Now that I’m caught up on the events of the last week, it becomes pretty clear that FriendFeed is still the topic du jour. Today, TechCrunch announces (based on Compete data), that FriendFeed still has a lot of killing to do:
FriendFeed certainly has a lot of potential, but it still has a lot of killing to do. Not much data is available for how FriendFeed is actually doing, other than blog headlines on Techmeme. The life-streaming service does not even register yet on comScore, for instance.
Compete counts about 150.000 uniques per month for FriendFeed, which, to me at least, seems very low (can FriendFeed really only get 10x more uniques that most semi-popular blogs?).
Duncan Riley (who has emerged as a far more interesting blogger now that he isn’t with TechCrunch anymore, btw), says it’s time for FriendFeed to kill Twitter. I find myself spending less and less time on Twitter and more on FriendFeed, and with the FriendFeed rooms now running in full swing, I can see how this can happen. Twitter could still kill FriendFeed in the mobile market (though