The top headlines at a given time on Wednesday morning at OurSignal. Yeah, a bit short on relevant news.
(Credit: OurSignal)On Wednesday morning, I read about a new site called OurSignal, which mashes up the top headlines from Digg, Reddit, Delicious, and HackerNews, promising to show a more diverse array of what the Web's recommending. Kind of like OriginalSignal for social news.
Unfortunately, when I loaded up OurSignal, staring me in the face was "Goatse In Spore," a reference to an extremely crude graphical Web meme (don't Google it, please). Not exactly the kind of top headline I was looking for.
The concept is kind of cool: "warm" colors mean a story is gaining momentum, and "cool" colors mean it's fading. Bigger boxes mean more votes on a story across the Web. And it refreshes every 15 minutes, which isn't that impressive in the real-time culture of Summize, but is still quick enough to provide a fresh take on the news.
That's the problem: news. Social-news sites, for better or for worse, have become known for being places to find the most popular Top 10 lists and funny videos in addition to the news, and OurSignal is no exception. So if you're looking to find the goofiest Digg and Reddit headlines in one place, this is a nice resource; but if you're actually looking for the news, you might be out of luck. Putting a handful of social-news sites together unfortunately doesn't do much to help the content.
I'll stick to Google News for now, thanks.
A helpful search for my favorite hard-to-find brew.
(Credit: BeerMenus)BeerMenus.com, I've been dreaming about you at night. And now you've jumped into my world. We're a match made in heaven.
Here's how it works. Much like a boozier version of Menupages, BeerMenus aggregates bars' beer lineups so that you can search for a particular establishment or for a particular beer to find out where it's on tap (or bottled) and for how much. For those of us who prefer their beer to be a bit more esoteric than Bud Lite or even Stella Artois, this is a godsend. I searched for my favorite variety, Allagash White (a delightful Belgian-style white ale brewed in Portland, Maine), and BeerMenus gave me a list of ten establishments where I could find it along with a Google Maps mashup.
For even more hops-and-barley fun, BeerMenus indexes special events at bars as well. That's something that Going, Upcoming, Yelp, and their socially prolific brethren already handle, but it's still a nice feature.
The nifty little site, which just launched Thursday, currently only extends to New York's prolific bar scene, and within that, it still only has about 150 Manhattan bars' menus available. And unfortunately, at the moment I'm across the country in San Francisco so I can't actually do a field test. I'm guessing it's generally accurate, but beer menus do tend to shift around more frequently than food menus do--that's an area where social-networking features like comments and reviews could help.
But really. Think about what could happen if this expanded: frequent travelers could learn where to find their favorite brews in unfamiliar cities, or learn where they can try out a nice pint of a regional favorite. The site also has plenty of room for recommendations, discovery features, and reviews--like a Snooth for beer.
You'd never have to drink a crappy beer again.
He's coming to get you.
(Credit: JibJab)I got a little bit obsessed with JibJab.com's "Starring You!" video creator when it allowed me to create videos of my co-workers dancing the Charleston in drag while horrifically bored on a slow news day. (Josh Lowensohn looks awesome in flapper garb.)
Now, as I've just learned, the site has created a politics-meets-Halloween gimmick so that you can edit a likeness of yourself into mini-movies called "Night of the Living Democrats" or "Night of the Living Republicans" and battle zombified versions of politicians from the political party you abhor the most. The new project, launched Tuesday, is in partnership with CNN Politics--why exactly, we're not sure. And zombies are a big deal, in case you couldn't tell.
Some of us are politically jaded enough so that we'd rather battle undead incarnations of our office-mates or in-laws (since we have to do that every day anyway), but hey, Bill Clinton and Trent Lott will have to do for now.
JibJab, created eight years ago by brothers Gregg and Evan Spiridellis, made a name for itself by Photoshopping the heads of world leaders onto cartoon bodies and turning it all into elaborate song-and-dance numbers. The original "Starring You!" mashups launched over the summer, and the Spiridellis brothers gleefully cite the statistic that over one million of the custom JibJab avatars have been created.
I guess there are more than a few of us who are inclined to procrastinate sometimes.
Office time-waster alert! AOL's AIM Network has launched an interesting new service,
It's clear that CircaVie is trying to gear itself toward social media junkies who are eager to find new ways to map out and visualize their lives on the Web: when choosing your user icon, for example, you can opt to use your AIM icon, or select your user picture from Flickr or Twitter. It'd be nice to see this same implementation available for photo and video integration: you can put in the link to a photo anywhere on the Web or upload one to accompany a milestone on your timeline, but there's no way to work in your Flickr, Photobucket, or what-have-you account.
CircaVie's interface is really cool, it runs smoothly, and I really like having the ability to create a "time-tagged" photo mashup in the same way that I'm a big fan of Flickr's geotagging maps. But it needs more features to appeal to people like me who dig functionality. The biggest problem, as previously is that CircaVie isn't tied to any photo or video-sharing services, so you have to individually link and integrate whatever multimedia accompanies each marker on the timeline. Some other developments I'd like to see: a "location" field so that you can geo-tag events on your timeline (which could lead to some kinds of really cool space-and-time visualizations), the ability to delineate events with a span of time rather than just a start point, a zoom in/out function, a better selection of skins...the list goes on.
In other words, I think it's kind of begging for an API, but the Flash-based software doesn't look like it's really set up for that too well.
It's in beta, so maybe we'll be seeing those things soon. Alternately, maybe Flickr or a Flickr developer will come out with something similar that's more functional. Until then, it's still a cute little way to procrastinate.
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