And you're solving that problem (a few sentences later) with "Every time you post to the group, she'll receive the full content as an email. She can reply directly to your email and everyone in the group gets her update."
How exactly does that solve any inbox-clutter problems whatsoever? If anything, it seems like it'd create even more inbox clutter. Am I missing something here? Sending more emails results in less clutter?
I had this exact problem twice in the last month, and both times, I found that everyone in the two real-world groups I was trying to bring online was already on Facebook. Literally every single person out of maybe 50 people total, spanning age ranges from teenagers to folks in their late 50s. I found it much easier to get them to use it than it would have been if I had to explain this new posterous thing.
Posterous Groups makes email the core of the product. You can do everything via email including creating a group and replying with rich media attachments. There aren't any restrictions on what you can post.
Facebook Groups doesn't work well as a mobile experience. It's important for me to be able to post and consume content from my iphone. This works well in email and using the Posterous iPhone app.
While Facebook does have a large user base, there will always be people who aren't on the service or don't sign in to it regularly. We're firm believers that email is the best way to reach people.
We've made it seamless to get non Posterous users to understand how a group works and how they should participate. Give it a shot and please send feedback our way.
Thanks!
We got a volunteer who said she'd help moderate, but then all she wanted to do was post links on Facebook that pointed to WC stories. I explained to her that we were looking for her to help edit stories, post cool stuff, and participate in discussions and she kept asking if we could just move it all over to our Facebook page. I tried a few times to explain why that was counterproductive but she kept giving me blank looks. I asked her what web sites she visits, and she said, Facebook, Amazon, and Apple. That's it. Turns out, she doesn't even visit political blogs, she just visits their Facebook pages and talks about their content there. Unreal.
She's still posting her Facebook links, but the idea of her hanging out anywhere outside her "big 3" is just anathema to her. She's got X bandwidth for web sites, and it's all being consumed.
I think Facebook definitely has the stronghold with familiarity, though. I'd expect their groups features to expand dramatically in 2011.
I'm not sure about the media thing, though it's not really practical for video to attach the media...surely posterous doesn't do that either.
This is a privacy leak. You should remove references to these remote resources when displaying a message in the posterous web interface. You should then provide an option to "Load Remote Images". Much like most email clients do.
http://r.posterous.com/track/?redirect=http%3A%2F%2Fgoogle.c...
This will be abused by spammers...
Not good...
That said, I agree. I think it's great that they're taking some time to see how their product evolves, especially when they seem to sincerely want to "change the game." One thing YC companies seem to do well is that they have the patience to take the time to explore those markets alongside their users, instead of dragging them into a business plan that detracts from how users want to use the product in their daily lives.
EDIT: Whoops, this answers part of the question, from their FAQ: Yes, Posterous is enthusiastically a free service. Later, we'll be adding premium features we know you'll love, but there will always be a useful free version you can use.
This model of running groups has minimal friction in maintaining records of team discussions (as opposed to setting up internal mailing lists) that will get archived in a central place instead of valuable discussion info hidden away in individual end-user inboxes.
- Can groups be members of other groups?
- In gmail when I click "reply" to a mail sent to the group, it just goes back to the sender (there is a "Reply To" visible in the mail, but gmail isn't using it for some reason).
Otherwise, neat stuff. Not everybody in my family is on Facebook, and others in the family are leery of using FB because of privacy issues (unintentional information sharing between friend circles).
2. It should go to a custom email address and will function as a reply to the post. The sender's name is the author of post or reply in that notification.
The service is fully functional as an email list, but better since it handles rich media well.