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February 9, 2013 02:46 am GMT

Shortwave Aims To Spur Video Conversations By Launching A Reddit-Style iPhone App

shortwave screenshotI’ve seen some unsuccessful attempts to build tools for video comments and discussions (includingan earlier version of Seesmic), so I was a little skeptical when I first heard about a startup called Shortwave. But then co-founder Aditya Avadhanula showed me the team’s new iPhone app, and I have to admit that I’m impressed. The idea, Avadhanula said, is to facilitate conversations, not the sharing of specific moments, which makes Shortwave different from a lot of the current wave of social video apps. Those conversations can be public or private. On the public side, Avadhanula said, “Imagine if Reddit had video responses only” there’s a section in the app where you can start a conversation around any topic, users can respond, and other users then vote to either “float” or “sink” each video, with the most popular videos rising to the top. You can browse the app by looking at the newest or most popular content, or by following different users. And you can share any public video via Facebook, Twitter, or email the content will be viewable either in the app or on the web. What I particularly liked was the work that Avadhanula and his co-founder Sean Chen have put into the thread-browsing experience. When you’re reading a website like Reddit, you can mentally skip over the stuff that bores you, and Shortwave tries to replicate that experience with video by letting you skip the rest of a video as soon as you get bored you just swipe across to view the next video. You can also bring up a diagram of the thread that lets you jump to any point in the discussion that interests you. Here’s a video demo of the app. The sound is a little rough (and it doesn’t start until a few seconds in), but it should give a sense of what the actual interface is like. I also liked the range of content that’s already in the app (Shortwave has been testing with a limited group of users, mostly students at Stanford and Cornell). There are users, like a beekeper, hosting “Ask Me Anything”-style threads. Avadhanula also showed me a thread where an amateur singer was taking song requests from all comers. Now you could theoretically have some kinds of interactions in other video sites and services, but again, Shortwave has an interface that feels natural for these types of

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