Seen that? – Three Good Mashup Sites
Three Good Mashup Sites Java Entrepreneur
I'm very interested in the new trend happening with Web Services. I've been digging around to find more information about this stuff and I found the following three sites: Web API Tracker is a blog that tracks recent events The second is a Wiki called WSFinder.com. This is a community effort to create a list of all APIs and web services that are publicly available for people to play with. The [...] Read More
The Big Mashup from Sun Microsystems Java Entrepreneur
Here comes the big mashup from the stable of Sun Microsystems. Big mashup enables you to know how the world of entertainment and news are changing quickly as network has caused the line between the audience and entertainer to thin. It will be featuring a documentary of leaders from the world of entertainment and media, a blog which would be focusing on the changes caused by the network and an [...] Read More
Smash: Mashup development tool from IBM Java Entrepreneur
Mashups enables users with little or no technical background to create customized applications. Here is Smash, a development tool from IBM aimed at creation of mashup application in secure environment. With this tool users will be able to bring together pieces of code and data from several sources and use it in a single mashup application. With Smash IBM plans to take care of the security aspect which otherwise was [...] Read More
Three New Telephony Mashups The VoIP Weblog
It's not often I haer the word mashup and profitable in the same sentence, but the winners of the Telephony Mashup Challenge look to be just that. The challenge was hosted by Sylantro and The Thomas Howe Company and was designed to find innovative telephony applications-using Sylantro's applications programming interface (API) of course. It's also to prove innovation doesn't need a traditional carrier, and as Thomas Howe writes, "not involving [...] Read More
Mashup Mush The CIO Weblog
I've historically been pretty bullish on the whole concept of mashups, particularly end-user mashup technologies which promise to offer the next step in offering the average user programmer-like power to process and report generation. If this sounds outlandish, as many claims do which promise to offer programming without coding, consider that some of the most popular office applications have done exactly that at other levels of abstraction… spreadsheets are just [...] Read More