Firefox Plug-in Provides Web 2.0 Address Book

Started by dwarakesh, Nov 07, 2008, 02:04 PM

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dwarakesh

A new plug-in for Firefox lets web users link their contacts to information they are searching for on the net.

Sxip created the app as part of its Sxipper 3.0 plug-in and CEO Dick Hardt showed off the prototype of the application during a demo at Defrag 2008.

Sxip's so-called 'address book 2.0' feature marries data on a web page and a user's email contact information, which can be spread across local address books and connections on social networking sites such as Facebook and LinkedIn.

Applications such as the address book feature Hardt was introducing are becoming known within social networking as flow applications. They are applications that bring multiple flows of information into a single view.

The address book software is activated as a user surfs the web. For example, if the user visits a vendor site the Sxipper feature compiles a list of the user's contacts related to that company. The list is presented along the left side of the screen.

The user sees people they know at that company and people their contacts may know at that company. The data is gleaned from a user's address book and profile data from people they are linked to on social networking sites.

From an enterprise perspective, Hardt says the tool could have value for sales people, customer support and business development.

The application is browser only now, but could be extended to work with email clients.

A company called Xobni has an Outlook plug-in that helps users organise their in-box and pull together contact information on users, how often they exchange email, when and other data.

Hardt says the point is how to get to data that is relevant at a particular time.

"With Sxipper, you are showing your interests by the web page you are on so we ask what else might be relevant," he says.

"Users have all this information on friends and friends of friends so how do we filter that and make it available."

Hardt did not say when the application would ship, but he says the prototype he showed is about 60 percent complete.