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Stereogrammes, Cross Eye 3D, Illusions, 3D Illusions, Optical Illusions, Magic Eye
http://stereogrammes.org/
http://www.iamlittle.net/?p=89
Happen to catch how they make $? I disabled ABP but saw no ads.
Just curious.
Thx.
--Dean
Pete's analysis is (hopefully) a bit off based on a couple incorrect assumptions made.
The project is hardly doomed to failure. From a financial standpoint, we don't have a team of engineers to support, as does Amazon. We're a very scrappy startup.
Secondly, Unspun was designed first and foremost to push products. That is a completely different goal. There may or may not be a role for user-generated list sites out there, but that comparison doesn't stick. Our approach is quite different from Unspun. Users build out their own lists, and debate, rather than just rating up/down and adding to a list-pool. Your unique version of a list is viewable and sharable. That said, we'll try to evolve if it doesn't work out.
Thanks for a coverage and feedback!
Tyler
Good luck to they guys who own it - it looks a fun idea, and just like my own site its ethos is in adding fun to being online rather than trying to be cool.
excerpt from Adam's article posted and deleted today:
"Mashable’s Take
We like lists at Mashable, and usually publish at least 1 or 2 every day, ranging from 100+ More Ways to Organize Your Life to The Top 10 Video Apps for iPhone. While these posts often spur a lot of discussion and debate in the comments about the merits of the selections, the list itself doesn’t change after we publish it. Demolistic is a service that focuses solely on letting users create lists, and then provides an interface where other people can debate the merits of each item on it. Additionally, other users can take a stab at any list – for example “Best Ice Cream Flavor†– and Demolistic will publish a “consensus†list, which is an aggregate of how the different flavors place on all the lists that have been created for the topic. Taking it a step further, you can also comment individually on every single item on every list.
While this is a smart play on wisdom of the crowds and a popular concept, the crowd itself hasn’t found Demolistic yet. The service depends on having a large user base to be fun and useful, and is a perfect example of the type of service that should integrate with Facebook Connect or MySpaceID to spur registrations and viral growth. "
Thanks to Paul J for giving us an honourable mention over here at Snagsta. We're a recommendation site that uses lists of your favourites to help you find things you'll like.
We just launched in private beta so if you'd like a test drive please sign up as a beta tester from our homepage: http://snagsta.com. Any and all feedback about our site will be greatly appreciated.
The main problem is, I think, that nobody gets up in the morning wanting to make "lists." Lists aren't an *interest*, they're a *genre* of interest.
People do make lists, but it happens in some definite interest-based social context. (People make tons of lists on my site, LibraryThing, but they're about books, and even there it's not general lists, but lists taking place within an interest group.) I could see a big list site growing out of a niche site--a site devoted to sci-fi might have a list section that grows into something bigger as the sci-fi people get comfortable with each other and want to know what the best fantasy novels are. Or maybe a list site could start by externalizing their technology, so you could add list-making functionality to your blog or niche site easily.
But a stand-alone site devoted to lists... I just don't see it working.