• On MovieTome: Leaked images from TRANSFORMERS 2?
January 22, 2008 5:00 AM PST

Netvibes gets unnecessary social features

My favorite start page, Netvibes, is getting an interesting upgrade. The new "Ginger" version gets social features for sharing your start-page widgets and layouts, as well as a status feed reminiscent of Facebook and Twitter. Netvibes Ginger also makes it easier to add content to your pages.

The site will be updated with the Ginger release in mid-February, but we have some invitations to the private beta now...read down to the end for details.

Still my favorite start page.

With Ginger, all Netvibes users get a "universe" page--a public, shared collection of widgets and tabs that anyone can access. Here's a quick example. It's easy enough to send items from your private pages to your universe, and if you want to point people your favorite widgets or blogs, it's a simple solution. If you happen to have an online presence on several different service (for example, a professional blog, a personal blog, a social network, Delicious, Twitter, etc.), this is a way to put them all together so your friends can see what you are up to.

Now you can create a ticker of your Netvibes actions. You can see your buddies' feeds, too.

With Netvibes new "activity" window, you can now see what your friends are up to...on Netvibes, anyway. When you're in a widget on Netvibes, you can flag an item to save it to either your private or your public feed, and in the activities window you can see either your own private starred items, your public ones, or those of the people you are following. (Unfortunately, you can't see all these activities together in one window, and you can't flag an item from its detail page, only from its headline in the widget.)

The concept of following other users on Netvibes is a conceptual stretch. While it's easy enough to find other Netvibes users and add them to your Netvibes circle, one has to wonder if this bare-bones social network can possibly get traction. Netvibes Tariq Krim told me, "We wouldn't do it if we didn't add value." So, he said, "We will announce plug-ins so it can automatically sync with Twitter, Facebook, and so on."

Adding feeds and widgets in Ginger is easier thanks to a good visual directory and search function.

Maybe that will help. Krim is trying to make Netvibes into a hub for social information. If it works without requiring that your friends are also Netvibes users, it could be useful. But if it's just the Netvibes social network, I predict rather limited uptake.

Evolutionary changes in Netvibes include a better way to add content to your pages. There's a very attractive catalog of widgets you can add, and you can preview each one before you drop it on a page.

As a current Netvibes user, I like the new interface but I can't say that any of the new features bowl me over. The new methods for adding content are nice, though, and will make the service more approachable for newbies.

But the social bits are puzzling. I've never thought of Netvibes as a social platform. I don't really want it to be social. I get enough social in all the other sites I use.

I could be wrong, though. If you sign up for the Netvibes Ginger private beta, add me to your network (search for "rafe"), and we can see if we like it. Update: Webware users burned through our first allotment of invitations to the Ginger private beta very quickly, but there are 100 more invitations available here--use the new code WWMORE100.

Rafe Needleman writes about start-ups, new technologies, and Web 2.0 products, as editor of CNET's Webware. E-mail Rafe.
Recent posts from Webware
Facebook announces 25 developer grant finalists
Flock 2.0 out of beta: Gets current Mozilla engine, MySpace support, more
Adobe fends off rivals with Flash Player 10
An undelivered campaign promise: You2gov
Run your own election at Plurk
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 10 comments
by robinlast January 22, 2008 5:40 AM PST
perfect startpage combo: netvibes + popurls + techmeme; better leave all the social stuff to facebook.
Reply to this comment
by raftos January 22, 2008 8:04 AM PST
First look (apart from aesthetics). The public page is exactly what pageflakes has been offering.
Reply to this comment
by DirtyDaveUW January 22, 2008 8:29 AM PST
Any chance of more invites? Somehow the code has already expired...
Reply to this comment
by SaintDoormatius January 22, 2008 9:44 AM PST
Man, the response must have been huge! I think we broke Netvibes - I got to try it out for about thirty minutes before the site just crashed and now will no longer load. I'm sure they're working on it, though. Their support is excellent, in my experience.
Reply to this comment
by raftos January 22, 2008 10:32 AM PST
Feeds don't load on tabs until you click on them that's perhaps efficient, but also slow and unsatisfying
Reply to this comment View reply
by xxdesmusxx January 22, 2008 1:46 PM PST
100 invites are gone already? :(
Reply to this comment
by xxdesmusxx January 22, 2008 1:51 PM PST
scratch that ...Netvibes just had a hiccup. all good now :)
Reply to this comment
by DirtyDaveUW January 23, 2008 6:40 AM PST
I "successfully" entered my invite code and it said my profile would be upgraded to Ginger in a few minutes....but that was last night. What gives?
Reply to this comment
by Essays March 19, 2008 11:15 AM PDT
Excellent post. I recommend PeerPapers.com for researching. They have over 100,000 term papers and essays available on almost every subject.
Reply to this comment
Powered by Jive Software
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

advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right