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Clip, Blog, Tweet, and Share with Amplify

Written by Sarah Perez / June 10, 2009 8:24 AM / 8 Comments

Amplify is a new service that lets you clip the things you see and read on the web and share them with others through social media, blog posts, and even Twitter. If that sounds a lot like what Clipmarks does, you're right. You see, Amplify was made by Clipmarks' creators and it almost seems like a variation on their theme of "clip and share." But if we had to choose between the two services, we think Amplify is the better choice today.

How to Use Amplify

Like Clipmarks, Amplify works via a browser extension. When you click the button it adds to your toolbar, orange boxes appear on the page you're viewing allowing you to select the text you want to clip. You can also select text using your mouse. The boxes surround the text up until a paragraph break, so if you want to add more text to your clipping, you just have to click again on the following sections until you've grabbed all you want to save. Images can be clipped as well.

The next step is to click the "Click Here to Amplify it!" button. That brings you to your clip blog's "Save page" where you can fill in more info like the title of the post and any additional commentary you want to add. By the way, your clip blog is called a "Clog," which is kind of funny, but to be honest, we're not entirely sure the term will catch on.

The clip blog reminds us a lot of Tumblr site, a scaled down blog platform for sharing tidbits from around the web. (If you'd rather post to your Wordpress, Blogger, TypePad, or LiveJournal site, you'd be better off using the Clipmarks solution instead.)

Before you post to your "clog," you have the option to check a box and post the clip to Twitter. You can even customize how the beginning of the tweet should read. If you look further down the page, you'll see a link that says "post this clip to Facebook, Delicious, or Clipmarks." Clicking here will take you to a new page where you can configure these services, too.

Once you've added the additional services, they'll be checked by default every time you clip something and post to your clip blog. If you don't want to always tweet or update Facebook, you'll have to uncheck the checkboxes on the "Save this Clip" page with each use of Amplify. We wish there was a setting that would let those boxes be unchecked by default for those of us who don't want to over-share.

If you decide later that you want to add or remove services, you can no longer do so from the "Save clip" page of your blog - you'll have to log into Amplify and access your Admin settings from there - a bit of an annoyance, but one we can live with.

Great Features: Groups and Sharing from Your RSS Reader

There are three features that make Amplify the better choice for clipping, in our opinion: Twitter sharing, of course, but also groups and the ability to share from RSS. The groups feature lets multiple users from a business, organization, class, etc. create a community site to which they all contribute. Because the groups can be synced with Twitter and Facebook, this can be an easy way to keep up a shared Twitter account or Facebook page.

The other great feature for voracious RSS users is the ability to share clips directly from your feed reader, be it Google Reader or Bloglines. When you use Amplify from either of these services, it will find the source URL and link back to the original page - not the feed URL. That makes Amplify a handy way to tweet, bookmark, or share the best content from your feeds without having to open up the article in a separate window.

To get started with Amplify, sign in from the main page using your Twitter account. If you don't use Twitter, you can create an Amplify account instead. You'll then see the option to install the browser extension (Firefox only) which is the last step before you can start using the service. For more info on Amplify, you can view the YouTube video embedded below.


Comments

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  1. Thank you for such a kind review of amplify. Definitely some fair points that we need improve upon. Just want to explain why we created Amplify as a new service being that it's pretty similar to our already existing clipmarks service.

    From the outset, our goal was to extend our solution for clipping and sharing what people read on the web to Twitter and Facebook users as well as groups. Initially, we tried developing this into the clipmarks experience, but the more we tried, the more it became clear that we were forcing it. We simply couldn't achieve what we set out to do without disturbing the user experience or community on Clipmarks.com - something we really wanted to avoid. After looking at things from a bunch of different angles, it seemed that the best user experience would result from us creating Amplify as a separate service from Clipmarks. Hope that helps clarify things.

    FYI...we're in a very accelerated part of our development, so over the coming days/weeks, they'll be lots of new features rolled out (including support for bit.ly later today).

    eric

     Posted by: Eric Author Profile Page | June 10, 2009 9:44 AM



  2. I now have both clipmark and amplify buttons in my FF, and besides the twitter functionality I can't really decide which one I want to keep. Not enough differentiation. The terminology on Amplify also needs to be cleaned up, it's all in terms of clips and so fort -- confusing :)

    Posted by: Fleshlight Reviews Author Profile Page | June 10, 2009 7:00 PM



  3. Great idea and just what I have been looking for, cannot access from China. Too bad.

    Posted by: Brian | June 10, 2009 10:02 PM



  4. Looks like a slick implementation. I can definitely see space for this in the suite of tools that I use for tracking useful stuff on the web. Now just have to decide between this and tumblr... leaning towards amplify.

    Posted by: Damon Oehlman | June 11, 2009 3:24 AM



  5. A lot of competition out there for new apps but I think this one will be very useful, particularly the RSS part which I will be working on first for our services to clients.

    Posted by: Graham Bailey | June 11, 2009 3:51 AM



  6. The connection with Twitter and Delicius don't work for me. I double check the settings and the check box, but didn't work. My username for Amplify, Twitter and Delicius are different. But I hope this is not the problem, otherwise, you will need to have the same username for all the services and that is a great limitation.

    Posted by: Aleph Ozuas | June 14, 2009 9:09 AM



  7. worked with some guys in 2006 on something that shares similarities. take a look at notefish.com

    Posted by: rick | June 17, 2009 1:14 PM



  8. Clipping is very simple and great thing. But sometimes it doesn't work for some social bookmark websites.

    Posted by: Diana | December 14, 2009 4:26 AM



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