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[supernova] Wharton West Workshops

I’m at the workshop day of Supernova. The conference-y conference starts tomorrow. The IRC, currently up, is irc://irc.freenode.net/#supernova. The “media center” aggregates the feeds, etc., from the conference; I suspect it will be in full swing tomorrow.

The Wharton day starts with a session on “the personal infosphere.”

Dalton Caldwell of Imeem gives a demonstration; it integrates IM and social networking. It does tags, but does not (yet) take in tags from other sites, so you hvae to make your Personal Infosphere investment in Imeem.

eSnips, an Israeli company gives you a gig to snip ‘n’ share Web content. I’s a social site and, as the slide ways, “The only social site where mainstream people are … and teens aren’t!” It’s focused on the content, not the people, says Yael Elish. (Here’s a folder of optical illusions I stumbled upon.) You can control who can see content. Anything you upload is given its own Web site. It’s tagalicious. It’s intended as a “pure consumer brand,” not an enterprise tool.

Ben Golub of Plaxo begins by giving a history of computing that claims that the Web wasn’t about people connecting to people until web 2.0 Aarrrggghh! I hate that meme! Anyway, he goes on to talk about how many people are connecting to other people. Lots. Plaxo is “the industry’s first smart address book.” It lets you “leverage your address book.” [I don’t know. I’d still rather see a distributed solution. FOAF and Plaxo should meet and have babies.]

Tariq Krim of Netvibes is an aggregator. I’ve played with it for a few minutes and the UI is very very easy. Cool even. He says that Netvibes is being designed by users and that it’s trying to be completely open.

Hans Peter Brondmo of Plum says it gives you a persistent way to aggregate all sorts of content in one place so you can share it or not. You can save deliberately or you can set it to save every site you go to. It indexes everyting. It will be tagalectable.

In the discussion, they agree that standards are good.

Mitch Ratcliffe asks a killer question about whether the motive for hosting content rather than managing it in a distributed fashion is in fact to give the hosting company an asset.

They discuss whether enterprise software is going to become indistinguishable from mass end-user software. Because these are non-enterprise sw folks, they push against the idea.

Do these services create new silos? Stated answer: Nah! Real answer: Yeah, probably.


By the way, for now I’m going to tag posts as “supernova” and not “supernova2006” on the grounds that the systems that sort through tags should be able to sort by date. Could be a tragic error on my part. [Tags:]

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