Spot the web RSS 2.0
# Sunday, February 17, 2008

Six months after Facebook came out with a version of its social network for the iPhone, LinkedIn is finally coming around to releasing a mobile version of its own.

It is live now. Just go to http://m.linkedin.com/ on any mobile browser. Of course, if you have an iPhone, you will see a version optimized just for that device.

This isn’t exactly what we had in mind when we noted there is still an opportunity to create a kick-ass mobile social network.

 linkedin-iphone-small-1.png

But the basic functionality is all there. You can look up people’’s profiles, invite people into your network, and see updates from your contacts. More fully-featured, downloadable mobile apps geared to specific phones may be coming in the future.

Even limited mobile browser accessibility should help LinkedIn keep its members happy. The regular Website has been on a tear lately, nearly tripling in unique visitors over the past year in the U.S., to 3.6 million in January 2008, according to comScore.

No signs of social networking fatigue there.

linkedin-chart.png

Sunday, February 17, 2008 5:37:15 PM (Jerusalem Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Site Reviews | Web 2.0
# Thursday, January 10, 2008

xobni

Xobni (that's inbox backwards - cute!) is the next big idea in terms of productivity enhancements for your inbox. The Xobni software is an add-on for Microsoft Outlook that offers email management and quick access to important information in your email. But more than that, Xobni claims to "expose the hidden social network" in your email. That's ingenious because everyone I know is in my email...somehow, somewhere...but they may or may not be my friend on MySpace, Facebook, flickr, YouTube, etc. This is especially true for my family members over 40!

Xobni taps into email's hidden social network by creating information-rich profiles out of every person you have ever corresponded with by mining your email for information about them.

The Xobni software has several features, including fast email search, email analytics, automatic phone number discovery, threaded conversations, and more.

The email search is fast and begins finding the people and/or emails you're looking for as you type. A search for a contact will pull up their profile and every email where you two have corresponded...in 0.3 seconds!

A Xobni profile is created for every person you've emailed with and is displayed on the right side of Microsoft Outlook inside the Xobni sidebar. Each profile displays relationship statistics, contact information, related people, threaded conversations, shared attachments, and the author of the message you are currently looking at.

xobni

The relationship statistics show things like the time of day when you receive emails from the contact, the balance of incoming and outgoing messages, and the person's rank out of all of your contacts. These statistics are created by Xobni's powerful analytics engine, which can also be accessed from a menu option to further analyze your email habits with numbers, charts, and graphs.

A contact's phone number is displayed in the Xobni sidebar by automatically extracting that information from your emails. This way, you can see someone's phone number even if you've never actually entered them into your Outlook contacts. If you hover over the phone icon next to the number, you can see the text of the email from which their phone number was extracted.

phone_button

Further down, the related people section shows other people who are connected to that person in some way, exposing your shared friends as well as your contacts relationships to each other. Clicking on the name of one of the "related people" will take you to their profile in the Xobni sidebar.

Beneath the related people pane, a recent conversations area shows your most recent previous correspondence with that contact. This can be very useful to help jog your memory when replying to a new email, as you can quickly recall what had already been said. It can also save you time because you never have to navigate away from the current conversation to locate previous emails. The conversations are listed by date, and by clicking on them, you can then view the emails themselves. You can also reply or forward one of those emails right in the Xobni sidebar, or you can choose to open the email in Outlook. Attachments they've sent you or you've sent them are underneath the conversations area, again saving you from having to navigate away from the current conversation to find the email with the attachment you need.

Xobni also helps with scheduling. It displays your appointments, schedule, and to-do list, and in the Xobni sidebar, there is a "Schedule Time" link below each contact. Clicking this link opens up a pre-composed email with your availability. This saves you time as you don't need to check your calendar every time you need to schedule a meeting. Xobni knows when you have an opening. Another interesting feature is that Xobni also automatically identifies people you've lost touch with by looking at the dates of your last correspondence with them.

Outlook is Only the Beginning

Although currently for Microsoft Outlook only, Xobni's blog hints that this may just be the beginning by calling Outlook "the first platform we’ve integrated with." They said they chose Outlook because it is used by 350 million people, but they also say that they "don’t want to force our users to change email clients or social networks to use Xobni. Our software seamlessly integrates with the environments and systems that you already use to communicate and build relationships." This makes me think that we will see integration with more platforms in the future.

Xobni's brilliance is in providing you with a true social network filled with information that can help you stay productive and get things done. It will never replace the fun of building a customized profile page on a social network like Facebook or MySpace, but it uncovers the network already present in what is perhaps the main area of your life where you communicate and build the most relationships. This makes Xobni not just useful, but one of those, "how did I ever live without it" kind of things.

Xobni is currently in an invite-only beta, but you can sign up to try it here.

Thursday, January 10, 2008 4:54:04 PM (Jerusalem Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Site Reviews | Web 2.0
# Friday, January 04, 2008

YAML (Yet Another Multicolumn Layout)

YAML (Yet Another Multicolumn Layout)

Dirk Jesse’s extensive (X)HTML/CSS Framework offers the whole bunch of default-templates for a number of simple or more complex web-projects. YAML is based on web standards and supports every modern web browser. All Internet Explorer’s major rendering bugs are countered. YAML fully supports all IE versions from 5.x/Win to 7.0.

Apart from a number of standard-conform layouts the framework also offers a debugging stylesheet, print stylesheet as well as various robust tools for web-development in YAML. All CSS components of the framework as well as the various layout methods are thoroughly documented in both English and German, supplemented by numerous examples.

YAML Builder

You can also use a YAML Builder to develop your layout visually - in your web-browser. You can choose a Doctype, basic layout elements (#header, #footer, …), the number of content columns as well as preferred column order and set the layout and column widths. You can also drag & drop and nest both sub-templates and dummy content, display and output the complete code (XTHML markup and CSS) and switch between draft mode and preview of the finished layout.

Blueprint

Blueprint

Blueprint

The Blueprint CSS framework, created by Norwegian tech student Olav Frihagen Bjørkøy, is a very promising foundation for developing typographic grids using CSS. The framework offers an easily customizable grid, sensible typography, a typographic baseline and a stylesheet for printing. It also uses relative font-sizes, provides a CSS reset and is supposed to be cleaned of code bloats. The latter isn’t always true.

Besides, you can also use the Blueprint Grid CSS Generator to generate more flexible versions of Blueprint’s templates. Whether you prefer 8, 10,16 or 24 columns in your design, this generator now enables you that flexibility with Blueprint CSS Framework - a new “to-become-standard” in grid-based design approach.

Yahoo! UI Library CSS Foundation

Yahoo! UI Library presents a set of CSS frameworks: the core YUI CSS foundation includes the Reset CSS, Base CSS, Fonts CSS, and Grids CSS packages.

While Reset CSS removes and neutralizes the inconsistent default styling of HTML elements, Base CSS applies a consistent style foundation for common HTML elements across A-grade browsers.

Fonts CSS offers cross-browser typographical normalization and control; the framework provides consistent font sizing and line-height, supports user-driven font-size adjustment in the browser, including cross-browser consistency for adjusted sizes and works in both Quirks Mode and Standards Mode.

Grids CSS delivers four preset page widths, six preset templates, and the ability to stack and nest subdivided regions of two, three, or four columns. The 4kb file provides over 1000 page layout combinations. The framework supports easy customization of the width for fixed-width layouts; it also supports fluid-width (100%) layouts as well as preset fixed-width layouts at 750px, 950px, and 974px, and the ability to easily customize to any number. YUI also offers The YUI Grids Builder — a simple interface for Grids customization.

You should be aware that these frameworks are often criticized for bloating the code with non-semantic markup and generating too many unnecessary classes, IDs and div-containers in CSS. Yahoo! UI Library also provides a detailed documentation with numerous examples, tutorials, cheat sheets, templates and tools.

Friday, January 04, 2008 11:49:10 AM (Jerusalem Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
CSS | Design | Site Reviews
# Wednesday, December 26, 2007

What does Assembla do?
Assembla provides tools and services for building software quickly using global teams.

Is the service free?
Yes, the online service is free for individuals and small groups. We make money when we have larger groups that need premium tools, portfolios, and private servers.

500MB of SVN for free…

I have been using Subversion for project work for some time now, and it seems that most agree that it is the best Open Source solution available. I have enjoyed the use of SVN provided by clients or employers, but only recently started considering replacing my old local VSS server with a web-enabled SVN server of my own. My motivation is to get code that I own off-site and have some redundancy along with improved accessibility. I am also interested leveraging the benefits of the continual development and refinement of SVN as an Open Source project. TortoiseSVN is a good example of that.

I started by researching the requirements for installing SVN server. Installation on a local Windows host seemed doable, but I wanted to install it on my web server. Since my host doesn’t support applications, I’m on my own. I don’t even know what OS the server is running. From what I’ve read, installing SVN on a site would be a chore. Plus it would compete for space with site content. An alternative would be to pay for a specialized SVN hosting service. Hard to justify the continual overhead for that.

So I Googled for free SVN. One result stood out as promising: Assembla. They give away a 500mb SVN account with unlimited users and an integrated bug tracking setup (Trac). For the quick, small projects I am looking to use it for, I can accept the risk that Assembla flakes out as a business entity. Worst case I will still have my latest build on my local. Assembla’s business model seems pretty sound to me anyway - a successful freelance coder will eventuallly need more space if they get cosy using the free service and will become a paying customer.

Here aro some of the Assembla tools:

Subversion

Subversion is the most popular centralized source code repository and version control system.  Our subversion includes email alerts on commit, Trac code browsing, and a post-commit hook to trigger.  And, we know that reliability is important for subversion users, so we backup to failover servers in real time.  Learn more.

Trac

Trac is a popular open source ticketing system, with the mission to "help developers write great software while staying out of the way."   You can import and export trac projects from Assembla.  We enhance trac with simplified team management, HTML alerts (called "notifications" in trac), and hourly and weekly alert summaries.  We support a few trac plugins, including XML-RPC for Eclipse integration.

Scrum

The scrum tool collects reports from your team members in the stand-up meeting format:  "What did I do, What will I do, What do I need."

Chat

The chat tool provides a persistent chat room that you can use for daily meetings or just to drop in.

Wednesday, December 26, 2007 8:11:34 PM (Jerusalem Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Programming | Project Management | Site Reviews | SVN | Web 2.0
# Thursday, December 06, 2007

Gmail and Google Talk users can now chat with their AOL Instant Messenger buddies through the Gmail interface, Google announced today. Rolling out to all English-based users by the end of the day, the new feature will let you seamlessly jump from chatting with a Google contact to an AIM buddy without having to use two separate chat clients.

The AIM integration feels native to Gmail. The AIM log-in panel is behind the "Set status here" upside-down triangle under the Contacts list. Click there, and if the feature rollout has hit your account, you'll see a "Sign into AIM" option on the drop-down menu with AIM's yellow running man icon next to it.

A new window opens when you choose to sign in, so be sure that you don't have a pop-up blocker enabled for Gmail.com. Enter in your AIM username and password, or hit the link at the bottom of the window to create a new AOL account, and you're good to go. AOL buddies will appear in the Contacts list, mixed in with Google Chat contacts. The running man icon for AIM contacts appears on the right side of the chat list.

Click on the "Set status here" triangle again, and you'll notice the AIM login option has changed to a logout. Once you've logged out, your AIM contacts disappear, although the next time you log in you won't need to re-enter your password. To use a different AIM account, you need to go to the Chat tab under Settings.

Gmail's label colors make them easier to read.

(Credit: CNET Networks, Inc.)

This integration comes right on the heels of Google Chat rolling out group chats and more developed smileys last week. Individual chat and the ever-important smileys are there, but any other ancillary AIM features you might be interested in require the full AIM client.

Google was cagey about whether Gmail will feature other chat protocols such as ICQ in the future. Jason Freidenfelds, a spokesman for Google, said only that he couldn't comment on whether they were looking at including other chat programs.

Another new feature that Google added last night was colored tabs for labels. This feature, previously only available through plug-ins like Better Gmail, lets users assign colors to labels to make it easier to keep track of them. From the Labels panel, click on the square next to the label and a drop-down menu of colors will appear. Select a color and your e-mail list will refresh, with the label name on e-mails now in vibrant life-affirming hues.

The new colors are easily accessible from the Labels menu.

(Credit: CNET Networks, Inc.)

Besides making it easier to see labeled e-mails, when you click on an e-mail that's been labeled you can now search for all e-mails with that label or remove the label from the e-mail directly from buttons next to the e-mail's subject line.

While colored labels aren't a killer feature, they're small touches that make the interface that much easier to use. Combined with the AIM integration and other recent changes, it's hard to understate the usefulness to users of the recently rewritten Gmail source code.

Thursday, December 06, 2007 2:05:56 PM (Jerusalem Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Site Reviews | Google
# Monday, December 03, 2007

What is Snooth (http://www.snooth.com/)?

Snooth is a web-based social shopping experience that is simplifying how people select, interact with and purchase their favorite wines. It hopes to become a kind of Facebook for the wine world. It may not sell wine but it already has a database of more than one million reviews, from the public and established critics.

Snooth offers both casual and aspiring wine drinkers personalized wine recommendations, ratings & reviews, as well as a wine information search tool that seamlessly connects users to the websites of top online merchants and wineries worldwide.

The main screen:

Search results screen:

Monday, December 03, 2007 2:03:37 PM (Jerusalem Standard Time, UTC+02:00)  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
Site Reviews | Web 2.0
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