the bad weather was stormy weather the darkness clouds their more like sky weather of the terrible bad weather life in Mixel Land. But, that doesn't mean they don't like to have a little FUN with them first, to be honest.
Sworly is the leader of the tribe. She's a bit apathetic of her job and look grumpy But, despite her gloomy outlook, she was been furious storms in would world, she is very personable, bossy, and interrupt for herself like her personality. Badent is a nasty one. who look mean, he was grumpy and moody his clouds float in the air who was a bad habbit. Harshser is a mean and bossy. he was a bad weather is in trouble and lash out in fits of insanity. a bit of nightmares of his life. brought back to good with his harmfully cloud, who look Very Timid.
Their newfound habitat is a series of dark Sky. Their Max is an Incarnation giant cloud
In fact, this post is about some alternatives, which resemble Pinterest, but set themselves apart by content, purpose, or audience.
Pinterest has become an archetype for sharable content curation. Some sites modeled after it are humorous, like Manteresting. Others are overt copies, like Pinspire. Then there are those created for niche markets, derivatives of Pinterest mainly in structure and functionality.
A few:
Lover.ly: A Pinterest for weddings. Though Pinterest is already dense with wedding imagery, generating many a meme, Lover.ly launched in fall 2011 to become a wedding inspiration machine. The site focuses on high-quality submissions, partnering with wedding blogs and design influencers, and is enhanced by a tagging and indexing system. Of note is the ability to browse by color, which I hear is a pretty central thing to wedding planning.
The Fancy: A Pinterest for Pinterest lovers with a penchant for online shopping. Launched last year and backed by some big names (Kanye, Ashton, Horowitz), this site is considered Pinterest's most direct competitor. The point of differentiation though is their strong e-commerce integration. The site layers on the ability to “unlock crazy good deals,” as merchants can post directly to the site or identify products to offer group deals on based on how many users ‘fancy’ it. Each item on Fancy “represents an item in the real world,” explains founder Joe Einhorn [TechCrunch]. Though they have a small number of registered users (250k in February), 60% of their audience is male, a much higher percentage than Pinterest.
Mulu.me: A Pinterest for those feeling philanthropic. Considered more of a recommendation engine, Mulu is set up like an affiliate program and users compile their picks on pages. Mulu partners with curators who create pages and when one of those pages directs you to a purchase, the vendor pays Mulu a fee, a portion of which is given to the curator or to a charity of the curator’s choice. Lance Armstrong, Zooey Deschanel, and Michael Kors were among the first to curate for the site, funneling donations to charities like God’s Love We Deliver, Livestrong and Charity Water. Mulu is the Chinese word for catalog or dictionary, if you are interested.
Sworly: A Pinterest for music. There seems to be some intrinsic need to display what you are listening to and a fascination in knowing another’s choice, hence the success of Spotify. A brand new site, Sworly, looks to replicate the music discovery experience within a Pinterest-like setting. Sworly takes YouTube’s extensive song library, and surfaces only the originals, so you can start listening and sharing music by the artist without sifting through strangers’ a cappella versions. Some work needs to be done, but the thought of never having to use the search function on YouTube again is welcome relief.
And naturally, you can ‘pin’ from them all.
Alissa Micciulla is a Social Media Strategist at Razorfish New York (her hometown). Perpetually searching for the next great restaurant (if you need recommendations, check out her check-ins here) and pinning many things here.