Interview with Joshua Schachter of del.icio.us 174
prostoalex writes "Joshua Schachter, a Wall Street programmer by day, and a del.icio.us hacker by night, is interviewed by Guardian. The article also provides a little background story on del.icio.us, how it got started, and how Schachter convinced Stewart Butterfield of Flickr to add tagging to the photo sharing site. Both del.icio.us and Flickr are currently members of the Yahoo! family."
The future of del.icio.us and flickr at Yahoo! (Score:5, Interesting)
To start with flickr, it could/will be integrated with Yahoo! Maps (review [slashgeo.org]):
http://maps.yahoo.com/ [yahoo.com]
Right now, we already have a similar tool, named flickrmap:
http://www.flickrmap.com/ [flickrmap.com]
As for del.icio.us, combine it with, again, Yahoo! Maps, you get something close to social mapping, which you get with Platial:
http://www.platial.com/ [platial.com]
That's only a start. We'll get more. And there's a lot of competition: Yahoo!, Google, Microsoft (and even Amazon with their mapping service [slashgeo.org]) all want a piece of our mindshare. Competition mean, probably, we'll get better consumer-level tools (of course, there's a price tag, but that's another story).
To get back on-topic, my hopes are we'll see more open source flickr and del.icio.us projets. Take a look at Firefox extensions, you'll find del.icio.us wannabes. We're living in an interesting time...
Oh, yeah, my shameless plug... if geospatial technologies is within your interests, which includes mapping in general, take a look at the link in my signature.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
yes, you missed something (Score:2, Interesting)
Did you happen to notice that it's read/write, though? That's really the whole point for a lot of folks; it's a way to store interesting links without having to have 1,000 bookmarks in their browswer's menu.
Have you tried Opera or Konqueror? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:open source? (Score:5, Interesting)
de.liro.us seems to have just folded. alternatively, I just ran across scuttle.org [scuttle.org] which is written in php.
Plus, it appears to support most of the del.icio.us API. [del.icio.us]
-metric
Re:Did they ask (Score:4, Interesting)
Since its launch, and especially during the latest six months or so, the site has been growing at a great pace - exponential growth is actually an apt term [alexa.com].
During the past six months they've had a few server switches and almost constant rejiggering, and they're just settling in with a new bunch of servers, partly because of hardware failure. My assessment of the whole deal is that poor programming, actual scalability or design hasn't been the problem as much as growing pains (more users AND abusers like moronic spiders clogging bandwidth and stealing capacity), power outages and hardware just flat out not working. Although I don't rely on their service myself or use it more than, say, once quarterly, they're a competent bunch, and I fully trust that it will all work itself out in the end.
Re:What is the name for these people... (Score:3, Interesting)
Tagging allows you to categorize things, so you can find people's posts about certain subjects. There's nothing on Slashdot like it that I can see. The closest match, I suppose, would be doing a search and finding articles related to your interests.
As far as I can tell, Web 2.0 is defined by AJAX and collaboration, and really there's no Ajax that I've noticed in Slashdot.
I actually think the old Slashdot looked a little better than the new one (what's all this white space when I post?), but I'm not complaining in any strong way.
D
Similar concept with prioritized list (Score:2, Interesting)