Memolane, a Personal History Timeline Tool, is Beautiful & Wonderful

Posted by magician | Posted in Web | Posted on 21-01-2011

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What did you do on your last birthday, do you remember the details? I just transported myself back in time to my last birthday, thanks to the Tweets, Facebook messages, Foursquare check-ins and Flickr photos I posted that day, displayed on an attractive timeline from Memolane. Memolane is a venture-funded startup that hasn’t opened to the public yet, but if you look around online you can find some invite codes that are still valid. This is really cool stuff.

The service makes it easy to scroll through your personal history, or the history of your friends who use it, and see a wide variety of social media activity data all bound together by time. Unfortunately, some of the dates were a day off in my imported information, but I could figure it out easily enough. Maybe it’s an international time-zone thing, I don’t know.

The history got a little spotty once I went back several years in the timeline (!) but it was already much better than nothing.

Memolane raised $2 million this Fall from August Capital and Atomico, the venture firm run by Skype founders Niklas Zennstrm and Janus Friis, according to coverage by Jason Kincaid on TechCrunch. The service was brought to my attention by Bryan Lee.

I can’t get enough of stuff like this. I can’t wait until I get the music history feature working. Talk about a cool, accessible, example of value being built on top of user activity data. This is just the beginning of course.

If you’re unable to find an invite code for Memolane, perhaps its founders will show up here and provide some. Otherwise, I imagine the service will launch to the public soon. It looks good so far.

Hopefully an iPad version of this will be available, too. It looks like something made for the iPad.

See also Rememble, a similar looking service, and semi-related sites Dipity, MyTimelines and XTimeline.

Below, Robert Scoble recently did a 30 minute interview with the team behind Memolane, if you’re interested in taking a more in-depth look behind the scenes.

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Adobe unveils Connect 8 Web and videconferencing tool set

Posted by magician | Posted in Technology | Posted on 01-11-2010

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Adobe unveils Connect 8 Web and videconferencing tool set
Computerworld – Adobe Systems today unveiled Adobe Connect 8, a Web conferencing tool that supports videoconferencing on desktops, in conference rooms and most mobile devices.

Read more on Computerworld

First Look at SnapGroups: A Delightful Tool For Lightweight Discussion

Posted by magician | Posted in Web | Posted on 09-03-2010

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Mark Fletcher builds software, that’s just what he does. He may have sold the system that became Yahoo Groups for $400 million, and then made millions selling Bloglines to Ask.com as well, but that doesn’t mean he’s going to stop making software. And it’s not just any software he makes, either. Those two projects changed millions of peoples’ lives.

Fletcher will unveil his newest creation, a lightweight group communication tool called SnapGroups. You probably going to like it a lot: it’s easy, it’s clear, it’s got good social design and it’s real time. Check out the screenshots below.

SnapGroups makes it really easy to create a group discussion around a particular topic, invite people, set variable privacy controls and then participate in that conversation as part of a whole “newsfeed” style stream of updates from all your various groups in one place. Fresh comments, likes and dislikes get pushed to your browser live using a home-made bit of AJAX and the whole thing couldn’t be much simpler. It’s a lot of fun to use, in fact.

Fletcher says this is only the beginning, that all kinds of features are still to come, but he’s focused on the basics for now. He started working on the site in October and says his favorite part of the project was “learning about the new technologies that have sprung up in the past couple years.” “The various databases that have come out recently are great,” he told us. “I’m using Mongo, but there are many interesting projects now.” The core of the site is written in C++.

Fletcher says SnapGroups will go live tomorrow morning. You should try it out when it does. Invites to groups will no doubt be flying around Twitter and Facebook. It may very well become something you want to use regularly. Hopefully there will be a way to export your conversations easily. Fletcher is a pretty straightforward guy and will probably implement just about anything that enough people ask for and that isn’t too hard to do.

Mark Fletcher has a habit of building relatively simple things, like the first major email list system and the first popular RSS reader, that end up being a defining player in the rise of a new era online. Simple, real-time group communication? Not at all hard to imagine that being a big new thing as well.

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