• On UrbanBaby: Who decides whether to circumcise?
June 10, 2009 1:01 PM PDT

HP's Friendlee: Stalk and rate your friends

by Rich Trenholm
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 3 comments
Friendlee

Hewlett-Packard, maker of printers and other stuff that sits in your office not being terribly interesting, is working on an intelligent social-network application for your mobile phone, called Friendlee.

Friendlee keeps track of who you interact with the most, and organizes your friends list in that order. Status updates show what those contacts are up to, as well as the local time and whether their phone is on, off, or set to silent. You'll even be able to see where your contacts are, similar to Google Latitude. You, like your contacts, will be able to control who can see your information. The idea puts us in mind of Xobni, an e-mail plug-in that shows all sorts of fascinating--i.e. useless--stats about your e-mail contacts.

A BlackBerry prototype of Friendlee was previewed at this year's Wireless Enterprise Symposium, and the app is currently being tested at HP's Palo Alto, Calif., social computing lab, according to the BBC. The research team, headed by Professor Bernardo Huberman, analyzed interaction via Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter, and came to the conclusion that your phone is more interested in direct, reciprocal contact than building a giant circle of friends. We could have told you that--can we have a research grant to mess about on Twitter as well, please?

Huberman and friends will present the app at the Mobile HCI conference in Bonn, Germany, in mid-September. Friendlee currently runs on Windows Mobile and Google Android. One of the most interesting-looking features is a recommendation engine that lets your close contacts recommend and give advice on businesses and people. Yes, people, "both socially and professionally." Now that sounds like fun.

(Source: Crave UK)

Recent posts from Crave
Lenovo announces Skylight smartbook, smaller than a Netbook
Lenovo adds swivel and touch to its next-gen Atom Netbook
Lenovo announces slim, trim all-in-one PC
Digital City 64: the big CES preview
Lenovo meshes tablet and Netbook in one device: IdeaPad U1 Hybrid Notebook
Can new ThinkPads keep their Edge? ThinkPad Edge 13-inch First Take
Blackfire Research to launch Wi-Fi speakers for cell phones, computers
Helium HDBT-990 is no watch phone
Add a Comment (Log in or register) (3 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
by eli42291 June 10, 2009 4:02 PM PDT
Hehe I wonder if they noticed that they have a Blackberry Storm running Android OS.
Reply to this comment
by barronfujimoto June 11, 2009 3:53 PM PDT
haha I thought it looked familiar. Had to glance at my G1 just to make sure.
Reply to this comment
by eli42291 June 12, 2009 1:07 AM PDT
Yay someone replied!
Reply to this comment
(3 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
advertisement

About Crave

The name says it all. Crave is our blog about gorgeous gadgets and other crushworthy stuff. If you would like to contact Crave with a tip or comment, please write to: crave@cnet.com

Add this feed to your online news reader

Crave topics

Five New Year's resolutions for Google

Stakes are high as Google attempts to maintain one of the Internet's greatest cash machines while pushing into new and risky markets.
• Android event set for Jan. 5

For eBay sellers, a holiday hamster hangover

The gift frenzy over Zhu Zhu Pets leaves some power sellers feeling like they've just run a marathon--but the steep price tags lead to some impressive profits.