Social-Mail, Byoms and more: This week's eHub round up
Listed in order of my excitement this time instead of chronologically:
Social-Mail
Happy day! Send emails to an RSS feed. I feel far more comfortable using this tool, a Big in Japan offering, than I do using my previous stand by, mail2rss.org. Mail2rss.org has worked well for me so far, but the fact that it's remained in "extreme alpha" mode since I found it makes me very glad to find an alternative. I use these tools all the time to create feeds for organizations that don't offer them (many in the nonprofit sector, for example.)
Byoms (build your own mobile search)
Not highlighted directly on eHub, but the product of a company that was (Kozuro). Custom search via IM with support for natural language queries, search sharing and RSS feeds. Not sure how all of these will work together yet, but those are some of my favorite features for anything - so I'll be watching closely for the June 5th public beta release. The company says you'll preselect certain sources you want to be able to search, then you can use IM to query those sources on your computer or mobile device. Sounds pretty cool to me.
Netvibes ecosystem
Makes ajax homepage modules easy to share. Netvibes is one of the most popular Ajax homepages, which are themselves very poor ways to read anything more than a few RSS feeds with few items in each one (in my opinion). But it may be one of the most realistic ways to hope for further RSS adoption, and the ecosystem's sharing does help make tangible the portability of feeds. There's an API that's being used to develop new modules, a Word Press plug-in - the announcement of the ecosystem got a lot of coverage throughout the blogosphere.
Farecast
In private beta, this system will use historical data to allow users to predict future airfare offerings. Have to wonder if another larger vendor will buy this one out, I'm sure that's the idea. Probably one of the best examples, in fact, of a technology built to flip. Landing page visual design at least looks totally hip.
Big Blue Saw
You may have read some of the articles around lately about low cost rapid fabrication from CAD files. Big Blue Saw is an Atlanta based service that offers just such an affordable service. I've read about this type of thing being the future of manufacturing in the developing world, for now this service is getting press in Make Magazine at least.
Spinvox
Turns voice mail into text messages or email. Sounds great, presuming that it works well. Discussion at MobileCrunch points to two likely problems: long voicemail messages and the difficulty of trusting a translation to text of the important subtleties in spoken language (like the world "not"). Not having tested this myself, I don't know whether the text messages I get are going to tell me what the names of the callers are as well as my phone's recognition of contacts. That would be very important.
That's this week's highlights from eHub according to yours truly. Don't forget to check out the whole site for hours of fun.
Reader Comments
(Page 1)2. Thanks for the comments Hope. It looks like Social Mail couldn't handle the traffic load of the last week? Not sure what's going on there, but it does dampen my enthusiasm. To clarify, it's something I would use if I visited a website of an organization that offered an email newsletter, for example, but not an RSS feed. I don't want the email newsletter in my email inbox, I want it in my feed reader. This, if it worked, would solve my problem.
Good luck with the comment tracking system. Hopefully it will work better than Co Comment, which was great when it began offering a Firefox plug-in (until that plug in started breaking a bunch of important javascript on my pages!)
Posted at 12:02PM on Jun 3rd 2006 by Marshall Kirkpatrick
3. Thanks for the link to Big Blue Saw! You might want to check the URLs over again; some of them don't work right.
Posted at 2:19PM on Jun 3rd 2006 by Simon Arthur
4. I have started leaving comments all over the Web 2.0 section of the blogosphere and would like to know if anybody comments on what I say or answers my questions! Many bloggers basically ignore comments, which is bad, bad PR
Neal Saferstein
Posted at 3:51PM on Jun 3rd 2006 by Neal Saferstein
5. Hi, Marshall. Well, co.mments seems to have worked for me here. I just got an email from them alerting me to your comments above. Great, seem to work well. I will add it to the toolbox.
Thanks for the explanation of why Social Mail (when it is up and running properly) would be a good thing.
Neal: did you mean to comment on what I had written. not sure why you have cut and pasted that part of what I wrote.
Hope
Posted at 4:26PM on Jun 3rd 2006 by Hope
6. Thanks for the mention about kozoru and byoms. Please stop by on Monday and tell us what you think.
Posted at 1:06AM on Jun 4th 2006 by Justin Gardner
7. That was done in total error sorry about that.
Neal Saferstein
Posted at 4:12AM on Jun 6th 2006 by Neal Saferstein
8. Thank you, Neal.
Hope
Posted at 1:02AM on Jun 12th 2006 by Hope








1. Hi, Marshall. Thanks for the roundup. I like ehub, too. I also just love Robin Good's New Media Picks Of The Week. I read there today this:
“…co.mments is a service that allows you to monitor and follow blog posts in which you have placed your own comments. You only need to sign up for an account and once you find interesting posts, you can subscribe to your tracking feed and read new comments in your feed reader or e-mail client. Free to use.
http://co.mments.com.”
I am going to try it out with my comments here. We'll see whether I get notification of any reply you make to my comments here. It sounds like a really useful tool. I have started leaving comments all over the Web 2.0 section of the blogosphere and would like to know if anybody comments on what I say or answers my questions! Many bloggers basically ignore comments, which is bad, bad PR. You always respond to comments and that endears you to your readers.
By the way, I get an error message when I click on the link you have provided for Social-Mail--and could you expand a little on how one would use it and why?
Hope
Posted at 11:49AM on Jun 3rd 2006 by Hope