Archive for December 27th, 2007

Facebook improves Ajax support with FBJS LocalProxy

Written by on Thursday, December 27th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Facebook released FBJS as a way to do more than just the simple Mock Ajax that you could do before hand. It didn’t go as far as Caja (hopefully Facebook will work together on it), which seems to be the natural step wrt sandboxing code.

Today, they announced improved support for Ajax via a new feature, FBJS LocalProxy:

Many apps already use FBJS in innovative ways, and as part of this release we offer improved AJAX capabilities in FBJS. The new feature is a local proxy that allows you to make direct async requests back to your application server. This trick lets you to gain all the advantages of FBML without needing to use an embedded IFrame. To make this ability even more useful, we also now provide a DOM function setInnerXHTML that lets you to modify your canvas page by adding a string of HTML.

The more that we can do in our applications without having to jump into iframe land, the better.

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/207363771/facebook-improves-ajax-support-with-fbjs-localproxy

walmartclosed.jpg
Wal-Mart shut its movie download service on December 21st, but until today no one noticed.

The service was launched in February with all the major film studios providing content; at the time Michael wrote that it was an extremely crowded and competitive space however “Wal-mart will bail out of markets that they can’t dominate,” he was right. Wal-Mart’s Video Download service joins the TechCrunch Deadpool.

In related (and bizarre) news Wal-Mart has instead begun to offer search engine marketing services. Sam’s Club Online Services entices customers with the pitch “Advertise your website in Google with a pay-per-click package through us.” Pic below via Karl Ribas who first spotted it.

samclubonline1.jpg

Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/207326510/

With the emergence of cross-social-network developer platforms (first Google’s OpenSocial and then Bebo’s Facebook clone) comes the possibility for applications to connect people across social networks, thereby blurring the lines that designate where one social graph ends and another begins.

Out of the handful of applications on Bebo’s private (and soon-public) platform, one called Bunchball has earned the honor of becoming the first social network application to actually connect users of two social networks (Facebook and Bebo), and synchronously at that.

Bunchball consists of a set of Flash-based games: pool, arcade trivia, chess, sudoku, etc. When you initiate a game, you can choose to be matched with people from any social network that supports Bunchball (currently only Facebook and Bebo, but before long Friendster, Hi5, LinkedIn, MySpace, Ning, Oracle, Orkut, Plaxo, Salesforce.com, and Six Apart as well). You can also opt to just play people from within your current social network (Facebook in my case) or just your college, workplace, region, etc.

I don’t presume that it was very hard for the developers of Bunchball to match users up across social networks once they had established the application on both Facebook and Bebo. Nor do I have any reason to believe that it really made a difference, as far as cross-network interactivity goes, that these two social networks essentially share the same platform. What seems to have mattered most is that numerous social networks have begun to make themselves available to developers, a trend that will accelerate as OpenSocial rolls out more fully in 2008. As this happens, we will see many more applications connect users regardless of their chosen social network, simply because they can run the same applications in several social environments and they have no reason to wall themselves off from each within which they reside.

Furthermore, I wouldn’t be surprised to see this happen in more substantial ways than just matching people up for games. Third-party applications may end up substantially downplaying the importance of each particular social network as they replicate the same functionality across networks. This trend may emerge particularly strongly if the social networks themselves resist opening up their social graphs to other networks while users demand interoperability. Whose to say that profiles and lists themselves may not end up being managed by third-party applications that conform to open standards? It’s not inconceivable, especially if one expects the social networks to continue their rush to please developers by providing them with ever-greater accessibility and tools with which to work.

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/207295124/

2007 Had Its Share Of Internet Woes

Written by on Thursday, December 27th, 2007 in Ajax News.

2007 definitely felt like it had its share of Internet woes.

There was the mundane, such as Twitter’s frustrating downtime. And there were more dramatic moments, like when a truck slammed into a power transformer and brought down a significant part of the Internet. Through it all, Pingdom was there to quietly monitor when sites were live or not.

Today they summarized the major incidents on the Internet in 2007. In addition to the Twitter and Rackspace outages above, the report also mentions the multi-day Skype outage in August (it was Microsoft’s fault), the 365 Main outage in San Francisco, and other major Internet problems.

By the way, if you don’t recognize the image, it’s because you were never a Bloglines user. That guy, the Plumber, popped up whenever Bloglines was down, which was quite often back in 2005/2006. They may still have a lot of downtime, but we, along with a lot of other users, moved on to Google Reader last year.

Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/207142610/

Apple Tries To Patent A Way to Avoid Long Lines

Written by on Thursday, December 27th, 2007 in Ajax News.

apple-line.jpgAlready, people who own an iPhone belong to a certain club. But what if that club came with fringe benefits, like being able to avoid long lines at Starbucks and other stores? A recent patent application by Apple hints at a killer future feature that would let iPhone owners bypass long lines by placing orders at coffee shops and other retail outlets right from their phone. They would then be alerted via their mobile device when their order is ready. Apple’s head of hardware engineering Anthony Fadell is listed as the inventor. He states the problem Apple is trying to solve in the application:

Using a cell phone or other such device to remotely enter into a commercial transaction (such as food or drink ordering) is widespread and well understood. However, in order to initiate such a remote transaction using a cell phone, a user must be aware that a merchant of interest is nearby, must be aware of a list of available items for purchase by the merchant, must be aware of a price for each item, etc. Even in those cases where all the relevant knowledge is available and known, the user must then pay for the services or goods purchases. In some cases, the user must use a credit or debit card by repeating very sensitive information in a voice loud enough to be heard and understood over the phone, or enter the information manually if speaking is not an option. In some cases, if the merchant does not accept the particular payment method, the customer must pay using cash thereby eliminating most, if not all, of the perceived efficiencies of remotely ordering using the cell phone, PDA, media player, etc.

In any case, once the transaction is entered into, the customer order is then queued up in, typically, a first in first out order without distinguishing if the order was placed locally or remotely. In this way, a remote purchaser has only an approximate idea of a time to actually retrieve the order. This can result in an annoying wait in a long queue if the purchaser arrives before completion of the order. In the case of a food and/or drink purchase, a hot drink such as coffee is picked up in a tepid state if the purchaser arrives substantially after the ordered hot drink is ready for pickup.

Therefore, there is a need for improved approaches to process a remote order.

As frivolous as this may seem, what this points to is a larger opportunity for mobile devices to automate commerce in physical stores by connecting the consumer directly with a store’s order-processing system. If Apple is serious about this, it should consider implementing the service in its own Apple stores, where long lines are becoming increasingly common (see photo above).

Note that this is only a patent application. The patent may never be granted, and the idea here may never see the light of day—in an iPhone or any other Apple product. But mobile e-commerce will move in this direction one way or another, combining the convenience of online ordering with the immediacy of physical stores. What the patent application is silent on other than in vague terms is how such transactions will be paid for. Your iPhone or other mobile device would act not only as a mobile ordering system, but also as a mobile wallet.

Here I am speculating, but it could be tied to an existing credit card, your cell phone account, or a separate Apple account. Whoever controls that account, of course, would be in a position to collect any associated merchant transaction fees. Or Apple could waive such fees as an incentive for merchants to sign up for any such future service, since widespread adoption would make its iPhones and other mobile devices that much more desirable.

(Via Brian Caulfield at Forbes.com. Photo by Fleur-Design.)

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/207132636/

Amazon Adds Warner Music to DRM-Free Roster

Written by on Thursday, December 27th, 2007 in Ajax News.

amazonmp3-logo.pngThe DRM-free music movement just gained a new convert from one of the major labels. Warner Music Group is now selling songs from its digital catalog (Led Zeppelin, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Green Day) on Amazon’s DRM-free digital music store, joining EMI, Universal Music Group, and about 33,000 independent labels. That brings Amazon’s total digital music catalog up to 2.9 million songs. Apple’s iTunes, in contrast, sells more than 6 million tracks, but offers DRM-free songs only from EMI.

By going with Amazon first on DRM-free tunes, EMI is snubbing Apple much like Universal Music Group did earlier in the year. The music labels don’t like the power Apple has gained over them and seem to be supporting Amazon and other digital distribution outlets in an attempt to gain the upper hand once again. Amazon allows variable pricing (Apple does not), although most tracks sell for $0.89 to $0.99. And Apple has had to follow Amazon on the pricing of DRM-free tracks. When it launched with EMI last April, Apple tried to price the tracks at a 30 percent premium to its copyright-protected music, trying to justify the move by offering higher-fidelity files than regular MP3s. The strange pricing left consumers scratching their heads, and once Amazon introduced the same tracks without DRM in high-bitrate MP3 form, Apple had to match the price.

As DRM-free music, which does not come with all the annoying and ineffectual restrictions of copyright-protected tunes, becomes more popular, you can expect the labels to use their acquiescence as a bargaining chip with Apple. The annual MacWorld conference later this month would be an ideal time for Apple to announce more DRM-free partners, but you don’t hear a lot about that in the Apple rumor mill.

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/207078847/

Ajatus: Distributed CMS using CouchDB

Written by on Thursday, December 27th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Ajatus is a new distributed CRM that “runs as a local Ajax web application on your own computer. It uses the CouchDb object database for data storage and enjoys a wide range of plug-in and replication possibilities.”

The Ajax side of the house uses jQuery for fun and profit.

It is a lot of fun to see people get excited and creative around CouchDb, which recently had the first major release featuring:

  • a REST API using JSON instead of XML for data transport,
  • a JavaScript view engine based on Mozilla Spidermonkey,
  • a GNU Autotools build system supporting most POSIX systems (Noah Slater) ,
  • a built-in administration interface (Christopher Lenz),
  • experimental fulltext search with Lucene (Jan Lehnardt) and
  • countless tweeks, enhancements and other small refinements.

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/207032909/ajatus-distributed-cms-using-couchdb

Interviewed on GWT, Gears, Java, and JavaScript

Written by on Thursday, December 27th, 2007 in Ajax News.

Reposted from my blog.

I had the pleasure of finally meeting Didier Girard. I seem to run across Didier’s work every week or so, but for some reason we haven’t had a chance to meet face to face, until JavaPolis.

Didier sat down with me to talk about GWT, Gears, Java, and JavaScript, and I gave my honest opinions.

You can listen to my ramblings below. Let me know if you have any thoughts on opinions!

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/207003292/interviewed-on-gwt-gears-java-and-javascript

jQuery Glider Component

Written by on Thursday, December 27th, 2007 in Ajax News.

The nice folks over at Dynamic Drive have created a new jQuery plugin that lets you turn ordinary pieces of HTML content on your page into an interactive, “glide in” slideshow, with several
configurable options:

This script lets you painlessly showcase new or featured contents on your page, by turning ordinary pieces of HTML content into an interactive, “glide in” slideshow. For the ultimate in the
ability to customize its look, the pagination links are also ordinary links that you define on the page, but with special CSS class names inserted when it should perform a certain task (ie: “toc” class if it’s a pagination link). This means the pagination links can be styled and arranged any way you like. The script enlists the help of the jQuery library for its engine. Lets see a rundown of the script’s features now:

  • Both the contents to show as part of the glider plus the pagination links used to toggle them
    are created from ordinary HTML content on the page. The pagination links can
    be styled, arranged, even selectively removed anyway you like.
  • Pagination interface is gently faded into view.
  • Supports two different display modes- “manual” and “slideshow.”
    In slideshow mode, the glider automatically rotates the contents until the user
    explicitly clicks on one of the pagination links to view a particular content.
  • With slideshow mode, specify optional number of cycles glider should go
    through in slideshow mode before it stops.
  • Ability to configure the “glide in” duration (in milliseconds), such as 1
    second, 600 milliseconds etc.
  • Optional persistence feature to remember and recall the last content
    viewed by the user when they return to the page within the same browser
    session (session only cookies).
  • Multiple Featured Content Sliders per page supported.

The site has all of the details for setting up the content with simple CSS classes, init script, and such.

jQuery Glider

Source: Ajaxian
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ajaxian/~3/206956921/jquery-glider-component

GPhone To Debut In February?

Written by on Thursday, December 27th, 2007 in Ajax News.

androidphone.jpgGoogle powered phones could be debuted as soon as February, according to speculation by APC.

It’s an interesting exercise in drawing the dots together to get to a completely unsupported conclusion, but there are some interesting facts APC has reported that are worth taking a look at:

You can bet that if Google’s handset partners lift the covers on their Android phones during the Mobile World Congress expo, which kicks off on February 11th in Barcelona - or if Google itself trots out a flock of phones to impress this annual powerhouse gathering of the global mobile industry (the company has booked two stands on the expo floor) - that these will be shiny snazzy models endowed with a very high ‘cool’ factor.

The emphasis is mine but it’s the key line: why does Google require two stands at a mobile conference?

There is some logic in the conclusion; it would be an ideal time for Google, manufacturers, or both to show off Google powered mobile phones, but still this is awfully quick, despite the shot recently of a GPhone in the wild. In 7 weeks we’ll find out one way or the other.

(image credit: Gizmodo)

Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.

Source: TechCrunch
Original Article: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/206893853/



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