I like G+ and I cannot lie! You other bloggers can’t deny. When a social network shows up with an itty-bitty user base and some circles in your face you get sprung…from Facebook.
Oh my god, Becky. The hype about G+ is so big. Everyone’s all like ‘It’s the Facebook killer! No wait, it’s the Twitter killer! It’s super cool! No wait, it’s lame and it’s going to fail.’ Wrong! G+ is the best blog aggregator you aren’t using. Let’s rewind, shall we, to early July. Once the initial euphoria of having scored a G+ invite wore off, I realized my Stream was not unlike the crowd at Spinal Tap’s Jazz Odyssey concert. After a few days of little to no new content, I did something I’d never done before: I circled a stranger.
Part of the fun of G+ is seeing what all these experts have to say about the state of tech and social networking, it’s even more interesting to see them debate among themselves as they try to figure out where social media is moving and why. There’s Tom from Myspace offering up some first-hand insight on the social media wars. There’s Robert Scoble getting into G+ beefs with Kevin Rose from Digg.com. There’s Vic Gundotra from Google keeping us up-to-date on what’s going on with our favorite Google products. There’s Gina Trapani founding editor of Lifehacker.com sharing her personal development projects.
Think it doesn’t feel like a blog? Think again, people. Days after G+ launched Kevin Rose abandoned his blog and directed it to his G+ page. And as of today, you can now crosspost from G+ to your WordPress blog. It may not be there yet, but I’m calling it now. This is where G+ is heading.
And while we’re on the subject about the future of G+, let’s talk about what happened this weekend. The Dalai Lama and the Archbishop Desmond Tutu held an On-Air Hangout. Mull that one over for a minute. Two renowned spiritual leaders, both over the age of 75, joined G+ so they could broadcast a conversation and anyone on G+ could watch (provided you were awake at 4am eastern). Just a tad more interesting than say a hangout with Will.i.am.

Photo credit: Tibet Today
So why this weekend? Why G+? Here’s the story: It’s Desmond Tutu’s 80th birthday, of course his BFF the Dalai Lama is invited and of course he’s going. But South Africa is afraid if they let the Dalai Lama come over for the birthday party China is going to get mad, so there’s no visa for the Dalai Lama. G+ to the rescue! All of a sudden anyone on G+ can watch these two amazing people talk live. Kind of amazing what social networking is doing these days, eh?
G+ is still ridiculously young, so trying to figure out what it is or isn’t going to be is like asking a room full of three year olds what career they’re going to have when they’re 40 (paleontologist!). It’s fun to speculate, but not something you’d exactly put money on. In a lot of ways, even Facebook doesn’t know it’s going to be yet (remember Facebook email?) and it’s more grown up than just about any other social network. Everyone is still trying to figure out where all of the different social networking options fit into the digital space and how all of this fits into our personal and professional lives. And if “everyone” includes the Dalai Lama and Desmond Tutu along with the likes of Snoop Dogg and Tom from Myspace, well that’s just fine by me.

















