Stan James — guy from outfoxed.com is developer, that outfoxed is about people getting
trusted information from people they trust.
diffreence between explicit and implicit information gathering
where do you spend your time? that some places you spend the most time may not be bookmarked or show up in other ways of gathering attention
that servers/services have to be attention trust compliant
sending your data to a service is not mandatory
lot of discussion what attention.xml is and is not and what the foundation does and does not do.
the a variety of groups and services already capture attention, this
gives the user a way of captureing their own "attention" and doing something with it.
that this is related to but separate from attention.xml.
some confusion over what data is actually collected. What happens if there's PII in the URL being recorded?
basically, the gyst is this: record the clickstream of a user, whatever that may entail, and make it available to data providers / processors
what problem does this solve?
no discussion about privacy implications
LaunchPad
13 companies talk up their products and prospects. Each had six minutes to make their pitch.
Socialtext — enterprise wiki. built on open source, releasing code as open source.
Rollyo, Dave Pell — roll your own sarch engine. Can create a site specific search, offer that as something as others can use to search.
Joyent, Inc. , David Young — web based office for small groups. email, calendar, data sharing. all Ajax based.
Bunchball, Rajat Paharia — shared infrastructure for social applications built around MacroMedia Flash
RealTravel, Ken Leeder — travel web site built around Ajax / web 2.0 concepts. Users can create journals of travels, users can search such journals, or conduct general search an duse journalled content to amplify or illuminate search results
KnowNow, Ron Rasmussen — instant notification of any feed based content via desktop (windows?) application
Orb, Ian McCarthy — access data on home systems via any remote client (er, where any is a windows client). Also X10 connectivity to home automation systems
Wink, Michael Tanne — "People Powered Search". Tag sites of interest, rate their relevance to your search query, block irrelevant or spam sites. Use tags to rank pages (they have trademarked the term "TagMark")
Allpeers Matthew Gertner — Web 2.0 development platform. Built atop Firefox. Aggregation of metadata (relevant to earlier SXIP and attentiontrust discussions) for use on/with web sites and applications, web page annotation tool (remember ThirdVoice?)
Flock, Bart Decrem — social browser, new browser built around Mozilla platform.
PubSub Bob Wyman — Interestingly, they talked not about PubSub but about microformats and structured blogging. Trying to get people to use structured blogging, which PubSub in turn uses to improve various results and recommendations
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web2.0 notes day 1, afternoon (October 2005)
h2. AttentionTrust.org board meeting
* Stan James — guy from outfoxed.com is developer, that outfoxed is about people getting
trusted information from people they trust.
* diffreence between explicit and implicit information gathering
* where do you spend your time? that some places you spend the most time may not be bookmarked or show up in other ways of gathering attention
* that servers/services have to be attention trust compliant
* sending your data to a service is not mandatory
* lot of discussion what attention.xml is and is not and what the foundation does and does not do.
* the a variety of groups and services already capture attention, this
gives the user a way of captureing their own "attention" and doing something with it.
* rojo networks an early partner for attentiontrust
* collecting title, url, cookie sent, cookie set, http response code,
* that this is related to but separate from attention.xml.
* some confusion over what data is actually collected. What happens if there's PII in the URL being recorded?
* basically, the gyst is this: record the clickstream of a user, whatever that may entail, and make it available to data providers / processors
* what problem does this solve?
* no discussion about privacy implications