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Calais Gets a Wordpress Plugin

Written by Josh Catone / April 15, 2008 11:25 AM / 5 Comments

Open Calais, a semantic markup API from Reuters that we've written about on ReadWriteWeb before, has finally gotten the Wordpress plugin it has been looking for since January, when it started a bounty program seeking one. The new plugins come from developer Dan Grossman and represent one of the first public-facing applications of the API (as opposed to private uses like that of the Powerhouse Museum).

As we reported in March, even with a $5000 bounty, Calais didn't receive much of a response. "Unfortunately - and unexpectedly - we haven't seen any reasonable applications for the bounty process so we'll most likely be contracting for the development of the WordPress plugin," wrote Reuters' Tom Tague at the time. We speculated then that the relatively small size of the bounty may have been the issue. However, Grossman's plugins took just "a few hours" to complete, and though they don't technically meet all of the bounty requirements (they don't do tag clouds or have GUIDs om the RSS items), Grossman estimates that "it'd take only a few hours more to have met all the bounty conditions."

Grossman's plugins, which are available as an auto tagger and an archive tagger (to go back and tag old posts), received over 500 downloads in the first two days. The plugins work by sending post text to Calais and retrieving a list of suggested tags. The plugins rely on an Open Calais PHP class, also written by Grossman. Eventually, the plugins will be released under a Creative Commons license. Grossman tells us he's waiting until the next Calais feature update, scheduled for May 1st, before adding any more features to his plugins.

As we've noted, because of Calais' roots as Clearforest the rules it applies while parsing text are biased toward the language of business. That means that business or tech bloggers will likely find more utility in Calais for the time being. If you're writing about Fortune 500 companies, the Calais Wordpress Auto Tagger plugin might be very useful, but if you routinely write about sewing teddy bears, though, its usefulness might be dubious.

Unfortunately for Grossman, the application deadline for the $5000 bounty passed in March and Reuters has since farmed out the work of creating a Wordpress plugin to a commercial firm. Though work on that plugin continues, we're told that people at Calais have expressed interested in working with Grossman on future Calais-related projects. Open Calais is one of the most interesting new semantic APIs, and we're keen to see developers finally start to embrace it and make some useful mashups.


Comments

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  1. Looks like a Zemanta http://www.zemanta.com/ clone to me. That doesn't mean it is bad. :)

    Posted by: Jens | April 15, 2008 11:43 AM



  2. Lately I've been playing around with the PHP class that Dan released for Open Calais. It relieves you of most of the work of manually tagging long entries.

    What I'm really interested in though is finding out what other uses people have found for it.

    As Tom pointed out to me, they're using it at The Powerhouse Museum in Syndney [ http://www.powerhousemuseum.com ] to automatically tag and provide a few alternative searching methods for their users.

    Posted by: Joey | April 15, 2008 12:16 PM



  3. s/Syndney/Sydney

    Posted by: Joey | April 15, 2008 12:17 PM



  4. Tom from the Calais team here.

    We love it. We love it a lot. Dan's done a great job of getting a really useful tool out the door - I'm sure we'll see some new and innovative features in it over time.

    Josh - you're right about Teddy Bear blogs. This isn't where Calais is going to excel but some domain-independent things like people, places, organizations, companies will perform just as well whether you're writing about Teddy bears or the merger of corporate titans. We never even thought about tagging museum collections - but that is working out really well as a quick way to add value to historical content.

    With R2 of Calais - which will go public on 5 May - you'll also see some steps outside our comfort zone of the business domain into the areas of music, entertainment and sports. Just a start - but we'll continue broadening the capabilities every single month. In that release you'll also see another CMS platform plugin that will be very very cool - but we're not going to talk about it yet.

    Dan - Congratulations! We've seen hundreds and hundreds of API registrations over the last week to use your plugin. You've clearly struck a chord with this tool. Keep it up.

    Posted by: Tom Tague | April 15, 2008 12:45 PM



  5. Thanks http://www.trword.net

    Posted by: TrWord | April 23, 2008 7:17 AM



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