It's fascinating to see Twitch's expansion, from Justin.tv (cc @justinkan) into a gaming-focused livestreaming (almost) unicorn (acquired by Amazon last year). While gaming is massive (and growing), expansion into arts and other categories in the future makes a lot of sense.
h/t @sarahperez for this find from her TechCrunch article.
@rrhoover Maybe I'm just not a regular twitch users, but I can't find a "Creative" section anywhere in the web experience? No mention from the home, game or channel sections and even the directory only shows game content. How did you even find that url?
@walterareid it was written about on TechCrunch. I'm assuming they're rolling it out slowly as not to introduce something drastically different to their core community.
@rrhoover@justinkan@sarahperez fantastic pivoting ! It makes simpler to young influencers to create empathy with their first followers through common passions !
@rrhoover I wrote 15,000 words in a novel yesterday and I'm pretty sure I would love to review parts of it as a recording, to see how my flow developed through the 10-hour session. All I know is at times I must have been in a flow state of some degree. How I got there, who knows? :)
@decision_@rrhoover It's not exactly the same, but I sometimes setup a low fps screen recorder when I'm coding to see what I've done. I've found some major mistakes before they turned into bugs with this.
Seems weird. Why shut down Justin.tv in the first place if you're eventually going to keep adding back new categories? I hope it works, but I kind of like Twitch to be focused on livestreaming gaming.
@michaelaleo They're doing something right because they focused on one thing - gaming. I'm just worried that too many extra categories could dilute Twitch.
@samsabri maybe their success is less about focusing on gaming specifically, and just simply focusing on being a video platform for passionate niche activity. The creative process feels like a logical subject matter for the platform.
Adobe gets excited about getting more folks into creativity, so we're pretty stoked about platforms like Twitch Creative (disclaimer: Adobe is sponsoring Twitch Creative). We actually launched the Adobe Channel (http://twitch.tv/adobe) on Twitch, which live streams 17+ hours of continuous programming every day, spotlighting all kinds of awesome artists in the community.
On a personal note: It's crazy soothing to have talented people creating cool stuff in the background while you're doing something. Gets addicting. :)
Creative showed up several months ago I think, and I know it was (maybe unofficially) restricted to non-gaming activities that were at least gaming themed (eg. crocheting a Pikachu hat or something). That's definitely changed though, as I've seen everything from glassblowing to cooking to some dude applying a wrap to a pickup. Either way, fascinating stuff, and kind of the main reason I go to Twitch these days.
This is great. Seems like this might just be a timing thing. The promise of live-streaming anything is catching. This goes along with periscope, Meerkat, etc. now that we have the networks and hardware that can really support it. It doesn't seem strange to me that people want to watch others involved in what they are interested in. Im sure there are sports fans (and fantasy players) that would watch a live stream of all the practice sessions if the organizations provided it. There are designers that would watch Aaron Draplin push pixels. Now that we have the technology it will be interesting to watch which communities and creators choose to share in this way.
I'm so excited how this is going to change "television". Twitch app on Apple TV with all kinds of categories like this, in addition to Storehouse announcing their Apple TV app. Exciting times for the living room screen.
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