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Web 2.0 Central » archive for April, 2006



 Kaboodle Raises $3M

  • April 19th, 2006
  • 11:47 pm

Kaboodle is a site for collecting, sharing and discovering information on the web. It’s part social bookmarking, part wishlist and part organizer.

Users simply add a links to Kaboodle for things they are interested in. So for example if you’re planning a trip, you can add potential hotels, attractions or events to your Kaboodle page to manage it all in one place. Kaboodle then intelligently extracts the pertinent information and images from the contents and allows you and the community to rate and comment on them.

Their recently added Amazon Wishlist importer allows you with one click to import your wishlist. Because you can choose who you share your Kaboodle pages with you can restrict the access to the list to just your family and friends.

I had breakfast with Manish a few months back when I was in the Valley and he’s got an exciting vision for Kaboodle. Their recent Series A financing should help Kaboodle grow.

Via: Yahoo News, GigaOM, Silicon Beat


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 Social Picks - Stock Tracking

  • April 19th, 2006
  • 11:07 pm

Social Picks is a nice looking stock tracking application that was born in Vancouver, Canada. It now has offices in Vancouver and in the Silicon Valley. I’m frustrated with some changes made at Stockhouse and this service may be my replacement.

It’s got a nice community aspect by allowing you to see the performance of other users of the system. It features tagging to interrelate the data and allows you to both find and post news about the companies you’re watching.

A couple features I’d like to see are:

  • Allow you to track the # of shares owned. (privately outside the community aspect.)
  • Allow you to be bearish OR bullish on a stock.
  • Allow you to keep certain stocks in your portfolio private.

The interface is very clean and usable and I’ll be interested to see how the community aspects of seeing other peoples watchlists help me find new and interesting stocks to invest in.

First 5 comments on this post with an email address get an invite.


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 Microsoft Technology Summit 2006

  • April 16th, 2006
  • 11:19 pm

Sorry for the lack of posts of late. Life and too much travel are getting in the way.

Last week, Microsoft flew me out to Seattle for their Microsoft Technology Summit(MTS). The MTS is an event where 50 people who range from tolerating to pure distain for Microsoft come and hear what Microsoft is up to and tell Microsoft where they suck. This is a second annual event for Microsoft and this year they made it more international with people from Japan India, Russia and even Canada. Approximately 1/2 in the room were Java oriented and a sprinkling of an array of other open source development environments. I’m certain there were more laptops in the room from Apple than any other brand.

Microsoft brought in a varied array of speakers and tried to avoid PPT’s as much as possible and get right into demos and conversations. Rick Rashid from Microsoft Research spoke about about all the research stuff coming out of Microsoft. He spoke of the “Minority Report” mapping app and the video was cool. Cooler yet was our visit to the Microsoft Museum and getting to actually PLAY with it. Basically take a mapping application and use your hands to navigate and zoom in/out on the map. It was a fun experience and felt really natural. It uses three cameras behind the screen and worked incredibly well. We all zoomed into our houses. Cool!

Don Box was energetic and passionate about everything Microsoft. He made had us help him make a laundry list of questions about what Microsoft was doing wrong. He was very entertaining. Scott Guthrie gave a great session on ASP.NET & Atlas which I’ll detail a bit more in an upcoming post. Sanjay Parthasarathy was good and the Info Card stuff was interesting. Jim Gray from Microsoft Research talked a lot about Terra Server and Microsoft’s desire to solve big problems. It was great of Jim to stick around for lunch and chatted with us on an array of topics. Microsoft even threw in a bonus session based on our feedback discussing the Microsoft Office XML format which is intended to open up the Office format.

I wasn’t the only one in the room pressing Chris Wilson of the IE7 team to adopt Firefox’s XPI as the standard for extending IE7 or IE8. I was going to bring up the discussion and someone else beat me to it.

The event was well organized and it was an honor to be among the many attendees. Microsoft brought out some great people to present and interact with. It will be interesting to see what Microsoft does with our feedback.

I have more insights from the event coming in a post that I’m still working on… coming soon.


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 Lazybase - Online Database

  • April 2nd, 2006
  • 10:10 pm

Lazybase is a new entrant in the Web 2.0 database field. Lazybase allows you to quickly create a database to manage tidbits of data.

As regular readers are aware, I’m quite a fan of Dabble DB and I think Lazybase adds something new to this market. Lazybase certainly doesn’t have the sophistication of Dabble DB, however it makes up for it in simplicity.

A couple of nice features I like particularly are:

  • Embed your database results in any website.
  • Create a bookmarklet that allows you to enter data into Lazybase without having to navigate to Lazybase first.
Additional permissions and and API would be the first things I’d like to see. If they can maintain their simplicity as they add new features, I think Lazybase could be quite handy.

via: Kiwiobes


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