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Welcome to PlurkPlurk

Plurk united and brought together people who would not have otherwise met.

June 10, 2010

On June 16, 2008, I joined Plurk. I had been hearing about it for a few days from some friends, and finally caved in and joined.

Almost two months later, I was one of a group of nine friends. We were friends from different parts of the country. Plurk united and brought together people who would not have otherwise met.

Well, almost two years has passed since then. Our original group became very close…then everyone eventually went on their own way.

I am now the proud member of a group of probably thirty friends. I don’t know what I would do without these people. These people, this website…it has completely changed my life. I’m not the same person now that I was two years ago.

Now, I have better friends than I have ever had in my life. I am dating a beautiful girl. I have gotten two of my friends together who would not have otherwise met.

I don’t know where I would be without Plurk. Thank you, creators of Plurk, so much. I can’t express how grateful I am.

Written by Taylor, 15, from Chino Hills, CA, United States. http://www.plurk.com/iPodjunkie

Posted by alvin

Plurk, the thoughts of a veteran Plurker

June 8, 2010

This is my first blog meant for a Plurk or at least potential Plurker audience. What can I say about my first year and now officially over a half years of being a loyal Plurker myself? Well only that it has been the best parts of my day, every day each time I connect.

This has been the place where I’ve met a variety of people with a multitude of interests; from writing to designing jewellery, computer programming and video shooting. I dare say this has been one character building experience I’d recommend to the world.

Plurk for me is unique in the respect it doesn’t just accommodate the needs of those who don’t speak English, French, Spanish or even mandarin. It encourages the all to join and mingle if they want! Not Facebook, Twitter nor My Yearbook offer such a feat, despite being worldwide.

I am also surprised Plurk has shown no evidence of seeking out celebrity endorsement or even trying to fleece one person out of a penny, which I’m eternally thankful for as I don’t have a penny to my own name.

So perhaps Plurk is the solution to everyone’s problems? No, though as a site where a mélange of cultures collide, peace is well maintained. My own best friend lives half way across the world and is Mexican, something I never envisioned as a child, though have no regrets about now.

I ask myself daily what I would do without Plurk, and my answer every time? Read a book, lie on my bed, everything that suggests my total boredom and search for friendship in the vast world I’d have not fathomed without the genius which is Plurk.

I suppose on a philosophical level, Plurk is its own world, or even a heaven to some, with its own Gods protecting the system, and users. And everyone whether they be white, green, blue, purple, brown, black, have one eye or three, whether they be a sadist or Hindu, catholic or Muslim, in Plurk those differences are shed from us all and we become only a Plurker.

Now, I don’t know about you, but if I were reading this and were not a member of Plurk, I would be signing up before I finished this article. Plurk has provided for me a family or friends; where else can you find that?

Finally I just want to thank Plurk and you all for being there for me, I’ll see you all soon.

Written by Joseph, 17,  from UK. http://www.plurk.com/LeFox

Posted by alvin

Blog needs love

June 4, 2010

To all Plurk users,

We have a confession to make – we need help in maintaining our blog. To be precise, we need your help.

Over the past year, we probably published like what, 4 blog posts? As a small team of 6, there just isn’t enough time. Our motivation, time and resources are spent on mundane tasks such as improving Plurk, fixing bugs, introducing new features, sobbing over angry users emails and taking out the trash. Of course, some of you have written to us before complaining about the lack of updates on our blog and that we need to do more in promoting Plurk and keep the media buzz going. I fully agree. I know how bad it reflects on us, as a community, as a company and as a product, when people find out about Plurk, go to Plurk.com, check out our blog and find that the last time it was updated was 6 months ago. Is this company even alive? We are and we are growing at a tremendous pace and we need to let people know how awesome this community is. We can do better.

So why don’t you write for us? Anything related to Plurk is welcomed. Your stories, constructive criticism, suggestions, meet ups, funny plurks, what Plurk has done to you, what you have done for Plurk (I always wanted to hear some feedback from our beloved translators) and etc. You can write whatever you want – surprise us. You probably have already written something similar on your own blog. You can cross-post it to blog.plurk.com. We will be more than happy to drive some traffic your way with disclaimer and link-backs. We can also give you access to our WordPress blog as an author. Of course, not all submissions will be published. And if we do get a lot of contributions, we will spread them out just so we have enough content to publish for the next 5 months. So please don’t worry if you don’t see your writing on our blog as soon as you submitted it.

If you are interested, you can write to us here. You can cut and paste your entire article or give us a link to your writing. Either way works. We will notify you when we publish it.

You can also write in your own native language(s). It might take us some time to google translate and review it so please be patience.

Oh and all published contributors will be given a happy, pinky microphon-ish badge as a token of our overdosing love-appreciation – tada!

Beside from the occasional official announcements, we hope this blog will be largely maintained and written by you from now on.

Thank you in advance. Please take care of our blog.

Alvin,
co-founder, Plurk.com

Posted by alvin

Happy 2nd birthday, Plurk.

June 2, 2010

Plurk officially came out of beta on Sunday 1st June 2008. This is probably why there is a candle next to your Plurk animal on your timeline at the moment.

Brief introduction: For those of you who don’t know me, I’m Rammi, a simple Plurk user who was technically meant to be keeping the blog updated. As you can see, I kind of failed at that. Sorry for the blog silence, guys.
I have been asked to share my “Plurk story,” or rather, my experiences of being a Plurk member.

As a user who only joined the website on the 8th of June 2008, I wasn’t actually around for Plurk’s ‘birth’, as it were. At the time, I was still on Twitter, posting angsty teenage thoughts and wondering what this whole social networking shebang was all about. Then, suddenly, there it was. The name. PLURK. Every single person I followed seemed to be talking about it. It was heralded as a competitor to Twitter, a brand new way of communicating, a replacement to life as we knew it, etc. It depended on which tech blog you read (I might also be slightly exaggerating on the last point). It sounded AMAZING. I initially had reservations, but since all my friends at the time were joining, I thought it couldn’t hurt.

I was soon addicted. It was less cluttered than other websites I’d used. I found it easy to connect with people and have random conversations. The karma system had me hooked, and I would have done anything to be able to use a little dancing banana in my plurks.

Two years on, Plurk still is the best website I ever made the decision to join, and I’m not just saying that because I’m writing this here. Sure, I still use other social networking sites, but Plurk’s still the first place I go to when given the option.

I’ve learnt so much from Plurk. Plurkers give me help and advice when I have issues, send me weird and wonderful links that make me laugh and cry at the same time, and, most importantly, have let me befriend them. I’ve developed relationships on here that I know will last a lifetime. In the last two years, I’ve also been given my own (rammi) emoticon and have access to this lovely blog.
Unlike many other websites online, I actually feel like I’m valued and part of a community here.

Happy birthday, Plurk. Here’s to many more.

 

Do you have a better (less cheesy-sounding) Plurk story that wasn’t written by a half-asleep person at 3AM? Shoot me an email at glomprammi@glomp.me.

Posted by Rammi

Plurk’s official response to Microsoft’s apology

December 17, 2009

Translations of this blog post:
- Bahasa Indonesia
- 日本語

We are currently looking at all possibilities on how to move forward in response to Microsoft’s recent apology statement. We are still thinking of pursuing the full extent of our legal options available due the seriousness of the situation. Basically, Microsoft accepts responsibility, but they do not offer accountability.

Plurk is a very young startup with a founding history of about 2 years. We are a very, very small and tech-centric company. We don’t have a marketing department, we don’t have a sales department. Even I, as a co-founder of Plurk, have to write this press release myself. We spend most of our time producing and perfecting our own product. Countless iterations, human efforts and almost all capital resources are spent to provide a unique and rich social networking environment for our users. We write our own code and give back to the community when it is appropriate (e.g. opensource.plurk.com). We play the fair game hoping that, like many young entrepreneurs out there, to be able to someday help solves other people’s problems and grow our little company.

This event wasn’t just a simple matter of merely lifting code; Due to the nature of the uniqueness of our product and user interface, it took a good amount of deliberate studying and digging through our code with the full intention of replicating our product user experience, functionality and end results. This product was later launched and heavily promoted by Microsoft with its big marketing budget.

Sincerely,
Alvin Woon and on behalf of Amir, Kan, Janet, Ryan and Gleb

Press contact: Dave Thompson (dave@plurk.com), Plurk Asia Pacific Press Contact, +64 9 889 0610.

Posted by alvin

Microsoft China rips off Asia’s No. 1 Microblogging Service

December 14, 2009

Imitation may be the sincerest form of flattery, but blatant theft of code, design, and UI elements is just not cool, especially when the infringing party is the biggest software company in the world. Yes, we’re talking about Microsoft. Blerg.

Here’s the short of what we think has happened:

  • Microsoft China officially launched its own microblogging service, MSN Juku/Hompy/Mclub, some time in November, 2009.
  • The service’s design and UI is by and large an EXACT copy of Plurk’s innovative left-right timeline scrolling navigation system. (see screen captures below)
  • Some 80% of the client and product codebase appears to be stolen directly from Plurk! (see evidence below).
  • Plurk was never approached nor collaborated in any capacity with MS on this service.
  • As a young startup, we’re stunned, shocked, and unsure what to do next and need your support and suggestions.

We were first tipped off by high profile bloggers and Taiwanese users of our community that Microsoft had just launched a new Chinese microblogging service that looked eerily similar to Plurk. Needless to say we were absolutely shocked and outraged when we first saw with our own eyes the cosmetic similarities Microsoft’s new offering had with Plurk. From the filter tabs, emoticons, qualifier/verb placement, Karma scoring system, media support, new user walkthroughs to pretty much everything else that gives Plurk its trademark appeal, Microsoft China’s offering ripped off our service. See for yourself: (Microsoft MClub on top, Plurk on bottom).

Design theft, MS at the top, Plurk at the bottom

A little overly inspired, wouldn’t you agree? Of course, we understand others will always be motivated to emulate and take bits and pieces of visual and functional elements from widely successful services and carve out localized versions. Plurk was already Taiwan’s biggest microblogging service, 10x bigger than Twitter in that market alone, and emerging as Asia’s answer to Twitter in many of the biggest countries in East Asian, so naturally Microsoft probably saw some potential in piggybacking off the success of our unique service and launching something similar in a related market like China. Ultimately if something works, others will copy it and try to adapt it to another market, be it another vertical or another locale. It’s the nature of the web. And for the most part, we don’t get bothered by clones. Of course, there will always be exceptional circumstances where we feel wholly wronged, both legally and more important, morally, and this one just happens to be one of those rare cases. That it is Microsoft doing the copying in broad daylight makes it even more incredulous.

Let me explain. If this was just a case of visual inspiration gone too far, we could probably have lived with it. We would have taken the time to reach out to Microsoft, get colour on the matter and try to amicably resolve it. That’s not the case here. This is something far more sinister. On closer inspection, we found that MUCH of the codebase and data structures that Microsoft’s MClub uses are identical snapshots of our code. Microsoft has taken Plurk’s custom developed libraries, css files and client code and just ported them directly over to their service without any attempt to even mask this! Here are just 3 small examples of literally hundreds we have found. Any developer will be able to see that this is basically copied and stolen code.

Code theft, part 1

Code theft, part 2

Some users in the blogosphere even speculated that Microsoft Mclub/Juku was some sort of official partnership we’d struck with Microsoft to clear a re-entry into China after our earlier censorship in the region behind the Great Firewall of China, prior to which we were the #1 microblogging service in the country. Let’s clear the air around this. While many reputable internet companies have forged solid partnerships with Plurk, valuing our innovation and market leadership in Asia, Microsoft was absolutely not one of them. We were never contacted by any party at MS to collaborate on such a venture nor did we give any prior written or verbal permission to anyone on their side to take our code, take our CSS, and copy the essence and ethos of our service.

We’re still in shock asking why Microsoft would even stoop to this level of wilfully plagiarising a young and innovative upstart’s work rather than reach out to us or innovate on their own terms. Of course, it just hits that much closer to home when all your years of hard work and effort to create something unique are stolen so brazenly. All the more ironic considering Microsoft has often been leading the charge on fighting for stronger IP laws and combating software piracy in China.

So what next? We’re not entirely sure but we are exploring our options. We have been seeking advice from respected colleagues, responding to press inquiries and gathering facts on the timeline of events and parties involved here to understand why and how this took place.

To our millions of loyal users: We also need your sincere help. We need your loud and emphatic voices. We need you to help us get out this important story to anyone and everyone you know who can raise awareness on what has taken place. Please translate this story into your respective languages, share it with local media, bloggers and friends, and help us fight the good fight for your beloved Plurk.

Press contact: Dave Thompson (dave@plurk.com), Plurk Asia Pacific Press Contact, +64 9 889 0610

Posted by amix

Plurk API service

December 4, 2009

For the past couple of months, we have been privately testing our brand new API platform with selected partners with the goal of bringing it to the public someday. After months of bugs fixing, we are happy to say “Today is the day!”.

As Plurk grows, the demand for different set of tools, applications or features to complement our product has also increased. While some of those requests are later added into our social platform, we fully aware it would be impossible for us to implement everything by ourselves. Our users love Plurk passionately and we love them back just as much. So if someone’s mom wants to read her Plurks from her kitchen microwave, she should be able to (provided someone else already wrote such application using our API).

Without further ado, the full documentation of the API is available at: http://www.plurk.com/API. Simple ‘Hello World’ examples for various programming languages are also available on that page. If you are already a Plurk user, you can go ahead and generate a key and start coding.

We are excited with how this new project is going to enhance your plurking experience and looking forward to see how the community evolves and improves Plurk ecosystem with it. Surprise us!

Posted by alvin

Daily Photo

November 7, 2009

The Daily Photo feature allows you to take photos directly from your webcam and upload them straight to Plurk.

Daily Photo

After the picture has been uploaded, you will then be able to plurk it as you wish.

User examples

Plurk users have been using this feature to document many things, including bird attacks and stick figure violence…
heatherjayne xkcd

Pets and toys…
Looi AZJazzyJ

General shenanigans…
Shailee Rammi Farho joshlawrence xoes Telperion b_c normalflu

And even pictures of your latest fans on Plurk!
Pshaw nethead

Other photo options

If Daily Photo feature isn’t for you, you can still upload photos to Plurk via the qualifier as usual.

Posted by Rammi

Yummy new features!

August 1, 2009

In the last two months, many things have been a-happening in Plurkland! Here is a short summary of the new stuff that has been added in the last couple of weeks…

Plurk poem

New Plurk user winterchild has written a poem about Plurk (who else?). Read the wonderful little ditty here!

Timeline improvements

In late June, we also optimized the viewing experience of Plurk for people with smaller screens (i.e. 1024×768), by making the timeline height variable. The timeline should now shrink if the window size is less than 500, hopefully making it easier for you to view your plurks.

Mark All As Read confirmation

Recently, we also added a confirmation button to the Mark All As Read option. The confirmation button only appears if you have more than 50+ unread plurks, or have unread private, own, or responded plurks, and should help to eliminate the problem of MAARing accidentally.

Music sharing

It is now possible to play and find music on Plurk via YouTube.

Step 1: Select the YouTube option from the “shares” qualifier.

Step 2: Find your video/music using the onsite YouTube search.

Step 3: When you add it, others will be able to play the audio in a player (located at the bottom right of your timeline).

We hope you have enjoyed the new features, but there’s still a lot more to come. Expect some big developments in the upcoming months…

Until then, team on!


Posted by Rammi

Improvements to mobile Plurk (and a new emoticon)

June 7, 2009

The A-Team has been working hard these past few days to try and improve your experience of mobile Plurk. We’ve added several new features that should help make it easier for you to plurk on the go.

It is now possible to mute/unmute plurks, mark all plurks as read, and delete plurks… Straight from your mobile!
Unread plurks are now displayed in chronological order (newest first), and the input boxes no longer allow you to type more than 140 characters. Unread responses have also been fixed, and are indicated in bold.

Mute/unmute

Mute

unmute

Mark all as read

Mark all as read

Deleting plurks

Deleting plurks

Mobile Plurk can be accessed from plurk.com/m.

New emoticon:

We here at Plurk are committed to giving rewards to our most active users. Plurkers with 100 karma can now take advantage of a new exclusive emoticon. Typing “(taser)” or “(rammi)” will result in , as shown in Taser plurk

Happy tasering plurking!

Posted by Rammi
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