Archive for the ‘api’ Category

Twitter API Gets Geotagging; Web Geotagging Coming Soon?

If people are comfortable with this informaiton it could really provide a wealth of additional knowledge which wouldn’t have to be added to the already tight 140 characters.

“The added information provides valuable context when reading your friends tweets and allows you to better focus in on local conversations,” writes Twitter platform/API man Ryan Sarver in the blog post.

Twitter API Gets Geotagging; Web Geotagging Coming Soon?.

Outlook PST to Open Up | Sarah In Tampa | Channel 10

Microsoft continues to be more open and more open every day.  Hmmm, can we say the same about Apple?

Outlook PST to Open Up | Sarah In Tampa | Channel 10.

WordPress Goes Real-time With RSS Cloud Support

WordPress Goes Real – Webmonkey.

A big step int he right direction.

Asynchronous Image Loading with jQuery | Realm of Zod

Asynchronous Image Loading with jQuery | Realm of Zod.

I need to build a weather api with a radar map that will constantly have new images…I wonder if this will help?

Google Maps Finally Ready to Tell You "What's Here" for Any Point on a Map… Almost

Google Maps Finally Ready to Tell You “What’s Here” for Any Point on a Map… Almost.

Attention media companies – please make sure to encode geo locations with your new stories.  Everyone in the world would like to mash them up for you.

Thank you.

Semantic Wishlist for 2009 from ReadWriteWeb

Image representing Powerset as depicted in Cru...
Image via CrunchBase

All I have to say is yes, yes and yes.

  1. Microsoft makes a very bold play with Powerset technology
  2. Semantic Web advertising
  3. Semantic apps for managing your finances
  4. Semantic apps for health industry
  5. A Personalized Memetracker
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Google Reader API

Say what?  I can only think of a million ideas for this…heck, I’m not so sure you couldn’t build a CMS out of this concept.  (http://www.niallkennedy.com/blog/2005/12/google-reader-api.html)

Google Reader is an online feed aggregator with heavy use of JavaScript and pretty quick loading of the latest feed data from around the web. Google’s AJAX front-end styles back-end data published in the Atom syndication format. The data technologies powering Google Reader can easily be used and extended by third-party feed aggregators for use in their own applications. I will walk you through the (previously) undocumented Google Reader API.

This could be an interesting development…now I just need more time.

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