webponce rants

things less interesting than a pigeon walking in a circle.


FriendConnect

I've mentioned on this blog before about barriers to entry for innovations like opensocial or openid - and how some things are just too technical to become interesting to the mainstream. here is something which is lowering that barrier - and possibly (until tonight) the most anticipated 404 page i've ever bookmarked - http://www.google.com/friendconnect.

FriendConnect promises to offer social tools through basic embeds and snippets of codes, allowing content developers who aren't necessarily the most technically savvy, to still enable their site with the power of social networking.

David Glazer, a director of engineering at Google, explains "Many sites aren't explicitly social and don't necessarily want to be social networks, but they still benefit from letting their visitors interact with each other. That used to be hard. Fortunately, there's an emerging wave of social standards -- OpenID, OAuth, OpenSocial, and the data access APIs published by Facebook, Google, MySpace, and others. Google Friend Connect builds on these standards to let people easily connect with their friends, wherever they are on the web, making 'any app, any site, any friends' a reality."

Watch this, and many other spaces.
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again + again

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piwik

Occasionally I remember how much of a geek i am, and worry myself. This is one of those times, normal people don't/shouldn't get so excited about web analytics tools. However, i'm not normal, so http://piwik.org/ has made me sit up and say 'oooh'. I've long wished i could do something more with the data *inside* google analytics, and piwik seems to solve that problem, not to mention using open source and non-prop software. I'd worry a little about constant hits to a db, and its scalability (as i've seen with slim's implementation of mint) - but its certainly worth a punt on a smaller site, and the API is worth looking at. Watch this tiny space.
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Olinda

olinda

A new product from the innovation masters, Schulze and Webb, supported ably by my good friend Amy T. and her team at BBC Audio & Music Interactive R&D.

Olinda is a prototype digital radio that has your social network built in, showing you the stations your friends are listening to. It’s customisable with modular hardware, and aims to provoke discussion on the future and design of radios for the home.

http://schulzeandwebb.com/2008/olinda/
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Looking for the mouse

Succinctly elegant as ever, Clay Shirky talks about why participation is the revolution

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