Google Friend Connect - New Revolution in Social Networking
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Orkut, Facebook, Myspace and Hi5 are few of the most used termed these days. People have a cyber life and identity powered by these sites but there was a generic problem with all these sites as users had to use either of them with no interoperability. Moreover, you couldn’t connect to websites using these social networking sites but this development was long overdue and here it is finally on the screens. Google Friend Connect is Google Answer to this thing! Google Friend Connect lets you grow traffic by easily adding social features to your website. With just a few snippets of code, you get more people engaging more deeply with your site. Attract more visitors. Visitors bring along friends from social networks like Facebook, orkut, and others to interact on your site. Enrich your site with social features. Choose engaging social features from a catalog of gadgets provided by Google and the OpenSocial developer community. No programming whatsoever. Just copy and paste snippets of code into your site, and Google Friend Connect does the rest. As expected, Google has unveiled a preview of Friend Connect, a way to add social features to a Web site without programming. David Glazer, director of engineering at Google, described Friend Connect, whose site is inaccessible Monday morning, as plumbing for the rest of the Web. “The Web is getting better by getting more social. We’ve baked social features into the infrastructure of the Web, and it is not tied to any particular site,” Glazer said. “Users can interact with any of their friends anywhere they go on Web, and with any app.” I asked Glazer if Friend Connect is a response to Facebook Connect and MySpace.com’s Data Availability. “People will speculate a lot in that direction. We didn’t create this code in the three days (since Facebook and MySpace made their announcements).” Unlike Facebook and MySpace, Google lacks a dominant, centralized social-networking hub. Friend Connect works the edges of the Internet, applying an open and distributed approach, and bringing a social dimension to the 99-plus percent of sites that aren’t socially enabled. “The distributed model has worked well for the Web. That is what the Web does–many points of light loosely coupled and massively distributed, allowing users to connect to pages of information,” Glazer told me. “Now it is working to connect people to other people.” Friend Connect-compliant sites will be able to view, invite, and interact with newfound friends, or with existing friends, from established social-networking sites, including Facebook, Google Talk, Hi5, Orkut, and Plaxo via secure authorization application-programming interfaces. Currently only a few sample sites, including Google’s Guacamole site, are available to end users. “We are looking to get feedback from Web site owners about what kinds of sites and apps they want,” Glazer said. Ingrid Michaelson, an independent musician, integrates iLike’s OpenSocial application with Friend Connect to connect friends without having to leave the site. John McCrea, vice president of marketing at Plaxo, said Google’s Friend Connect is “flipping the model” from walled gardens (such as Facebook) to a more open social Web:Instead of widgetizing apps and bolting them on to some corporation’s proprietary social graph, why not widgetize the social graph and socially enable any Web site or Web page?That’s a big, bold vision that Plaxo is 100 percent aligned with. As to Facebook and MySpace, it is certainly great to read the rhetoric they are now putting forth. The meme of data portability, open social Web, and bill of rights for users of the social Web has certainly caught on! (source: CNet News) |
This entry was posted on Tuesday, May 13th, 2008 at 9:42 am and is filed under Technology . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.











