• On MovieTome: Leaked images from TRANSFORMERS 2?
February 25, 2008 10:54 AM PST

Shifd reimagines the desktop Post-It note

Posted by Josh Lowensohn
  • Font size
  • Print

Here at Adobe's Engage event in South San Francisco, one of the services getting some buzz is The New York Times' social-bookmarking tool Shifd. It's a neat idea--give users a place to write and share little notes between their PCs and mobile phones, while providing a way to publish those notes to social services people are already using.

This morning the company has released the Adobe Air version of the app, allowing anyone to create and manage notes they've made while offline, and without having to fire up a browser.

The notes you can make are fairly simple in nature. Each note is color-coded and a lot like a Post-It, along with locations and Web links. What makes the app useful is that each link has links to various popular sharing and reference tools. For example, if you save a URL from your clipboard, you can then go back later and access it on your phone or home machine, then push it out to del.icio.us, Digg, Facebook, et al.

Another benefit of using the AIR app is that it functions similar to a widget engine of its own, meaning you can manipulate and keep notes on your desktop as you would with sticky notes.

There are several other companies showing off updated and new AIR apps throughout the day here at Engage, including some we've already written about. To keep track of them, bookmark this link and check back throughout the day.

Leave small Post-It notes and access them on your phone too.

(Credit: CNET Networks)
Josh Lowensohn is an associate editor for Webware.com, CNET's blog about cool and otherwise useful Web applications and services. If you've found a site you'd like profiled, shoot him an e-mail. E-mail Josh.
Recent posts from Webware
Googlepedia for Firefox brings Wikipedia to you
Tiltshiftmaker turns photos into miniature scenes
Resumator makes hiring collaborative, paper-free
LG Blu-ray players stream Netflix, CinemaNow, and YouTube
Tech layoffs: The scorecard
Opera's new SDK: Better browsing on the Wii?
Daily Tidbits: GrandCentral making its way to...Spain?
Zuckerberg: New year, 150 million Facebook users
advertisement

About Webware

Say No to boxed software! The future of applications is online delivery and access. Software is passé. Webware is the new way to get things done.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Webware topics

In the news now

Apple: DRM-free tunes, unibody MacBook Pro

roundup At Macworld, Phil Schiller touts 10 million songs sans DRM, plus 69-cent songs, a unibody 17-inch notebook, iLife updates, and more.


Countdown to CES

special coverage The tech community descends on Las Vegas as the Consumer Electronics Show gets ready to kick off in all its gadgety glory.


Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right
-->