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October 2009 Archives

ReadWriteWeb Events Guide, 17 October 2009

By Andrew Lobo / October 17, 2009 2:06 PM / Comments

You'll find a few more great new events this week on the ReadWriteWeb events guide. You can download the entire event calendar in iCal format or import it into your Google Calendar. You can also import individual events using the link beside each entry. This events guide is a weekly feature here on ReadWriteWeb. We publish it every weekend, as good a time as any to review your conference plans.

Know of an event taking place that should appear here? Let us know in the comments below or contact us.

Devs Hack iPhone API for True Augmented Reality

By Marshall Kirkpatrick / October 16, 2009 2:55 PM / Comments

arapi.jpgAn international team of computer scientists has created software that lets anyone perform on-the-fly analysis of live streaming video on the iPhone. Used alongside existing methods of displaying data on top of the camera's view, this new functionality signals a fundamental change in the kinds of Augmented Reality (AR) that iPhone developers can create. Existing AR apps, like Yelp, Layar, Wikitude and others display data on top of a camera's view but don't actually analyze what the camera sees. This new development changes that.

The iPhone has a private API for analysis of live-streaming video but developers' requests that it be made accessible haven't been granted by Apple. The new software opening up access to that API was made freely available to anyone this morning by the team that built it.

The Web of Services: Machine-Accessible Services

By Alexander Korth / October 16, 2009 12:00 PM / Comments

In the last two posts in this series, we discussed the Web of data, which makes structured interlinked data sets machine-accessible, and the Web of identities, which makes data about people machine-accessible while addressing privacy and data volatility.

This time, we'll focus on the Web of services, which makes services accessible to and processable for machines. These Webs all have a semantic architecture in common and follow basic Web principles, such as being decentralized, modular, simple, addressable via URIs, and built for machines.

Keep Your Friends Organized: Twitter Expands Lists Beta

By Frederic Lardinois / October 16, 2009 10:16 AM / Comments

twitter_icon.jpgTwitter rolled out a limited beta of its new lists feature to a larger number of users late last night. With these new lists, Twitter users can now organize their friends into groups. By default, these lists are private, but one of the most interesting aspects of this new feature is that users can also make their lists public - something many Twitter users have been looking forward to for a long time.

How Safe are Facebook Applications?

By Sarah Perez / October 16, 2009 7:21 AM / Comments

Recently, Roger Thompson, chief research officer at security firm AVG, discovered over half a dozen Facebook applications that had been compromised by malicious hackers. Although the apps' reach was small with relatively few users being affected, Thompson was concerned because it was the first time he had seen apps themselves hacked as opposed to something like Facebook profile pages, a common target for the still-spreading Koobface worm.

While this incident alone wouldn't generate much excitement given the low-profile nature of the applications affected, it's not the only example of unsafe applications on Facebook. Another researcher just spent an entire month scouring Facebook apps for security vulnerabilities and what he found is disturbing: six of the hacked apps were in the top ten, 9700 applications were affected, and the potential victims totaled 218 million users.

Who's Ignoring Those iPhone Ads? Women.

By Sarah Perez / October 16, 2009 6:28 AM / Comments

According to mobile marketing firm Brand in Hand, female iPhone users are the worst demographic in terms of interacting with mobile ads on the iPhone. The company, whose high-profile clients include Procter & Gamble, General Mills and American Express, has run 60+ mobile ad campaigns over the past two years. During that time, they've had the opportunity to study the engagement of iPhone users with their ads. So why are women ignoring the ads? Apparently, they're too busy actually using the apps.

YouTube Launches Real-Time Discussion Search and Tracking

By Marshall Kirkpatrick / October 16, 2009 3:39 AM / Comments

Real-time information is red hot all around the web but it made a surprise appearance on YouTube tonight in the form of real-time search for comments, of all things. YouTube comments are notoriously not worth reading, but now you can search their full text...in real time. There are some very real, potential use-cases crying out for a tool like this. Companies in particular are likely to want to know what people are saying about their names in the comments on YouTube. You name your topic, though: it's now available for real-time search across viewer discussion.

Real-time search appears to have been rolled out very recently, with no mention, on this page. In addition to search results continuously updated ala Facebook's newsfeed ("3 new results") there's also a frequently-updated list of "trending topics" on the search page.

Cartoon: Conference Appreciations

By Rob Cottingham / October 15, 2009 8:50 PM / Comments

Rob Cottingham is cartoon-blogging the Real-Time Web Summit - keep checking back for updates!

Cartoon: Everyone Has an Opinion

By Rob Cottingham / October 15, 2009 8:30 PM / Comments

Rob Cottingham is cartoon-blogging the Real-Time Web Summit - keep checking back for updates!

Cartoon: Peace In Our Time

By Rob Cottingham / October 15, 2009 6:30 PM / Comments

Rob Cottingham is cartoon-blogging the Real-Time Web Summit - keep checking back for updates!

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