Wasabi mosaic: A feed can be consolidated into a collection of images, as seen here.
Netvibes

Web

Personalized, Real-Time Web Content

A new version of Netvibes focuses on real-time data from around the Internet.

  • Tuesday, December 1, 2009
  • By Kate Greene

Choosing a home page is still an important step for many Web users. Nowadays, many home pages are custom-built, featuring headlines syndicated from favorite blogs and news sites and widgets that display the latest weather and sports scores, social network updates, and more.

Netvibes, a startup based Paris, France, that lets users build custom home pages, is testing a service that pulls together real-time data from Twitter and Facebook, as well as frequently updated blogs and news sites, on personalized home pages. Called Wasabi, the new service is built on technology that helps keep up with an avalanche of real-time information from across the Web, says Freddy Mini, the company's CEO.

Competing services, including iGoogle, Bloglines, and Pageflakes, take slightly different approaches to building personalized home pages, or "dashboards." Netvibes's decision to focus on real-time Web content reflects the growing importance of sites like Twitter and Facebook. Currently, Netvibes has 3.5 million active users. Wasabi is open to 20,000 beta users, according to Mini, and about the same number are on the waiting list.

Once you activate Wasabi, you can choose a "smart reader" view in the upper-right corner of the screen. This view consolidates previously separate RSS boxes into a stream of intermingled headlines. Twitter and Facebook updates and other information, such as the current weather and e-mails, are shown in the same feed. You can highlight particular feeds via a navigator on the left of the screen. And it's possible to view a "mosaic" of any images associated with the items in a feed.

Advertisement

Wasabi can keep track of the most frequently updated services and update a user's dashboard almost instantly, says Mini. Netvibes's engineers built back-end software that crawls through feeds, analyzing the frequency of posts. "Our crawlers come back to you and drop content faster if you update quickly," says Mini.

While Wasabi is an improvement over the standard Netvibes offering, it's only going to appeal to a certain type of Web user, says Robert Scoble, a social media expert at the hosting company Rackspace and a prominent blogger and Twitter user. According to Scoble, power users generally opt for toggling between Twitter and Facebook for most of their updates, with the occasional foray to Google News.

Print

Related Articles

Startups Mine the Real-Time Web

There's more to it than microblog posts and social network updates.

Web Mashups Made Easy

Software being developed at Intel makes it easy for people with no programming experience to combine data from different Web pages.

Power to the People

Eventful, a grassroots website that began by drawing musicians to small markets, has trained its sights on politicians.

Close Comments

To comment, please sign in or register

Forgot my password

kavehg

1 Comment

  • 806 Days Ago
  • 12/01/2009

Like the interface, but ...

I like the interface as it's borrowed from my.live.com (I must be one of a few users left using that service :), but other than that, I don't see much value over Google Reader or customize-able portals offered by the majors (Yahoo!, iGoogle and my.live.com).

Am I missing something?

Reply

Hesse

1 Comment

  • 806 Days Ago
  • 12/01/2009

Check out...

Feedly. Feedly is Firefox extension that is very similar to Netvibes, iGoogle, etc. Its a magazine like homepage layout based on google reader feeds. Its pretty sharp.

http://feedly.com/

Reply

Advertisement

MAGAZINE

Can We Build Tomorrow's Breakthroughs?

Manufacturing in the United States is in trouble. That's bad news not just for the country's economy but for the future of innovation.

Videos

A Social-Media Decoder

More

Advertisement

Technology Review Lists

TR50

Our list of the 50 most innovative companies, including the following:

Ushahidi

eSolar

PrimeSense

Lattice Power

More

Advertisement

Facebook

Advertisement