Posts Tagged ‘AOL’

myAOL Gadget Developer Platform

November 4th, 2008

tmp2B

After both Goowy Webtop and Yourminis Startpage walked into the sunset. it is clear that myAOL will be the place to go for those that enjoyed both serivices. as i said before. goowy is what is powering part of AOL whole Widget strategy and it should be a positive thing they have one to begin with. since all is focus is no finally in myAOL. it is timely to point out that myAOL got a Gadget Developer Platform. so if you are interested in widgets or are part of iGoogle Gadget platform. you will be happy to know this is a good place to look to as either a first time platform or as a second platform to adopt.

tmp2C

AOL is still one of the biggest destinations online and its restructuring should make for a leaner and meaner AOL if we allow ourselves to look at it with optimism. and what better time than now for some of that.

So. if you are interested in a widget platform to try out or you got a iGoogle Gadget and were wondering where else you could port it. then you should give myAOL Gadget Developer Platform a look.

Marshall Kirkpatrick got a more extensive and even more optimistic look at it in this post.

myAOL Gadget Developer Platform

myAOL Gadget Developer Platform  F.A.Q

Yourminis.com, Widget Startpage To Close Tomorrow

October 26th, 2008

tmp19

The time finally has come and after a little more of Two weeks of advance notice. Youminis.com Startpage will be no more. This is not the only thing that ceased to exist this October. Goowy. Yourminis parent webtop also ceased to exist after being inoperative for a while.

Dear yourminis user,

We’re sorry to inform you that as of October 27, 2008, we will no longer support the yourminis startpage. As a yourminis user, you already know that one of the best things about widgets is their ability to give you access to the content and features you value from different locations across the Web. Because there are already so many great startpage solutions out there supporting yourminis (like myAOL, iGoogle or Netvibes), we’ve decided to let the startpage experts take care of the startpages, so we could focus on what we do best — building widgets.

The startpage link has already been removed from the site (although you can still access the site directly at http://www.yourminis.com/start), and the startpage itself will be completely removed on October 27, 2008, so please make sure to export all of your content from the site prior to this date. Although we know that this is an inconvenience, you can export your feeds data as an OPML file, take most of your content, and import it into other startpage solutions (see instructions below). yourminis widgets will continue to work on other sites as they have in the past.

tmp21

Yourminis startpage and the Goowy Desktop were at some point in the late 2007 one of the best example of good widgets and good widget implementation. i also found odd that the Goowy and the Yourminis Startpage was not one and the same. this decreased the focus of the two products from the letgo even as active projects. nonetheless. they were the respective best Startpage and webtop done in flash. this were also the reasons why it got acquired by AOL. because they were good and one of the best Widget Startups back when they bought them.  but the purchase of  Goowy/Yourminis was a technology & team acquisition. Yourminis is what now powers AOL Widget Ads, and its also part of the new  My.AOL. Goowy Webtop is now part of AOL Mail. something i find funny is that AOL also released a RIA AOL Mail based on Silverlight 2. i have tested them both and there is just no contest. RIA AOL Mail truly shines even as a Beta. i wonder if what is being added to the regular AOL mail will have a RIA AOL Mail counterpart. but that is something for another post.

So. a Final Goodbye To Yourminis Startpage and to Goowy Webtop and Hello again to AOL that will now bring Widgets to all. something i  of course plan of keeping up with. so if you were using yourminis or goowy. the new My.AOL and the new AOL Mail do deserve a try. but if anyone represents a Widget based Flash, Flex or Silverlight powered Startpage. this is the time to let all those Yourminis and Goowy Orphan users Know of it.

Yourminis Startpage Closing

AOL goes further into Lifestreaming, Follows the trends, prepares for the future.

August 15th, 2008

image

Two weeks or so ago, no one would have thought of AOL as a company you would associate with lifestreaming. It was just after that Frank of SomeWhatFrank revealed in a tweet that he was using BuddyUpdates that the mention of Lifestreaming and AOL conjured an association. That association landed in Mark Krinsky head and off he went to write about it. Certain major blog ran with the story a little later without giving credit of that and then suddenly everyone knew about it.

Little we did know that that week would end with the news of AOL acquiring SocialThing! For a undisclosed amount (a rumored 1 million) as broke by Techcrunch. It was weird news because it almost seemed random of AOL to have acquired a Lifestreaming Service. That impression just lasted seconds to me because of the still very fresh impression of the BuddyUpdates lifestreaming Service for AIM.

BudddyUpdates is clearly a Lifestreaming Tool, but its focus and goal is only of relevance to AIM IM users up to this moment. It is more of a Funneling Service for Updates. It lacks a common ground in terms of being a Lifestreaming service. It is more of just a bridge.

That is because it may not be meant to be more than that. SocialThing is now the base of AOL lifestreaming services.

A Boulder based startup founded in 2007 and funded by Techstars , a startup incubator from Colorado started with a little hype and then the hype died down because it was a private beta and also because it was quite snobbish and it only worked right using firefox and downright blocked IE browsers from accessing the service. Even then, I have used it since I first got in because it solved a problem for me offering support to my favorite Nanoblogging (twitter) and Microblogging (pownce) service.

SocialThing is quite unique to others even if it is often compared erroneously to Friendfeed. Even if they don`t have anything alike in principle. Something SocialThing CEO rightfully agrees with me. There is a simple why on that:

Socialthing! Is a about cross posting, lifestream aggregation and service specific replying. There is no local reply in SocialThing, there are no rooms and there is not even an actual user profile. The replies are posted in the respective service you aggregate. SocialThing serves as bridge in the same way Posty, the AIR app from Cesare Rocchi, allows you to check your microblogging (or nanoblogging if you will) rivers, cross post and also do service specific replying to notes from your contacts.

Friendfeed aggregates but also centralizes interaction within friendfeed and it exists as a social hub with a accompanying user profile. You cannot cross post, or reply to the specific note in the specific service that is being aggregated in the same way you do in Socialthing!. So please stop comparing them. The only thing alike as a web service would be HelloTXT because you can cross post and view your respective service lifestreams without being able to reply directly.

So please, could all of those saying that it somehow competes with Friendfeed just knock it off?

I even had posted about it. First as a mention in a post about Lifestream.fm that caused a response from Ben Brightwell that gave me 25 invites and I have added quite significantly to that having invited over 100 people to the service up to now.

I criticized them for their lack of IE7 support that is pure nonsense for ANY web service that wants traction, coverage and goodwill. I did the same for their lack of badges and widgets. Something that has proven a popular tool and I would say now indispensable to any web service where it makes sense. A lifestreaming service sure fits the bill. Because of that and many details I have seen while using it. I do now come to the conclusion that a acquisition was their only way out because I really doubt it would have succeeded on its own given its extremely limited set of supported services and snobbish way of doing things so far.

I am being harsh? Of course I am. The reason for that is because I believe the tool is great and it got a great potential. Mathew Ingram said that he found it less useful because it didn`t steal away the conversation in the way Friendfeed does and because it is user centered instead of note centered like friendfeed. I disagree completely. Because for me the services are completely different as I already have stated above. I think some will also agree with me on that.

Now, a whole week after the news of AOL bought SocialThing! broke loose . The confirmation from Frank Gruber gave it new life again and finally cleared SocialThing to disclose it in public.

Now it is all about how AOL gets to integrate it with Bebo and Buddy Updates. What else they can do with the service is also still a big interrogation mark. I of course wish there is a Widget involved (please frank, it would be cool, pass it along) so I can get another chance to revisit Socialthing! here at Widgets Lab.

*Yes, yes, I know this is one of those unusual posts that somehow get into Widgets Lab even if there is not a Widget involved at all (at the moment) but at least I am not posting about big foot like Techcrunch….nope, I am not joking. They posted about big foot.*

SocialThing!

Userplane releases web 2.0 message boards, includes widget

August 13th, 2008

image

You read that right. web 2.0 boards. sounds strangely out of place in 2008?. think again. Userplane has release its product “Boards” and its a good one i may add. for more details on that you can go to Adam Ostrow post on it. i will give you the short version. Userplane boards are flash based, Userplane IM aware, multi media friendly real time and highly customizable message boards. that is pretty much it and the whole genius behind it is that it mixes  the tech behind other Userplane products like Chat and IM infused into a message board format. This gives old message boards the ultimatum and makes them officially obsolete. 

You can even extend the boards content beyond the actual board and get a board thread widget for your blog. so if you have a active thread you  are interested in or you run, you and your readers can follow it up from your blog or preferred social network profile (like MySpace) since everything is flash based.

image

The updating of the Message board by Userplace is something i welcome greatly. it was time for something like it because they still got their place but no one had done them truly right in modern way. the closest to it was Tangler. i bet they are not really happy with the news. there has been some great “from old to new” revamps lately. my first favorite example is Mibbit, the web based and widget based  IRC client. you cannot go more neo-retro than with a IRC revamp. the other big jump in terms of  concept refreshing must be Rejaw. what i call “the pownce alternative” or “what Pownce should have been”. Rejaw is a Real Time Microblogging service in the same vein than Pownce that launched last week. I will be writing more about it once they or anyone releases a Widget of it. in the meantime you can find me there too.

Userplane just like Mibbit and Rejaw show that Real Time web based services are what it is needed now and that in the case of Mibbit and Userplane. Widgets are essential to the extension of the service brand and reach. to a lesser degree because it is not truly real time but it is very close would be Plurk. a Nanoblogging service just like Jaiku that also found that having a Widget of the service should be priority to its brand and reach when they launched and that today now enjoy a more engaged and active audience that not only Jaiku the service they are the alternative for but also the very hyped Identi.ca.

I think that this new product by Userplane should do very well since it is free and it supported by Userplace advertising that has proven quite effective so far.

Userplane Boards

via Mashable

Website maintained by Happy Shoe Media LLC