what you read says a lot about you…

Archive for the ‘Facebook’ tag

Facebook tricks

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If you use weRead on facebook, now you have more control over what you share about your weRead-ing!  When you are logged in to weRead, you’ll see the “Settings” tab next to your name on Facebook.  Click this, and weRead Settings will be on the drop-down.  You can ask to be prompted before we publish anything to your wall, or to have stories feed automatically, only when they are short, or never.

If you have chosen to be prompted, you will get pop-ups like this one when you add a book or change the status of an existing one:

Feed away!

Written by jennie

December 5th, 2008 at 3:02 am

Features, everywhere!

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We’ve been busy!  Here are some of the things we’ve been adding to the features available to you on weRead:

* Half star ratings - No longer bound by whole numbers, the half star is your solution for that book that is better than three, but not quite worth four stars.

* A new logo

* Facebook - we’ve introduced more options on facebook so you can post to your profile and set your feed options

* tags - Now you can categorize all the books in your bookself, making it easy to sort and find the books you want

*Discussion boards - both for authors and books, this has been live for a few weeks so you can engage in loads of debates and discussions throughout weRead.

* Authors corner - if you have claimed an author page, you can now add or remove books from your books written list, edit your pen name, photo and date of birth right from within your profile page.

Have fun using all these and more, send us your feedback, and look for even more features to arrive as we make weRead more social!

Written by jennie

December 4th, 2008 at 6:30 am

Take weRead with you

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You have built up your bookshelf on MySpace, or weRead.com, but now you want to access all your reads on Facebook, or vice versa.   With weRead’s Take Your Bookshelf with You feature, you can link up all your accounts and see any updates you make in one place reflected everywhere.  We have had this option available for a while, but just recently made it possible for you to send your reads to Facebook.

To access this feature, go to the “More” tab on weRead, and then click “Take your bookshelf with you.”  This takes you to a screen with the options for where you can send your bookshelf.

Once you select the destination site, you will be prompted to confirm your login and identity, and then you can start updating weRead wherever you want to use it!

Written by jennie

November 19th, 2008 at 3:20 am

weRead - what’s new?

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Ever since I blogged about iRead back in April, a lot has changed. We have introduced tons of new features, and there is really not one place where we have captured all of them.

So this is my attempt to describe the features to our readers.

  • iRead is now called weRead and we have partnered with Lulu
    This post from our official blog has more details.
  • We now have a destination site
    You don’t have to login to Facebook or some social network to access weRead. You can directly access your bookshelf from our destination site. If you have already used weRead in Facebook or one of the social networks, you can link your account and access the same account from the destination site.
  • Connections - find people like you
    This Facebook feature allows you to find people who have similar book tastes like you. You can look for people of a specific gender, people in your network and people in specific age groups.
  • We now have friend activities in the homepage
    We now show activities from your friends on weRead in the homepage. This helps you keep track of which books your friends have been reading, and if they have participated in any discussions.

    Activity of friends on weRead

  • Book discussion boards
    This is the place to discuss with your friends and network about your favorite books, what you liked, what you didn’t like, why someone should or shouldn’t read a book.
  • Author discussion boards
    If you want to discuss about a specific author, talk about what works of an author are good, or what you would expect his next book to be like, this is the place to do it. Check out the latest discussions here.

    AC Discussion Board

  • Author profile claim
    Are you an author? Then you should be on weRead. weRead makes it ultra simple for you to setup a profile and interact with your readers. Writing a new book? Want to know who might like it? Want to get suggestions from your readers? Want to promote your book on various social networks? Start here

    weRead for authors

  • New catalogs
    We now have catalogs from Amazon, Google and OCLC integrated into weRead. This means you have a whole range of books to choose from. More catalogs are coming soon.
  • weRead is now available in multiple languages
    weRead is now available in 6 different languages - English(US), English(UK), German, French, Spanish (on Hi5 only) and Portuguese (on Orkut only). We have more languages being added soon. Want weRead in a local language? Help us translate weRead here.
  • We now have limited previews of books from Harper Collins and Google Books and full preview of some books from Gutenburg
    This will give you some sort of a ‘bookstore experience’ by allowing you to preview books.
  • See how a book fares in your network
    Curious to know how a book has been rated by people in your network? We now give you near realtime statistics about a book - how people have rated the book in your network, how many people own the book, how many have marked it favorite etc.
    Find who has read a book in your network
  • Readers now have a profile page which displays their bookshelf
    Each weRead user gets his/her own personal page that they can then share with their friends, bookmark, etc. In order to set up your own profile page, link your account from Facebook to our destination site and click on the “Profile” link in the top blue bar. Check out my profile page here.
  • Readers can showcase their bookshelf in their blogs and other sites
    Want to advertise your bookshelf in your blog? It’s simple! Go to your profile page and then click on ‘Take weRead with you’, get the code and put it in your blog. You also have some customization that you can do before you get the code. Check out a demo here.
  • The Facebook Wall application allows you to post information about books, write reviews etc directly from the Facebook Wall.
    You can now chuck a book at your friends directly from the Facebook wall. Go to your Facebook profile page: http://www.facebook.com/profile.php. Under the Wall tab, you should see the Books iRead option. Clicking this opens a dialog that allows you to pick a book from your shelf or search for a book and chuck this at your friend.

    Facebook weRead Wall application

  • Similar authors
    Under every book detail page, we show similar authors that will help you discover authors who write books similar to the one that you are viewing.
  • Mis-spelt searches
    weRead now has builtin suggestions in case you make a misspell some work while typing your query.
  • See more like this
    We have launched some kind of a ‘Stumble upon’ feature. When you are viewing a book in weRead, you will see a button ‘See more like this’, clicking which, takes you to a random but related book.
  • External integration with OCLC
    We now power the OCLC related books and reviews.
  • We have also moved to bigger and more powerful servers, which means a better user experience for all our readers.

As you see, we have been busy! We have tons of new and exciting features lined up and we promise to provide feature updates as frequently as possible. A lot of these features revolve around making weRead a truly social application.

By the way, you can get some quick updates on weRead in our Twitter page.

Happy reading!

PS: Features and feature names are subject to change.

(cross posted from my blog)

Written by Gautham Pai

November 9th, 2008 at 1:33 am

iRead becomes weRead and teams up with Lulu.com

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It’s been one year since we launched iRead and what an amazing year it’s been – we have now over 2 million users and over 40 million books cataloged. Your feature requests and brutally honest feedback (we love your feedback) have helped make iRead the most vibrant social book community of its kind. Thank you!

In many of your feature requests (some of which are still pending), there is a common theme. You asked us to give you details about what your friends were reading, you chucked books by the thousands to tell your friends what to read, and you told us you care more about how your friends rate a book than how it was rated by other users. In other words, you asked us to make online book discovery the way it should be – SOCIAL.

In order to better deliver on your request we have made a few changes. First, to reflect the next exciting phase of iRead, we feel it’s only appropriate to change our name from iRead to weRead. To us, this was a natural progression from i to you to we, as “we” reflects the spirit of your ideas, suggestions and the true social nature of book discovery. It also helps us unify our identity across the internet.

Secondly, we have formed an alliance with Lulu.com, the world’s largest marketplace for self-published authors, to bring more independent authors to your bookshelf. Over next 8-12 weeks look for even more changes as we give weRead a fresh new design and add features that will make weRead the social book discovery tool you asked for.

We are excited about these changes and hope you are too. Thank you again for your continued support and ideas!

Written by Krishna

August 5th, 2008 at 9:55 am

What your friends are reading

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As so many of you have requested that you would like to see what your friends are reading on the home page of iRead (weRead). We had this feature in the first release of iRead but we had to pull this back because it was turning out to be an expensive call for our databases. Well that has been fixed as the engineers have designed a more scalable and fast solution for showing your friend activities. You will start to see many new social features in next 9 weeks.

Friend Activities on weRead (iRead)

Friend Activities on weRead (iRead)

So stay tuned…and as always let us know of any suggestions that you have.

Written by harish

August 4th, 2008 at 3:12 am

iRead - a social book discovery revolution

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It has been a while since I thought I should write a review of iRead.

iRead is a social book discovery application. It has been quite successful on Facebook and has a very large userbase. Currently iRead has a total install base of about 1.4 million users, mostly from Facebook.

So what do we mean by social book discovery?

iRead is not just about maintaining a bookshelf online. It tries to bring the social aspect into picture.

’social’?
iRead depends a lot on your social network. You can share your bookshelf with your friends, learn what your friends are reading and what their reading tastes are. You can discuss about books in various book clubs. You could participate in Quizzes or even add your own. You can find out how compatible your reading tastes are with other people in the network.

iRead does not require a separate registration. It is available right in your social network. (As of now the application is available in Facebook, Orkut, MySpace, Hi5 and Bebo.) So when we are talking about friends, we are talking about your friends from the network where you are using iRead. So if you use iRead in Facebook, you see your Facebook friends in iRead, while in Orkut you see your Orkut friends. Many a times, all it requires is to just add the application to your profile.

‘book discovery’?
For one, iRead provides recommendations based on your reading tastes. Then there are various other mechanisms by which you can discover new books to read.

Let’s explore some.

Several ways to browse

* You could first start off by searching for books and adding them to your bookshelf. This helps us learn about your tastes and recommend books that you may like.

* When searching, you could either enter the name of the book, or its author, or if you know the ISBN, you could enter that.

* If you want to just browse through the application you could start off by looking at what other iReaders are doing. The home page shows the most recent activity in the network.

News feeds on homepage

* So let’s say you find some interesting book. Just click on the book and you are taken to the book details. Here you get to know how many readers the book has, how many reviews people have written for the book and get some instant user reviews and an editorial review. You can also find out similar other books.

Book details for Da Vinci Code

* If you see that the book is interesting, just click on the ‘See All’ reviews link. This will display all the reviews for the book. Read the ones you like and you will soon learn what the book is about.

Book review page for GEB

* Since there are multiple ways to reach your data, your reviews are never buried. So even if you are writing a review for a book, that already has a thousand reviews, you can expect your review to be read by other iReaders.

* If the book interests you, you might want to check out other books by the same author. Just click on the author’s name. This will show all books by the author. You could also click on the small icon next to the author’s name to search for the author in Author’s corner. This will give you other details like the profile of the author, what others think about the author, how many fans the author has etc.

Authors corner

* Author’s corner is a forum for readers to interact with their favorite authors. So if you are the author of a book and are looking for a forum to interact with your readers, this is where you should be. Author’s corner allows authors to maintain their profile, and also learn about their readers’ expectations.

* While reading reviews, you might find that the review from a particular user is very interesting. You might now want to look at this reader’s bookshelf. Many a times, I have found this to be a good mechanism to discover new books. You can get an assurance of how close your tastes are by looking at the number of common books amongst you. Ok, now you might want to look at other reviews by this reader.

* You could also contact the reader by leaving a wall post/scrap.

* You may also want to check out who among your friends is on iRead and what they are reading. Click on the Friends link in the header. If you want to know about your friends’ reading tastes and they are not yet on iRead you could invite them to add the application.

Friends reads on iRead

* For selected books, you could even browse inside the book. A lot of out of copyright books are available for free online viewing. Some other selected books are available for limited preview.

Other features worthy of mention

Take your reads with you

The top header on iRead
So what if you are in all these networks and want to use iRead everywhere?
iRead has a feature to import your bookshelf from Facebook to Orkut, MySpace and/or Hi5. Once imported, you will see the same bookshelf in all the networks. However the friends shown to you depends on the network you are currently in.

Import books from other sources

Import books from other sources
If you have been maintaining books in some other place, you may want to try importing books using the import books option. The link to this is found below the search box.

Add a book

Can’t find a book you want to add to your bookshelf? You can add it to our catalog. The link to add a book is found below the search box.

So what’s more?!

Happy iReading!

(cross posted from my blog)

Written by Gautham Pai

April 19th, 2008 at 5:10 am

Down the memory lane - our first viral Facebook app

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This one’s been long overdue, but better late than never I guess. So here goes: an account of one of the most exciting moments any engineer, for that matter anyone, at a startup looks forward to: You build, They come. And boy! did they come. Thousands each hour, about 200,000 in a span of 24 hours, trampling on each other (virtually of course!), jamming our servers, and complaining every time something didn’t work. Within 24 hours, we not only beefed up our systems, we went on to delight our customers and pave the way to add nearly 2 million users in the months that followed. This is the story of how we handled the unprecedented (at Ugenie) surge in traffic we got soon after we launched Harry Potter Magic Spells on the Facebook Platform in July. Here we go…

After looking at the traffic stats the previous night, we knew we had our first real viral app on Facebook. We had to scale to make sure that we could handle all the traffic and a million users - “a nice problem to have” as some people like to say at Ugenie. Being in India meant that peak-traffic hours coincided with deep-sleep hours for our engineers. But on the brighter side, it meant that we had a full working day to get our act right and be ready to face the action the next day.

By then, we had started using Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud 2 (EC2). Back then, EC2 didn’t have support for large and extra large instances. So each instance was roughly equivalent to less then half of a production server we were using otherwise (in terms of computing power). Even though this meant we needed more instances, the ease of launching a new instance is one of the great things about EC2 (more about EC2 in a later post). But EC2 doesn’t have support for hardware load balancers / VIPs. So we had to look for a software load balancer that would be simple to use and configure. Having evaluated more heavy weight solutions before, when we stumbled upon Pound, we knew we had the right tool for the job.

It is very straight forward to configure Pound to load balance between various apache servers. We decided to go with Pound fronting two apache instances, each on a separate EC2 instance. One more instance also hosted our mysql server. Pound doesn’t support assigning weights (or we haven’t figured it) yet - it has to be round-robin - and that is one feature we missed. So we couldn’t assign a slightly lower weight to the apache which shared it’s EC2 instance with Pound - not great, but workable.

The next step was to ensure that our DB had the right parameters and indexes. A few indexes and explains later, the queries started looking decent. But the best way to improve your DB performance is to not hit it at all. The easiest way to do that in PHP is to use the APC cache.(One gotcha to be aware about APC: it doesn’t handle the case where the size of the value being stored changes. If you think the size of the value you are storing changes across calls, simple delete and store again).

All this gave us a nice feeling, but we weren’t feeling warm fuzzy yet! We wanted to do be certain that we could take the load. A back-of-the-envelope calculation gave a ballpark figure for how many requests per second (peak and average) we had to handle. We ran the previous week’s logs against a few perl scripts to get into the right format, and used that to load test our system using http_load. Knowing that our system could handle the requests put us in a comfort zone.

Much as expected, we got traffic - tonnes of it. Much unexpected, we got no alerts from nagios at all - none of it. What a day!

We went on to launch several other viral applications: Pillow Fight etc with a combined user base of over 3 million but we will always fondly remember our first viral app!

Written by admin

November 6th, 2007 at 6:05 am

Break out the champagne! iRead (Now weRead) now has more than 10 million books on its shelves

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Last week we launched the countdown to 10 millionth book on our users’ bookshelves. We hit that milestone on the morning of October 29th. As promised, we raffled off 10 $100 gift certificates from Barnes & Noble and announced the names of the winners. You can view the list of the lucky winners and congratulate them here.

Written by Krishna

October 31st, 2007 at 4:53 am

10 Million Books on iRead (Now weRead). We are celebrating.

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iReaders‘ bookshelves will soon have more than 10 million books! When we started, about four months ago, we had no idea that we will reach the 10 million books milestone so soon. We are thrilled and we want to thank you for making iRead the most vibrant book community! To celebrate, we are giving away 10 $100 gift certificates.

So how does this work?

When we reach the 10 millionth book, we will pick 10 lucky iReaders among the ones who have 10 or more books on their shelf and 10 or more friends on iRead. The lucky iReaders will get $100 Barnes and Noble.com gift certificate to buy more books! See below for more details.

Eligibility

  • Be a facebook user and have iRead installed on your profile.
  • Don’t be lazy. Add books to your profile. You should add atleast 10 books to your iRead shelf.
  • Don’t be alone. You should have at least 10 friends on iRead. iRead is more fun with friends!
  • Start adding books now so that we can reach the 10 millionth book sooner.

Promotion

  • 10 lucky iReaders (a raffle among eligible winners) will win $100 Barnes and Noble.com gift certificates.

How to Enter

  • Any Facebook/iRead user who has atleast 10 books on their shelf and 10 Friends on iRead at the time when we hit 10M book adds will automatically be entered into the promotion.
  • When we get the 10 millionth book added, we will do a raffle among all eligible iReaders to select 10 winners.

Notification

  • We will notify the winner via the send message feature on Facebook.

Other Fine Print

  • Barnes and Noble.com gift certificate fine print applies. Click here to see the terms and conditions.
  • iRead terms and conditions

    This promotion is valid starting October 17, 2007 and will continue until iRead get 10 million book additions. iRead will issue electronic $100 gift certificates for Barnesandnoble.com to the 10 qualified promotion registrants. To qualify, you must follow the promotion rules. iRead will issue the gift certificates within 30 days of the end of the promotion. If you are one of the first 10 qualified entrants, you will receive a facebook email from iRead with details on how to redeem the gift certificates. iRead reserves the right to cancel this promotion at any time, and to cancel issuance of the gift to certain individuals due to suspected fraud. If you have any questions, please contact ireadsupport@socialwizards.com.

Written by Krishna

October 24th, 2007 at 3:38 am