The death of facebook??

Today's Cool Site of the Day (12/12) boldly declares the death of Facebook. 

Canvas, an innovative start up out of Los Angeles, has launched an ambitious campaign that puts Facebook in its crosshairs. Canvas incorporates a concept it calls your “central identity,” or “Ci,” which is essentially a single identity for all of your social media communication. By incorporating a range of features, including audio call, video call, and private message, together with several of the most commonly used means of sharing content, you will be able to communicate in all the same ways you're used to, but with the convenience of only one identity to manage and only one service to sign into. 

The real breakthrough in Canvas comes in the way content is shared throughout the platform. The company will introduce a new media type called “canvases” which let you share packaged experiences through several types of media, to tell a fuller story. This means that instead of  sharing just a photo or video, you can share a multi-dimensional experience through a package of different photos, videos, music, movies, 
books, apps, and more - all from within a single post. 

Canvas is groundbreaking, beautiful, and nearly complete – but it still needs your help. Get your early access invite and reserve your username by contributing to the cause, and for a little more, you can receive perks such as t-shirts, sweatshirts, and exclusive party invites.

After 12/12, find it here: http://goo.gl/uHHiUB 

Sign up for the beta release here -- it's worth checking out.

Mike

40,000 oranges squeezed: A Facebook campaign to smile about

Prigat, a leading company in the Israeli fruit juice market, has come up with one of the most innovative Facebook campaigns you are ever likely to see. The application works by encouraging users to smile more and share it with their friends and the more users smile the more juice gets squeezed in a real life juicer. The best part is all the bottles of squeezed juice are sent to a charity of your choice. (via thenextweb.com)