personal - ReadWriteWeb http://www.readwriteweb.com/feeds/tag/personal en Copyright 2009 Richard MacManus readwriteweb@gmail.com Sun, 22 Nov 2009 10:30:40 -0800 http://www.sixapart.com/movabletype/?v=4.23-en http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss Now Share Anything From Netvibes Via Facebook Connect, Twitter Netvibes, one of the many personalized homepage products available today, has just announced a new feature which allows users to share anything from their Netvibes pages - not just tabs, but also articles, widgets, and RSS feeds. This new feature allows those items to be shared via integration with two of the most popular social networks: Twitter and Facebook, the latter being powered by Facebook Connect. What's not to love? As it turns out, based on the comments found on the Netvibes blog, users are not happy about this change.

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]]> If you want to publish an article, widget, or a tab to your public profiles on either Twitter or Facebook as well as on Netvibes' own Activities section, that's now easy to do thanks to the new "Share" link found on both widgets and tabs.

The first time you use this feature, you have to authenticate with each of the social networks. Once configured, links are published to your Facebook News Feed and to your Twitter stream. (Note: Facebook Connect only works on Firefox at present). An option to email items instead is also provided.

The individual articles found in RSS feeds also have a sharing option which is activated by clicking on a yellow star next to the word "share." This feature lets you save articles with an optional note for later reading . The saved articles are placed in your private activities section.

It is this last feature that has Netvibes' users up in arms. Because the star and link reside on a separate line beneath the article headline and introductory text, it takes up valuable screen real estate which impacts the number of entries which can be displayed on a page. Out of 26 some comments (at time of writing) on the Netvibes blog, a surprising majority of them (25) were against the yellow star for this very reason. Everyone was requesting that this feature be optional, so they could shut it off.

Although 25 people aren't the entire Netvibes user base, they are a good representative of the most enthusiastic of Netvibes users - the ones who take the time to read and respond to the company blog entries. In this case, we think they may have a point. Hopefully Netvibes will take this into consideration and make some tweaks.

However, the user outrage issue shouldn't overshadow the big news of the day: a Facebook Connect sighting in the wild! We just love those. After Netvibes fixes the above issue, the new sharing features are likely to become popular ways to make the entire Netvibes experience more social and fun.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/now_share_anything_from_netvibes_via_facebook_and_twitter.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/now_share_anything_from_netvibes_via_facebook_and_twitter.php Products Fri, 14 Nov 2008 07:06:31 -0800 Sarah Perez
Memiary: Save Your Life From the Oblivion of Forgetfulness Memiarylogo.jpgI don't remember what I did last Monday, do you? I'd have to think pretty hard to remember what I did even on my last birthday, and that was only two weeks ago. That's depressing.

Enter Memiary, a startlingly simple diary service that prompts you to enter up to five sentence fragments about what you did today and lets you look back by date at what you did in the past. It's really simple, from the gracefully implemented account creation process to the AJAX item editing. I've bookmarked it and am going to try to fill it out daily for awhile; I'd sure like to be able to look back at any given day in my life and remember what happened. This is so simple I might actually use it.

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Memiary is a weekend creation from Sid Yadav, long-time app reviewer at the blog Rev2.org. Yadav wrote a good post about the process of creating the service, how fulfilling it was and how proud his first user (mom) was of him.

These kinds of projects can go well, or not. We wrote about the relaunch of Diary.com last month, where private diaries are now combined with "lifestream" aggregation of activity from around the web. That site claims 11k diaries have been created, a number lower than what you'd think they could have managed with that URL and no effort at all.

Twitter's not made for this kind of thing, either. That company gives and takes away access to users' own archives as it suits their scaling needs and people tend to send more messages in a day than is appropriate as a personal history.

Even more simple could be the way to go. That's what I'd like, I realize now, after checking out Memiary. Hopefully Memiary's Yadav will implement a simple XML data-export option so I don't have to resent the control he holds over my life, trapped in his website. I'd also like to be able to enter more characters per line than is currently allowed. Simple is good but so are complete sentences. I would also like a reminder to make my entries - for me that would work well as an IM at 5:00 PM.

Little services like this might not turn the world upside down, they might not take markets by storm or get acquired for tens of millions of dollars - but they can make a difference in the lives of the people who use them. Isn't that really why most of us are here on the internet, anyway?

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/memiary_save_your_life_from_th.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/memiary_save_your_life_from_th.php Products Mon, 27 Oct 2008 10:47:15 -0800 Marshall Kirkpatrick