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OpenSocial Roundup

3 min read

 At hi5 we've been busy busy busy getting OpenSocial up and running.  We released our developer sandbox, and are rapidly implementing features.  So check out the following URLs

Campfire One Highlights: Introducing OpenSocial


Also, here's a copy of my response to Tim O'Reilly's blog post:

OpenSocial: It's the data, stupid

Hi folks,

Good comments all around. However I'd like to posit that data access is _not_ the problem. We've had universal standards for years now with little uptake. Tribe.net, Typepad, LiveJournal and others have supported FOAF for many, many years, which encompasses the OpenSocial Person and Friends APIs. Not much has come of that -- there isn't a large enough base there to get people interested.

Now you have a broad industry consensus on a single way to provide all of the above plus activity stream data. You have a rich client platform that allows you to crack open that data and use it in interesting ways, and finally you have a common standard for social networks to interact with each other based on the REST api.

So Patrick's statement at the Web 2.0 Expo is correct, a app running inside a container only allows you to see what that container shows you. However that does not mean that a container could not contain friend references to external social networks via it's own federation mechanism. Movable Type 4.0 has shown that you can support any OpenID login in a single system, there's no reason to believe that social networks could not leverage OAuth to do the same.

And here's a final point to consider -- you have Myspace opening up to developers. That's huge. That alone is going to draw more developer attention to this problem than much of the oh-so academic discussions of the past few years.

I suggest people that _want_ OpenSocial to solve all the social graph ills get involved on the API mailing list and make sure that those elements are addressed as OpenSocial evolves.

There's a tremendous amount of momentum. Let's not waste this chance.

 

11/1/07

1 min read

 

11/1/07

1 min read

 

ILike at Campfire One

1 min read

In hi5, Orkut, and Ning!

 

Suggestions

1 min read

This has got to be a bug....

Dear Amazon.com Customer,

We've noticed that customers who have purchased or rated White Noise Critical: Text and Criticism (Viking Critical Library) by Don DeLillo have also purchased Caught in the Machinery: Workplace Accidents and Injured Workers in Nineteenth-Century Britain by Jamie Bronstein. For this reason, you might like to know that Caught in the Machinery: Workplace Accidents and Injured Workers in Nineteenth-Century Britain will be released on October 10, 2007.  You can pre-order yours by following the link below.

Caught in the Machinery: Workplace Accidents and Injured Workers in Nineteenth-Century Britain
Jamie Bronstein
Price:    $55.00
Release Date: October 10, 2007

 

Found in Hi5 Lunch Room

1 min read




Update:  On the back we find the fine, fine web site http://www.rapsnacks.com/ (Enter if you dare!) and a bio of Romeo, a rapper I have never heard of, but my colleage Brett tells me was once a featured artist on Hi5.



 

Free WiFi in San Francisco

1 min read

Meraki is building a free mesh network in San Francisco.  This is probably the best hope for getting this type of service in the city now that the Google/Earthlink deal fell apart.

Join up!

Go to http://sf.meraki.net and help build the network.  When the router comes in I'll have 7th and Howard covered with 1Mbps of donated bandwidth.

 

Widgets, APIs and more

2 min read

I'm happy to announce that Hi5 has Widget support.  Yes, I know that this is soooo last year. However there's a twist that makes it better.

We worked closely with Rock You and Slide to integrate tightly with our site, using open standards wherever possible.  For example, for slideshows we created Atom Feeds for each photo album, and a feed-of-albums feed for the list of all albums.  And when it came time to share profile information for horoscopes (birthday) and languages spoken we used FOAF.  Thus we get partners to adopt open standards, plus the work we did for them is usable by everyone. 

The only tricky part was authentication and authorization.  Right now it's using our own AuthToken implementation, but it could probably be done in a better way.  I looked into OpenID as a mechanism, but's way too end-user centric for this type of thing.

Coming soon we should have full Atom endpoints (both in/out with WSSE auth), OpenID provider, and a few other standards based things like XMPP vCard support.  All of this is being done with an Web Services Aspect Oriented toolkit called Enunciate, which has made writing these services a very enjoyable experience.

 

Peruvian Earthquake

1 min read

Earthquake in Peru, logins drop immediately.  Hope everyone is safe....


 

Got yer back 6A

1 min read

So I've spent a good chunk of today defending Six Apart from the cheap shots being leveled at them today.  I won't link to them, they don't deserve the pagerank.

I'm particularly angered at the audacity of the bald-faced lies in some comments.

I may not be employed at Six Apart today, but I put my heart and soul into building it.  I won't let a bunch of hacks harm the people still there.  So, if you see anyone anywhere putting the hurt on Six Apart let me know.  I'll use discourse, reason and wit to set the record straight.