You've probably seen lots of services that put pop up windows on top of links in web pages - usually for advertising and often in unhelpful places on the page. Could something like that be done well, though? Serial entrepreneur Craig Barnes believes it can be, and he's been working on it for more than 9 years.
Barnes says his new service Panels.net gets reader engagement numbers above 10% - an astonishing number in advertising. He says that's because his Panels are genuinely useful. At first blush they strike us as a little awkward but the potential here is big. Well selected, up-to-the-minute info about any link we see online sounds like a great idea - if it works.
Panels.net requires one line of Javascript to be added to web pages. The service then ads a little icon to any link that goes to an "entity" - like a person or business. The links can be styled to your liking as a publisher, and when hovered over they produce a pop up "panel."

There's a site: search function for any domain in its panel, there's info pulled in from the Crunchbase database, there's a lot of information available in these little panels.
The variety of information is quite diverse and Barnes says what's served up is customized depending on what kind of entity you're looking at. You can see Panels in action over on Barnes' personal blog; the service will be rolled out to bloggers over the coming months.
This isn't a fly-by-night organization deciding to throw a handful of RSS feeds into a Javascript pop-up either. Craig Barnes is a four time CEO who started then sold for $140 million what's now one of the top handful of font management software companies in the world, Extensis, in 2001. He then served as the CEO for venture backed enterprise RSS company Attensa. Now he's out on his own, making hires and getting ready to launch a service for which neither the market nor the storage and delivery technology was prepared when he thought of it years ago.

As many of us found out with the recent launch of Google SearchWiki, adding symbols to a familiar, simple web page can be very disruptive. Ostensible Panels competitor Snap has faced years of criticism for their over-eager pop-ups.
We're not sure how Panels scores on obtrusiveness. Its popups are polite and relatively attractive, but the icons you have to click on to launch them are a little hard to swallow. It's a very fine line for services like this between being invisible and being used. We don't know what the solution is, but we do know it's a big issue.
Fortunately the usefulness is immediately apparent when you look at a Panels popup. If you're interested in an organization's web traffic, financial trends, recent mentions in the press - and many of us are - then for many links Panels will serve you well.
Barnes says that a signifigant amount of thought has been put into caching much of the information served up through Panels. That's smart and we hope it will make a big difference. When we tested the panels they were sometimes a little slow to respond and many of the display options just said "coming soon." We would need to see this resolved before we were to, for example, put Panels on our site.
There are some decisions that can be presumed in the user experience here that don't appear to be now. We need clicks to be kept to a minimum. If, for example, we've clicked on 3 Panels icons on a page and navigated to the website traffic numbers first for each of them - then we'd like to have the panel pop up and go immediately to the website traffic view. (Update: On second look, it appears this is done to some degree, at least the first level of navigation is repeated in subsequent Panels.)
The point is that the user experience needs to be as smooth as turning a box of cereal around to look right at its nutritional panel. Right now the user experience doesn't quite feel that easy.
It's early days, but we hope the company is prioritizing user experience. We suspect that forthcoming improvements in browser handling of Javascript will also help make Panels smoother to use.
Panels is a very good idea. If it can be executed upon well, and overcome the kinds of obstacles listed above, then we think this just-launched startup has as good a chance as any. We want it to work better than it does today, but we're sure it will.
Key information available about people and companies online could soon be at our fingertips at a moment's notice as we browse the web. That really is how it ought to be.
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Thanks for the post Marshall, if anyone has questions we are on twitter as @PanelsDotNet or getsatisfaction.
Ostensible Panels competitor Snap has faced years of criticism for their over-eager pop-ups.
Snap. Champion, Pop-Up Intrusion Hall of Shame.
Interesting article. While Panels does look impressive, I think that there isn't really something as an unobtrusive popup. It's like an unobtrusive person cutting in line.
Posted by: possible248
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November 28, 2008 4:53 PM
Provided they don't overdo it, only linking on items they can provide genuinely useful information about, I think it looks pretty promising.
I don't think popups are inherently obtrusive, certainly much less so than opening a new tab to get info, people have just become disenfranchised with them after enduring years of popup ads.
Panels seems to be very useful to bloggers displaying all info about blog stats,traffic and all in a pop-up windows it's a worthy try.
Great competition for Apture.com which I personally think has a great service. Too bad Apture has been mistreating early users and reviewers like me providing spotty service and no willingness to come out of his protected shell.
Too bad Panels is not yet out, or it would be a ntural to do a comparison between the two.
Their overlays go underneath flash objects when viewed in Vista/FF (but not in XP for some reason) We had the same problem when doing the overlays for our bookmarklet and it was quite the bugger to debug.
Overall looks like a promising service.
The biggest killer for me with all of these guys is that the popups are all triggered on a rollover.
This creates an undesired interaction when scrolling down a page with the mouse pointer in the page, triggering these painful things unintentionally and thereby disrupting a user's flow.
The company who moves the trigger event to on click might take a hit in usage stats but will probably take the lead in usage and adoption.