comment frequency bump that many bloggers who switch to Disqus talk about. And it is a great thing. However, I believe that the problems that typically passive readers face still remain: too many things going on at once; too fractured a conversation that makes it hard to jump in at any one place; no obvious call to action that spurs engagement; etc. And so bloggers still will have a problem getting these types involved in any kind of interaction with the community. I believe that the Qwidget will meet that need.
Seesmic is another player that is making the online dialogue experience a bit more smooth for those of us that enjoy the chaos of web conversations. It brings in video which makes the whole experience more personal. I think Seesmic will make it really fun for people in small tight knit communities. And one big benefit that Seesmic will have, at least in the tech community, is making it easier for people to recognize each other at conferences and events. Also, seeing someone on video before you meet them often makes you feel like you know how to interact with them because you already have a sense of their speech style, their voice, etc. Obviously, the Qwidget is a text based system and consequently very different than Seesmic. So I’ll happily install the Seesmic Wordpress plugin very shortly.
Update: I’ve activated the Seesmic integration with Disqus.






Stories, Updates and Thoughts From the Qwidget Makers
The Qwidget is a tool that publishers and bloggers install on their sites to make it easier for readers to engage in dialogue around their content.
With the Qwidget, we are building a cross-web dialogue platform. We aim to make the web a better place for meeting new people and starting conversations about the issues and content that interest people.
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