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BlockChalk is the voice of your neighborhood. Use your mobile phone to leave messages on your block, your street, at the coffee shop, or anywhere you happen to be. Respond privately or publicly to messages from people in your neighborhood.

Visit BlockChalk on your iPhone, Palm Pre or Android phone.



12/11/2009 10:56:16

Behold our shiny new mobile web app

We’ve just launched a completely redesigned mobile experience for BlockChalk. Just visit http://blockchalk.com with the browser on your iPhone or Android phone to witness the new hotness. Through the magic of HTML5 we deliver the full BlockChalk experience entirely inside the browser and with nothing to download or install. This includes:

  • Using GPS to post messages anywhere in the world and see what people are saying near you
  • Setting your “home neighborhood” and interacting with your neighbors, even when you’re not there
  • Using the new “Replies” tab to track when people reply to you, so you can keep the conversation going no matter where you are

Because web-based applications are so much faster to develop and deploy, it’s always been the plan to use ours as a “proving ground” for new features and designs that will eventually make their way into our native applications. That’s how BlockChalk originally started, and that’s how we plan to keep rocking it.

You can expect to see similar looks and functionality in our upcoming iPhone app (which we expect to be available soon) and the already-available Palm Pre app, with native apps to follow for other major smartphone platforms. Check out the new web app and start chalking up your block!





12/02/2009 10:02:00

The Reviews Are In…

BlockChalk has been in the Palm App Store for over a week now and the chalk keeps appearing in cities all over the world. The app is lucky to have some great reviews from the people that matter the most: the folks actually using it in their neighborhood.

The app has received some great praise and lots of helpful suggestions for future releases. It’s currently rated between 4 and 5 stars in the store. Thanks to all the BlockChalkers for letting us know what you think! Keep the feedback coming and keep chalkin’ up your block!

The Palm App Store isn’t currently accessible from a desktop or laptop. You have to have a Palm device to check it out (we hear this is changing shortly). In the meantime, we collected a few of the reviews and included them below.

PS - Thanks to the rock stars at Palm for getting BlockChalk through the app approval process! Really appreciate all your help and support.



5 STARS ***** Awesome app, very responsive no lag like lots of other apps out there. And! No sign up! Couldn’t ask for something better. Update: I sold 3 effect guitar pedals to some dude i linked from blockchalk. Good stuff

4 STARS **** Honestly think it needs to be a multi-OS app if it isn’t already. Smart phone dumb phone compatibility would make this great, Maybe even an main page like twitter n facebook 2 use on the pac at home. Five star app potential. I give it 4 3/4 stars.

5 STARS ***** This is a very impressive little app. So much potential once it starts getting lots of other folks on board. Can’t wait until my neighborhood is full of chalk.

4 STARS **** Really cool app, would give it five stars but I haven’t realized the full potential of it yet. So far there are only two other people who have chalked in my area and I live in a decent size city. Hope more people get on the band wagon and start using this app.

5 STARS ***** It’s gonna be great when more people get it downloaded. Come on people join and and start chalkin it up. It’s pretty sweet

5 STARS ***** Pretty awesome, you can talk with neighbors you don’t even know and find out about some cool stuff happening around you.

4 STARS **** It’s handy for public/local issues, events, achievements, solutions or general comments. I don’t think it was intended for personal networking (e.g. Twitter, Facebook)

4 STARS **** Very useful when situation permits. Also could be used as a “neighborhood watch” or anything that would benefit your block.

4 STARS **** I think this could revolutionize the way we do things and communicate. This wold be great for auctions to screw the auctioneer. this rawks.

4 STARS **** This is a cool app! I wold give it 5* if i was able to chalk @ areas outside of mine.

4 STARS **** Very interesting idea. Can see some fun with this one. Threading of replies would be good.

5 STARS **** I really like this a lot. Needs more people but that comes with time. Great app!

5 STARS ***** Very cool. Needs more people but they will come. It is awesome in larger cities






11/24/2009 11:08:00

Living in the bubble (or, why the future of location is even bigger than you think)

Last Friday I attended TechCrunch’s excellent Real Time CrunchUp in San Francisco. Real time web services are all the rage these days of course, and this conference brought together entrepreneurs, engineers, investors, and others to discuss the field and debate where it’s going.

Much of the focus was on location-based services and information “streams”. Since this is the area in which BlockChalk plays, the discussion was of personal interest to me. Companies like Twitter and Foursquare were in the spotlight, although newcomers like SimpleGeo, GeoAPI, and HotPotato attracted their share of well-deserved attention. Great products, smart people.

As I listened I heard some exciting predictions for the future: how one day soon we would all know where everyone is all the time; that people everywhere would share such information willingly and benefit from it greatly; and how this would fundamentally alter the way we interact as a society.

But something about all this didn’t feel quite right. There seemed to be an underlying assumption at play: that today’s location-based services show us the shape of things to come. And so it was that about halfway through the day I finally realized what was bothering me.


credit: h.koppdelaney on Flickr

Everyone in the room was living in the geo bubble.

What’s the geo bubble? It’s a land populated by the early adopters of today’s location-based services. Inside the bubble, people’s online actions are primarily driven by social activity and personal reputation. This has many implications, but the one I want to address here is privacy: bubble-dwellers have a reduced expectation of it, because it gets in the way of the things they want to do.

Now, the bubble is a great place to live, and bubble-dwellers are perfectly nice folks. It’s not my intent to besmirch them (hell, I frequently visit the bubble myself). Instead, my intent is to point out that, by definition, there is a world outside the bubble. That’s where most people live, and yet as an industry we’ve barely scratched the surface of what can be done there.

Today’s hottest services are pitched directly at bubble-dwellers, and by all accounts they are popular, useful, and fun. But by linking your identity to your location and sharing this information broadly, many of these services largely ignore issues of personal privacy and security. As a result, there are a wide range of everyday social interactions and transactions to which they are ill suited — buying and selling goods and services, lodging anonymous complaints, reporting crimes, the list goes on. It also means that a large portion of the population may never feel comfortable using them.

Dave and I created BlockChalk in part because we believe that the world outside the bubble is every bit as interesting as (and larger than) the world inside. Bubble-based apps will undoubtedly continue to grow dramatically, and the bubble itself will grow as early adopter behavior trickles down to a broader audience. But in order for location-based services to truly reach the mainstream, we as product designers will need to get even smarter about the social assumptions that we are harnessing — or in some cases, undermining.

For BlockChalk, that means a focus on personal privacy. We’re building it from the ground up to be a location-based service for everyone, where the user is always in control of how much identity and location information they share. We’ve also made it aggressively hyper-local, with a strong focus on what’s going on in your neighborhood. We think this will encourage people to use BlockChalk for completely different purposes than systems like Twitter and Foursquare. We also think it will attract entirely new types of users to this space. And we’re already seeing both happening.

The world of location-based services is moving faster than ever, and the hottest products out there today are innovative and fun to use. But it would be a mistake for us to assume that today’s users are representative of the overall population, and that today’s products necessarily represent the shape of things to come.

The future is going to be different — and even bigger — than we expect.

Stephen Hood






11/21/2009 09:32:21

Now available in the Palm app store

We’re happy to announce that BlockChalk is now available for the Palm Pre and Pixi, via Palm’s official app store. This is a native webOS application that gives you full access to BlockChalk with a slick interface that makes the most of your Palm phone. Best of all, it’s free!

To get BlockChalk on your Pre or Pixi, just visit the Palm app store and search for “blockchalk”.

We’d like to thank Les Orchard, independent developer extraordinaire and author of this app. Les used our open API to build a great experience for Palm users. We love it and we think you will too.

Now get out there and chalk up your neighborhood!






11/17/2009 11:02:00

Home sweet home

BlockChalk now makes it easier than ever to keep track of what’s going on in your neighborhood. You can now set a “home neighborhood” and jump to it any time, from anywhere. You can set your home neighborhood to be the spot where you’re standing right now. Or, if you’re somewhere else, simply hit “browse elsewhere”, key in the address you want, and tap “set as home neighborhood”.



After you’ve set your home neighborhood, you can always jump back to it by tapping the “home” button.


Home neighborhoods are available right now via the BlockChalk web app (http://blockchalk.com) on iPhone and Android, and are coming soon to the Palm Pre. We’re also working on native applications for iPhone, BlackBerry, and other popular smartphones, so stay tuned!





11/05/2009 11:10:56

Updated BlockChalk.com

We just updated the design of BlockChalk.com! While we’ll miss our clever black-on-white, chalk-on-chalkboard look, it was time to move on. Our new site is a little easier on the eyes and a lot more functional.

Take a look and let us know what else you’d like to see on BlockChalk.com!






10/01/2009 12:27:13

Chalk to me

As you may be aware, BlockChalk lets you “reply” to other people’s chalks. Replies enable you to carry on private conversations with other BlockChalk users, even though there’s no registration or sign-in. It’s really useful for things like making contact with a seller and taking a transaction offline. Of course there are many other uses, and since BlockChalk launched we’ve noticed that people are replying quite a lot — almost 1/5 of all the posts to date are BlockChalk are private replies.

We’ve heard from a number of people that they like private replies but would also like an easier way to reply publicly to someone else’s chalk. So today we’ve introduced a new feature called chalkback. Now when you’re reading a chalk, you can tap “chalkback” to post a public response. Everyone in the area will see your chalkback, along with a link to the original chalk you referenced.



Chalkbacks are available for use right now on your iPhone and Android phone, and will be coming to the Palm Pre application soon. Check it out and let us know what you think.

—Stephen and Dave





09/28/2009 10:59:00

Who are the people in your neighborhood?

We’ve just improved BlockChalk in a way that we think you’ll find really useful.  Put simply, BlockChalk now knows neighborhoods the same way you do: by name.

This means that when you post a new chalk we mark it with the name of the neighborhood you’re standing in.  When other people see your chalk, they’ll see the neighborhood name, too.  In many cases we can now also tell you your neighborhood name while you’re simply browsing nearby chalks.

These changes help us to expand on the idea of “neighborhood” in BlockChalk.  Instead of just showing you chalks within a certain distance of your location, we can now also show you chalks from the entire neighborhood.  Say you’re standing on the edge of the Mission Dolores neighborhood in San Francisco.  Before today you wouldn’t see all the chalks in Mission Dolores, just the ones nearest to you.  Now, you’ll see it all!

But what if you’re not using a mobile device?  Or what if you’re curious about a city or neighborhood but you’re not actually there?  The BlockChalk web site now lists the most active cities internationally. Just click on one to see the latest chalks in the city.  For most cities you can also filter by neighborhood; the most active ones are listed for each city.  For example, you can browse the latest chalks in San Francisco, or you can zoom in to see what’s going on in hot neighborhoods like Cole Valley.


There are already over 1550 neighborhoods in BlockChalk, representing chalks posted in more than 1100 cities around the world!  We expect these numbers to rise as BlockChalk grows, so if you don’t yet see any neighborhoods in your area you probably will soon.

We hope you enjoy these changes and find them useful.  Please let us know what you think, and keep chalking your block.

—Stephen and Dave






09/08/2009 11:32:01

There’s chalk everywhere! (also, Android and Palm Pre support)

It’s been almost three weeks since we introduced BlockChalk and since then we’ve seen new chalk showing up all over the world. From Helsinki to Hawaii, Calgary to Canberra, the growth has far surpassed our expectations.  BlockChalk is now being used on 5 continents, 42 countries, over 120 cities and more than 250 neighborhoods.

We’ve heard a lot of positive feedback, but a common request has been to provide support for other phones than just the iPhone.  Happily, we can now announce that we’ve extended our browser support to include Google Android-based phones (specifically those running the latest v1.5 of Android).  Thanks to the HTML5 support provided by the iPhone and Android, you’re able to use BlockChalk right inside your phone’s browser, with nothing to download or install.  Simply go to the site and start chalking.

But it doesn’t stop there.  You can now also use BlockChalk on the Palm Pre, thanks to a new application released this weekend by developer extraordinaire Les Orchard.  It’s free and works great!  Les’ app is one of the first to use our new API.  You can expect more native apps to follow, for a variety of platforms.

Thanks again to all of you who have checked out BlockChalk so far.  Keep chalking, and keep letting us know what you think.

Stephen and Dave






08/31/2009 10:17:15

A new (and different) geo platform

We’ve just released a brand new API for BlockChalk.  It’s very easy to learn and use: requests are made via HTTP GET and POST, and data is provided in XML, JSON, and RSS formats.

These new interfaces enable developers to do nearly everything that you can do at http://blockchalk.com.  It’s now possible to build client applications, mash-ups, and other tools based on BlockChalk geolocation data and services.

You can read the full API documentation here: BlockChalk API v0.6

So what does this mean?  It means that BlockChalk is now more than just a nifty GPS app for your iPhone.  It’s an open platform for storing and accessing user-generated content within a geographic context.

What makes the BlockChalk platform unique?

  • It’s dead simple.  There are no badges, medals, points, unicorns, pirates, or other viral gaming craziness.  BlockChalk is about locations and the messages people leave there, that’s it.
  • It’s flexible.  The interfaces and data structures are general in nature, and we encourage you to build application-specific functionality on top of them.  We’ve thought up plenty of uses for BlockChalk, but we think it’s the independent developers who will come up with the best ones.
  • It’s anonymous.  This means authentication is unnecessary and security concerns are light (when was the last time you heard that?).  The API just uses a simple user ID token to tie together a given user’s chalks (i.e. messages they’ve posted) and replies. Anonymity also means that BlockChalk is unconcerned with identity, friends, and social networks.  Think more Craigslist, less Facebook.  Tired of the ego-driven status-update rat race?  BlockChalk is for you.

This is our first major release of the BlockChalk API (v0.6) so we welcome your feedback and suggestions on how to improve it.

Finally, we’d like to recognize Joshua Schachter, Toby Eilliott, Les Orchard, and Joao Prado Maia for their invaluable input in the design of this API.  Thanks guys!


Stephen Hood

BlockChalk








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