
via BMannConsulting >_ Twitter is Jabber May 14, 2007 - 11:19pm — bmann
OK, I finally lost it when I read Dave Winer’s post re: Twitter premium:
Jason Calacanis is known for stimulating interesting discussion. Today is no different.
He says he’d pay $100 a year for a Twitter that was always fast, almost always up, and had some additional features.
I sent Jason a private email which I’ll now repeat here.
Just FYI, because of their API, you don’t really need Ev and Biz to do that for you. A bunch of us could pool resources and set up a server of our own, and peer with Twitter’s. If Twitter is down it would just queue up the messages, in the meantime, anyone who was on the premium system would see the messages immediately.
Look: forget Twitter. It has a bunch of users, that’s about it. How to build twitter:![]()
That’s about it. And it has a publish and subscribe architecture built in, rather than all these crazy desktop apps that constantly poll the Twitter mothership. That’s it. It’s simple.
“Peering with Twitter”. WTH. Built into the XMPP protocol. It’s a standard. Works with lots of other things already.
My only explanation for the Twitter craze is that North Americans are still enamored of anything that can do the tiniest bit of mobile integration. Yes, Twitter has managed to scale and spend many thousands of dollars paying for SMS gateways. Great! Maybe if they had built a front end on top of Jabber, they would have gotten there faster…
An excerpt from the 1958 “Disneyland” TV Show episode entitled “Magic Highway USA”. In this last part of the show, an exploration into possible future Transportation technologies is made. It’s hard to believe how little we’ve accomplished on this front since 1958, and how limited the scope for imagining such future technologies has become. Witness an artifact from a time where the future was greeted with optimism. Note the striking animation style here, achieved with fairly limited animation and spectacular layouts.
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~johnny/projects/wii/ >_ Since the Wiimote can track sources of infrared (IR) light, you can track pens that have an IR led in the tip. By pointing a wiimote at a projection screen or LCD display, you can create very low-cost interactive whiteboards or tablet displays. Since the Wiimote can track upto 4 points, multiple pens can be used.