It's cool! I like the site. I like the idea. What group of people do you think will use it? I was thinking thinking this would be great for "unsophisticated" users. When I worked as the webmaster for a large school division in Virgina - I always got ask to help employees "create" things on their computers. It was kind of like putting a picture of your kids on your desk or desktop screen saver. When other people visited your office/cube they always ask about your kids. And the social aspect of your idea might fit in too. If you're interested in testing out the "unsophisticated" users angle let me know - I don't work at the school anymore but I still have inroads to to other similar environments.
Good point but I'm playing with another concept at the moment. When I can I just like to lend a hand to other startups - I was thinking the people I know might like the ClutterMe site.
Unfortunately, the page looks ugly because I suck at design, and you're making me do the design. So it ends up looking really tacky.
Perhaps this "click anywhere and type/edit" technology can be used to annotate webpages (or even iPaper PDFs). I know I'd use it for those purposes if I could.
Annotation is an interesting idea. I've seen other ideas to annotate web pages out there, but never one that really caught on to my knowledge (maybe because they required a browser plug-in to see or create the annotations), and they also allowed you to annotate anyone's site with or without their permission.
What if as an option you allowed other sites to install an "annotate my site" script you provided, which acts as a lead-in to direct people back to your site with a link or with a "find other pages like this" type of thing? You could even provide a cross-reference between annotated sites this way, and provide a centralized site sort of like a directory of these sites...
What aneesh and yourself are saying is coming eerily close to discussions we've been having recently... thanks for the feedback guys, very much appreciated!
I've visited your site several times before, and every time I visit I just don't see many people using it. I appreciate the freedom your service offers, but I think even for a customized homepage there is value in structure and organization. As much as Myspace pages vary with annoying background gifs and videos, there is still an underlying framework that adds unity to the site. I think the fact that it's too open might hurt you in the end. On Facebook you have your pics, your wall, your feed, etc., so there are expected components to each page that unite users. Placing anything anywhere on a page would give users a lack of focus and expend energy to use your service because they'd have to forge the connections among their and their friends' pages.
I think your click and type anywhere technology, which is very cool, could be applied to other fields as a feature, but I don't think it'd work best as a social network.
We're almost back full time on our web app and it was frustrationg trying to find our niche. It looks as though we are going to open up ClutterMe to external sites.
We're thinking two levels of service, the first being something along the lines of an iFrame and the second level is allowing users to create accounts from within their site.
If you want to be included in the conversation and/or want this software on your site, send us a ping, or just keep track of the blog for updates. (blog.clutterme.com)
Use a colored header and a footer. There are two important reasons to do this: 1) it keeps the non-editable content seperate from the editable content, which makes your site's function clearer. 2) it maintains the webpage metaphor that people have grown accustomed to. My reaction to your site for the first half-second was "wtf?", which I mainly attribute to the fact that the page design gave no indication of where I should look to understand it.
Use directional arrows instead of a paw for the "move" icon. The paw looks friendly, but it makes no sense ;)
Demonstrate the fonts in the drop-down font menu. Ditto for sizes.
Don't allow the "People on ClutterMe" section to load more than one person with the same photo.
Very cool, dude... I don't know much about the web design industry, etc., but maybe you can get multiple revenue streams going by using this technology for a variety of applications. Maybe Web-based photo annotation? Web-base architectural diagram creation? Just a thought... seemed like cool tech that could be used for a lot of different things.
Very simple, but really nice. It needs some work on usability and design though. If you get that rigth it's a winner. There are some great possibilities in sharing pages too.
while at PyCon I was talking to John Draper (Captain Crunch) and he brought up some idea (although I don't remember the specifics) that made me think of your site. I tried to remember the URL so I can show him your site but I couldn't remember it.