Mashup Makeover
The “Personal Mashup Recorder�?Commendo’s Voyager™ service records for replay on the user’s PC, virtually all standard HTTP delivered content, including mashups or interactivity-enabling software (Flash, AJAX and JavaScript). Replaying mashups on the PC provides significant performance improvements to the user experience, while also making the mashups portable. This hands-on session will show how to use Commendo’s Voyager™ as a “Personal Mashup Recorder�? to record existing mashups, along with techniques and approaches which you can use to create new mashup categories. Three mashup types will be shown and discussed: Entertainment (Videos), Mapping, and Search/RSS. In addition you will learn how using existing debugging tools with recorded mashups can speed up development. Voyager processes mashups in parallel, and is multi-processor enabled, allowing mashups to take full advantage of today’s multi-core PCs. Mashup recording requires no changes to the underlying applications, the mashup code, or content conversion by the user. Download Voyager ™ to your Windows PC prior to the conference at www.commendo.com.
25 minutes 41 seconds | July 10th, 2006More Mashup Camp Videos
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Introduction to Mashup Development
For the novices at Mashup University, this will be the sort of icebreaker that should help you to understand the rest of the material that you’ll be exposed to during the rest Mashup University. Two links worth checking out are Brian Hamlin’s Intro 101 page and the Ruby on Rails page.
33 minutes 26 seconds | July 10th, 2006 -
Adobe 1
Ted Patrick, technical evangelist for Adobe, demonstrates the new releases of the Flex SDK, Flex Builder and Flash Player 9. He also shows how to build a mashup with Flex 2 using Flickr and YouTube APIs.
45 minutes 42 seconds | July 10th, 2006 -
Adobe 2
Adobe product manager Deeje Cooley demonstrates Adobe’s Kiwi APIs for building RIAs using public services as the data backend. Kiwi APIs support data exchange with Typepad, Blogger and Del.icio.us APIs.
15 minutes 32 seconds | July 10th, 2006 -
Adobe 3
Apollo application manager Christian Cantrell walks through a number of recently released Adobe Actionscript 3 Web API Libraries. Senior product manager Mike Chambers presents Apollo, Adobe’s new cross-OS runtime that allows developers to leverage existing web development skills, such as Flash, Flex, HTML and Ajax, to build and deploy desktop RIAs.
31 minutes 19 seconds | July 10th, 2006 -
Making Mashups Mobile 1
Mike Fisher and Ben Widhelm, founders of ElephantDrive, show how their mashup with Intel’s Mobile SDK and Amazon S3 APIs have improved their customers’ user experience by improving mobile aspects of an existing web solution.
26 minutes | July 10th, 2006 -
Making Mashups Mobile 2
Jeff Barr, web services evangelist for Amazon, discusses Amazon’s S3, a Simple Storage Service that allows users infinite and scaleable storage on the internet. Barr expands on how Elephant Drive uses this web service and explains how to get started with S3.
28 minutes 14 seconds | July 10th, 2006 -
Mashery
Mashery is a new startup committed to making it easier to build, deploy and use mashups. Over the next several months, we’ll be launching a number of services for mashup developers and API providers. Come join us in our Mashup University session to get an early look at what we’re working on, and to talk to us about what you’d like to see Mashery incorporate in its future releases.
29 minutes 54 seconds | July 10th, 2006 -
LignUp
LignUp will demonstrate a mashup called PropAlerts that integrates voice into Propsmart¹s real estate website. Adding this VoIP capability enables real estate agents to connect with motivated buyers via broadcast alerts and IVR messages the instant new property listings hit the market. Following the demo, we will walk you through the web services used and how they can be implemented in other mashups.
27 minutes 21 seconds | July 10th, 2006 -
co.mments
Scraping is not a four letter word. In fact, the HTML/HTTP protocol is the easiest way to offer your users a great UI and your applications a useable API, all from the same code. Keep it simple, and you can build an API around any site. In this presentation you’ll learn how to build a scraping API with a few lines of code and a touch of style. You’ll see how simple it is to build a scrAPI for eBay and Amazon. And we’ll do it all using open source code.
27 minutes 43 seconds | July 10th, 2006 -
Mashups and Markets
What do you do when the mash is through? As mashups gain in sophistication, sustaining the creator, developer, and user relationships necessary to promote, support, and enhance the mashup becomes more difficult, yet more critical to overall success. The promise of mashups cannot be fully realized without a simple transactional fabric for enfranchising highly complex work. This session presents a concept for using the power of markets to harness mashup efforts.
29 minutes | July 11th, 2006 -
Map User Interface Customization
Real time map image rendering for customization and brand differentiation. Server-side versus client-side ovelays. Map labeling density control and customization. In this session, deCarta will also preview its next-generation JavaScript API that supports this approach.
30 minutes 30 seconds | July 11th, 2006 -
Location mash-ups with Microsoft Virtual Earth
This session will provide an overview of the Virtual Earth platform including SOAP and JavaScript APIs providing maps for 68 countries, bird’s eye imagery, map navigation, geo-coding, drawing, proximity searching and routing features. We will look at how to leverage Virtual Earth to create mash-ups including MapCruncher, a tool for overlaying any PDF/JPEG data such as floor plans or campus maps.
50 minutes 40 seconds | July 11th, 2006 -
What is Windows Live?
Windows Live is a development platform that provides a potential audience of hundreds of millions of users. Integrating apps like Hotmail, Messenger and Spaces, it brings together a number of consumer oriented services to push forward the new model of the internet: social networking.
15 minutes 5 seconds | July 11th, 2006 -
Plaxo
Nearly all new web applications have a strong social component: sharing content with your friends, growing by invitation, and building reputations and ratings. Unfortunately, this means that many services are asking their users to build and maintain yet-another-address-book on each site they visit. As a result, these address books are usually incomplete and quickly become out-of-date, which is bad for both the sites and their users. Plaxo has built a “smart address book�? that automatically stays in sync with the address books members already use—including Outlook, Mac, Thunderbird, AIM, and Yahoo. A few lines of JavaScript is all it takes to create a Plaxo mashup that lets people import and select contacts to be added in to their address books at any web site or application. Sites wishing for an even more integrated experience can implement Plaxo’s full REST-based sync and access APIs. In this session, we’ll talk about how to take advantage of Plaxo’s widgets and APIs, and I’ll discuss some of the underlying technology that makes these mashups possible.
15 minutes 5 seconds | July 11th, 2006 -
What can you do with Windows Live Messenger?
Windows Live Messenger has a potential audience of 240 million users. This means great opportunities for both businesses (free API access, ad servers, pay-for-placement,) as well as hobbyists (interactive multi-user apps, DHTML and AJAX development.) With Internet Explorer now directly accessable in Windows Live Messenger, the aim is to create a user experience that is all about interactivity and engagement.
26 minutes 08 seconds | July 11th, 2006 -
Extending Windows Live with Gadgets
Did you know you can extend the Windows Live experience with your own Gadgets? Windows Live Gadgets is the web-based component philosophy used to develop all Windows Live properties. You too can use the frameworks to extend your reach and experience into Window’s Live. We will take you on a developer tour of the Windows Live AJAX Frameworks. We will show you how to use the framework for object-oriented Javascript (base classes, inheritance), using the built-in network stack for AJAX calls, and discuss object lifecycle and memory management.
36 minutes 51 seconds | July 11th, 2006 -
AOL Music Now APIs, Winamp plugin development
Not your little brother’s music mashup. How to mash Music Now’s dynamic playlists, and how to build web services that integrate with Winamp.
28 minutes 32 seconds | July 11th, 2006 -
Open AIM APIs and Location Services
The Open AIM Program enables developers outside of AOL to write official AIM custom clients, plugins, and bots. AIMCC is a comprehensive set of APIs, each targeted at different types of applications and a wide variety of developers. Within the API are the Location Services where users can opt-in and share location information with people on their Buddy Lists.
24 minutes 47 seconds | July 11th, 2006 -
Mapquest APIs and integrations
Building a more useful mapping mashup - Free mapping API’s unleashed the creativity of the developer community by allowing anyone to display data on a map. However, existing API’s haven’t given developers a complete tool kit. MapQuest’s OpenAPI is the first to offer integrated routing and geocoding and we’ll showcase how you can use these capabilities to build more useful web mashups.
32 minutes 32 seconds | July 11th, 2006 -
AIMPages module microformat and module development
The modular web is coming. AIM Pages is AOL’s attempt to find the best practices around this new concept. This presentation will cover the goals behind the technology, the microformat for defining modular content, and some of the emerging best practices in markup, CSS and Javascript around developing for the modular web.
19 minutes 18 seconds | July 11th, 2006 -
StrikeIron
StrikeIron is the worlds largest marketplace of commercial web services. In this session you will be given $50 worth of free web services such as Geocode, Address Verfification, Sales Tax calculation and SMS messeging and more. You will also see how commercial web services are saving companies money and opening up new opportunities.
23 minutes 04 seconds | July 11th, 2006