The mouse was the
original idea of Doug
Engelbart who was the
head of the Augmentation
Research Center (ARC) at
Stanford Research
Institute. Engelbart's
philosophy is best
embodied, in my opinion,
in the design of another
device that he invented,
the five-finger keyboard
- with keys like a piano,
used by one hand. The
problem was, Engelbart's
five-finger keyboard and
mouse combination was
very difficult to learn.
Google's new-year special
logo, which went live
briefly as 2008 began,
celebrated the 25th
anniversary of TCP/IP -
adopted by Arpanet on
January 1st, 1983. While
'invisible' to most
users, many of the layers
built on top of TCP/IP
are well-known even to
laymen: HTTP (Hyper Text
Transfer Protocol), FTP
(the File Transfer
Protocol), SMTP and POP3,
and IRC.
To take advantage of the
OpenSocial implementation
in Orkut sandbox, you
have to create a Google
Gadget with the
OpenSocial feature, post
the gadget on the
Internet, and then add
the URL of the gadget as
an application. As I
looked into the Google
gadget API to build this,
I found something
interesting, the Google
Gadget framework exposes
the function
_IG_FetchContent() that
can be used to
asynchronously fetch the
text at any URL.
So what kind of real
social networking
applications would
Silverlight enable? Would
it be network
visualization or media
playback or mash-ups?
Google with its Orkut
online community (a
closed-source ASP.Net
application) created an
API for social
applications so that
developers can build
applications that can
then run inside other
social networking
applications. They then
opened up the
specification for that
API to other social
networking applications
so that all other social
networking sites can (if
they want to) make their
sites containers for
third-party applications.
So I started playing with
it.
One of the Google folks
working on OpenSocial
sent me a message via
Facebook asking what I
thought about the
technical details of the
recent announcements.
Since my day job is
working on social
networking platforms for
Web properties at
Microsoft and I'm deeply
interested in RESTful
protocols, this is
something I definitely
have some thoughts about.
Below is what started off
as a private message but
ended up being long
enough to be its own
article.
There are 50 million
Facebook users who don't
know what OpenSocial APIs
are...and don't care.
There are about 5,000
tech bloggers and
developers who think it
is a revolution that will
'Checkmate' Facebook and
leave them with no moves.
TechMeme has over 100
stories saying that
OpenSocial is awesome and
Facebook is dead. MySpace
joins Google on
OpenSocial initiative.
OK, surely that settles
it, Facebook is toast.
Nope, not in my opinion.
Have you played with
Google's Desktop tool?
This is basically a strip
on the side of your
screen that lets you
house small applications,
called Gadgets. The tool
is available for Windows,
Linux and Mac so no
matter your vice there is
a flavour for you. There
is a wide variety of
Gadgets available,
ranging from the usual
news tickers and clocks
right through to games
and even being able to
vote if a girl is hot or
not!
I am sure that most of
you have heard about or
have had a chance to use
Google Maps. It's a great
service and I was really
impressed by the
responsiveness of the
application and the ease
with which users could
drag and zoom maps from a
Web browser. It has in
many ways heralded the
arrival of AJAX
(Asynchronous JavaScript
and XML), which I am sure
will revitalize Web
development in the days
to come.
Six of the Web's
brightest and best minds
- Google's Adam Bosworth,
Laszlo Systems founder
David Temkin, coiner of
the term 'AJAX' Jesse
James Garrett, Paul
Rademacher of
HousingMaps.com and
Google, Web 2.0 Journal
editor-in-chief Dion
Hinchcliffe and Microsoft
MVP Sahil Malik - wrestle
with a host of issues in
this 'AJAX Power Panel'
moderated by SYS-CON
Media Group Publisher and
Editorial Director,
Jeremy Geelan.
Like so many of the ideas
that tumble out of the
Googleplex into the
public domain, Google
Trends is irresistible.
Jeremy Geelan puts the
application, newly taken
out of beta and now
available to all
cyberspace from the
Google main page, through
its paces by taking it
out for a giddy spin
around the i-Technology
world. The results are
surprising...
May. 12, 2006 09:15 AM Reads: 25,053 Replies: 7
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