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September 25, 2007 2:04 PM PDT

PeopleJam: Help us help you

by Erica Ogg
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PeopleJam is a place for people looking to give and receive advice on health, relationships, spirituality and finances to connect with each other.

PeopleJam (Credit: PeopleJam)

The site launched Monday and is in open beta right now. The founders have culled more than 150 "experts"--meaning writers, motivational speakers, counselors, finance experts and more--to blog on these lifestyle topics. There are also "lifecoaches" who also contribute content, both videos and text-based.

The idea is that PeopleJam will be the destination for people who have specific questions to create a profile, find answers to questions and add their own posts to the site, which encourages participation. The company calls it "social networking with purpose." It's aimed at Web users between 25 and 49, slightly older than the average Facebook/MySpace user.

April 19, 2007 2:15 PM PDT

InPowr: Self-help 2.0

by Rafe Needleman
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The second of 36 questions.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Unveiled at the Web 2.0 Expo on Monday: InPowr, a service to help you achieve your life goals.

Don't laugh. I already did that for you, live from the event. I Twittered: "InPowr intro: WTF? 'It's fun, it's light,' Sure, just answer the 36 QUESTIONS. Argh."

At the moment the site is feels like an online Cosmo quiz. The first thing you do is answer 36 question about your state of mind. Then you get a little diagram showing you where you are, and are not, feeling content. After that, you get a grid with tiles that represent things you need to work on, such as "My finances." Then you put together tiles in groups and, finally, you set up some goals to address the issues in those groups. It's actually not a bad way to take an inventory of what you need to work on in your life, but the whole process is rather rigid.

The flower of well-being

(Credit: CNET Networks)

In its current beta form, the service is a tease, since key features have yet to be released. A key value proposition of InPowr is that it will help you create a 21-day plan to improving your happiness, and that it will allow you to add friends as a support network to help you. These and other key features should come to the service soon, but without them, InPowr strikes me as just a clever quiz.

After the InPowr demo at the Expo, I talked to several people and asked them what they thought about it. "Would you use it?" I asked. The vast majority said, "No way." Only one person seemed intrigued by the service: a woman who told me she was a big Tony Robbins fan.

There's nothing wrong with software and Web apps whose creators want to help us improve our lives. Like the little personal goals start-ups JoesGoals (review) and SuperViva, InPowr comes from a good place. It just seems, for the moment, more precious than useful.

Adding goals to groups.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

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