dashboard - ReadWriteWeb http://www.readwriteweb.com/feeds/tag/dashboard en Copyright 2012 Richard MacManus readwriteweb@gmail.com Wed, 15 Feb 2012 07:00:00 -0800 http://www.sixapart.com/movabletype/?v=4.35-en http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss Netvibes Launches Ultimate News and Lifestyle Dashboard netvibes-logo.jpgIn late November, ReadWriteWeb asked the question, Can Netvibes pull off integration of real-time feeds into its existing dashboard product?. At the time, early testers were just gaining access to Wasabi beta. As of today the service will go live to the public concurrent with CEO Freddy Mini's presentation at the Le Web conference.

]]> In addition to a number of magazine-style themes, some of the features designed for the real-time web include:
Multipurpose Navigation: Users will enjoy the ability to read their feeds and insert widgets directly into the Wasabi home page.
Smart Reader: In addition to delivering users' RSS feeds, Netvibes Smart Reader lets users check their Twitter, Facebook, widget apps, notifications, podcast subscriptions, photos and notifications.
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Real-Time RSS:As promised, Netvibes' feed delivery engine updates with full PubSubHubBub support.
Publishing: In addition to being able to create more than 185,000 widgets, users can take advantage of the site's no-code push publishing and notification tools as well as free hosting. The company's premium product also allows users to monitor real-time brand conversations.
Drag and Follow Widgets: Facebook, Twitter and MySpace widgets allow users to drag hashtags or usernames out of existing widgets in order to instantly create new specialized widgets.

To test the product visit netvibes.com.
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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/netvibes_launches_ultimate_news_and_lifestyle_dash.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/netvibes_launches_ultimate_news_and_lifestyle_dash.php Start Pages Thu, 10 Dec 2009 08:56:00 -0800 Dana Oshiro
PeopleBrowsr Launches Custom App for SXSW PeopleBrowsr, the online dashboard which tracks updates across all your social networks, has just launched a version of their application designed for the folks who will be attending the SXSW Festival later this month. With the customized application now available at sxsw.peoplebrowsr.com, you can track parties, SXSW-related hash tags, and you can even see where people are tweeting from using Google Maps.

]]> South by Southwest (commonly abbreviated as just "SXSW") is a huge music, film, and web conference that takes place every year in Austin, Texas. A week-long event, the festival has become one of the top destinations for internet geeks thanks to its numerous panels and sessions on all things tech. It's also well known for its numerous parties...err...networking events, where like-minded people get to interact with each other face-to-face, out from behind their respective keyboards.

sxsw_peoplebrowsr.pngBut because of its massive size and scope, keeping up with all the activities and events at SXSW can be somewhat overwhelming, even for seasoned attendees. That's where the Peoplebrowsr application can help. With the special SXSW edition of this online dashboard, you have a customized portal that comes pre-configured with a number of features that attendees will surely love.

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Ten Reasons to Check Out SXSW.Peoplebrowsr.com

  1. You can view all conversations and content related to #SXSW on Twitter, Facebook, and other popular social networks in one dashboard.

  2. You can create Twitter groups (like you can in TweetDeck) to listen to a specific subset of people - like those attending SXSW for example.
  3. You can see all the SXSW parties in one master list without leaving your PeopleBrowsr dashboard.
  4. You can follow the buzz about the conference and parties - check out who's going where, what's cool, and what shouldn't be missed.
  5. You can find and follow new people and trends based on both popular and yet to be discovered hash tags such as #SXSW, #techset, #allhat, #bloglounge. This feature is especially useful for newcomers who may not know which hashtags are related to SXSW events.
  6. There's an embedded map for visually tracking where friends are tweeting while in Austin. This can help power the SXSW flash mob mentality made popular by last year's @garyvee (Gary Vaynerchuk) party by visually seeing where people are tweeting from during the conference and parties.
  7. You can check out the statistics and word clouds for the most popular tags and words used during the conference.
  8. You can learn more about the people attending the conference. For example, when you see an interesting tweet, you can click on that person to see their other IDs and profiles across the social web, including pictures and videos. And to find out if that person will be at a party, you can check the parties stream or perform a Twitter search (e.g. +party +Friday) in that person's stream.
  9. You can analyze Twitter activity by reviewing a number of integrated reports. PeopleBrowsr lets you keep track of activity such as who's re-tweeting you, who's re-tweeting your friends, who recently followed you, among many other things.
  10. You can share the results of Twitter searches you do in the application with your friends - and in just one click.

Bonus: The SXSW edition of PeopleBrowser also lets you spread something they call "PBLove," which is a feature they implemented for Valentine's Day. With this, you can share public but anonymous tweets of adoration for other festival attendees, secret-admirer style! That certainly allows for a nicer back channel than we've seen in previous years.

For more info on the features of sxsw.peoplebrowsr.com, check out the video below.


If the SXSW edition of Peoplebrowsr proves successful, the company plans to launch other customized editions of the application in the future.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/peoplebrowsr_launches_custom_app_for_sxsw.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/peoplebrowsr_launches_custom_app_for_sxsw.php Product Reviews Mon, 09 Mar 2009 10:40:32 -0800 Sarah Perez
Surchur Relaunches Their "Dashboard to the Now" Surchur, a web, blog, image, video, and social media search engine, has just relaunched their online dashboard. The company calls this an "update," but it's more like an overhaul of their earlier product. Launched back in spring of 2008, Surchur's original homepage was barely even worthy of a mention, much less of use. But today, the company's "dashboard to the now" delivers a well-designed and comprehensive view into the "real-time web" - that is, what's happening on the internet right now.

]]> About Surchur

The Surchur website isn't only a search engine with an empty box awaiting your queries. It also serves as a dashboard-style homepage where the latest web trends are tracked on an ongoing basis. When you first visit Surchur, the main page features trending topics on Yahoo Buzz, CNN, Google Trends, Twitter Search, and Technorati Popular. It's at-a-glance information about the conversations and news which are hot right now.

Links at the top of the page let you also click through to see the "Weekly Hots" and "Daily Hots," which track topics that have been popular in the recent past.

But the new Surchur isn't just a dashboard-style mashup of trend lists - it's also a search engine. If you're looking for all the news on a particular topic, you can enter your query into the box provided and then click "surch."  The engine delves into social media sites, pictures, blogs, news, video, and product searches. The only things it doesn't return are the static pages of the traditional web, as Google would.

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Performing a search directly from the search box delivers you to a dashboard where each section (social web, pictures, blogs, etc.) displays along with modules that feature the latest information from sites relevant in that niche. For example, the social web section displays modules that show the latest from Twitter, Digg, and Delicious. The Images section features flickr, Photobucket, and Pixsy. Blog Search shows Google Blog Search, Technorati, and IceRocket. You get the idea. However, you can delve into any one of these areas to see even more from those searches than what's displayed on the initial results page.

Also handy is the new "surchmeter" which gives the topic a ranking on both blogs and Twitter based on its current "hotness." For example, a search for the TV show "American Idol" (which aired last night in the U.S.) returned a blog ranking of "8" and a Twitter score of "9." Unfortunately, a search for the "Oscars" returned a "9" and "8" respectively, even though that event is long-gone in real-time web terms - it aired Sunday night. That system seems to need a bit of tweaking if it wants to really rank what's hot right now as opposed to what was hot a few days ago.

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In addition, Surchur provides a plethora of RSS feeds. Any searches on the site as well as the trending topics and previously hot items can be tracked via RSS. Every section and subsection you visit has a feed, so it's easy to subscribe to just the news you want to follow.

Why We Need This

There has been a lot of talk lately about how Twitter Search could become the next "Google killer," but we think that may be taking it a bit too far. Clearly, the real-time web is an important vertical to follow, but it's only a slice of the pie. The real impetus behind this ongoing debate is likely due to our deep-seated frustration with the fact that Google has not integrated a real-time web search vertical into their offerings. Instead, we're having to turn to other search engines - like search.twitter.com or FriendFeed search - to know what's happening now. Still, we have no doubt that a company as smart as Google is working on this problem, even if they're not telling us about it just yet. 

However, Google's delay to launch a real-time search vertical leaves the door wide open for other startups to deliver what's being missed. The speed with which news spreads today is moving us further away from a searchable web of ranked static pages and closer towards a web where news is posted and spread as fast as it can be typed.

Does Surchur Deliver?

The most important question when analyzing these potential new real-time engines is simply this: Are they fast enough? Sadly, the answer in Surchur's case is "No." A true real-time web engine wouldn't still be displaying results for things that happened last night on their dashboard this morning. Also, Surchur's dashboard for Twitter doesn't even match up with the trending topics found on the search.twitter.com homepage. That points to a delay between what is happening right now and when Surchur's web service is made aware of it. And that, essentially, kills our hopes that Surchur could be the new real-time engine of our dreams. 

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But if Surchur can close that gap - or if any other startup could do the same - the end result could be the next big thing in search engines. Until then, Surchur remains an innovative concept but one whose delivery isn't quite fast enough to meet our needs.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/surchur_relaunches_their_dashboard_to_the_now.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/surchur_relaunches_their_dashboard_to_the_now.php Search Thu, 26 Feb 2009 06:37:18 -0800 Sarah Perez