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February 20, 2007 3:04 PM PST

Zpeech adds a message board to any Web site you want

by Rafe Needleman
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Yesterday, Josh Lowensohn covered Yaplet, a very new tool for adding real-time chat to any Web site. If for some reason Yaplet doesn't float your boat, you might also want to check out Zpeech.

Add a message board to any site.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Zpeech has a few advantages over Yaplet. First, it's easier to initiate a Zpeech chat on a site. You just type the Zpeech.com URL, a slash, and the target domain. For example: www.zpeech.com/webware.com. Yaplet can also be kicked off by a URL, but the syntax is not as simple. Zpeech is also prettier than Yaplet. The chat window pops up over your page and can be moved around easily. A Yaplet chat can also be opened in a separate window, but when I tried, it opened up a whole new browser tab. Finally, Zpeech conversations are persistent, like message board postings. Yaplet conversations are like IM chats, and there's no record of historical conversations.

But we have three issues with Zpeech. It requires registration before you can chat. That will keep the trolls away and the noise level down in a room, but we think it will also keep casual conversations from starting at all. Second, Yaplet allows you to move from a public chat to a private online conversation with anyone who's in the room. Zpeech chats are all public. Third, Zpeech limits you to making two comments per minute. So much for rapid-fire chats.

As an ad hoc site-based message board (as opposed to chat) Zpeech works fine, and that's what its builders created it for. It's flow-control features and registration requirement keep things sober. That's why we like Yaplet so much more.

See also MyBlogLog and Me.dium.

Rafe Needleman writes about start-ups, new technologies, and Web 2.0 products, as editor of CNET's Webware. E-mail Rafe.
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by rmjoe123 December 29, 2008 10:11 PM PST
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by toto00001 March 26, 2009 8:45 PM PDT
Perhaps theres another slightly larger town they can reach to service more people before they get to you. Or perhaps it'd just cost them too much. YOU are the one who chose to live in a rural area. Thats the price you have to deal with for living away from everything. You cant expect a broadband provider to subsidize service at the expense of their other customers (which is who would end up paying for it) because you chose to live
http://www.roomfurniturechina.com
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