Rafael Peláez

Rafael Peláez

Oct 13 / 8:21am

Top 100 Real-Time Web Companies

by Rafa
Written by Richard MacManus / October 13, 2009 8:00 AM / 0 Comments

As part of the lead-up to our inaugural event this Thursday 15th October, The ReadWrite Real-Time Web Summit, we're pleased to announce our list of the top 100 Real-Time Web companies. A couple of weeks ago we posted our top 50. Thanks to the comments on that post and messages we received in the days after, we discovered 50 more companies!

The Top 100 is now categorized, making it easier to understand and spot trends from. We'd like to give a huge thanks to William Mougayar of Eqentia, who helped us develop the list and the categories.

A reminder that the ReadWrite Real-Time Web Summit is happening 15th October in Mountain View, California. Many of the ReadWriteWeb team will be there, so we look forward to meeting and talking with you all! You can register here for the low price of $270.

The Top 100 list below is ordered by category.

Company Category
Superfeedr Aggregation
FirstRain Analytics
HubSpot Analytics
PostRank Analytics
Lexalytics Analytics
Scout Labs Analytics
Sysomos Analytics
WebTrends Analytics
Insttant Analytics
Tumblr Blog
Posterous Blog
TypePad Blog
WordPress Blog
Eqentia Business Intelligence
Bantam Collaboration
Present.ly Collaboration
Shareaholic Collaboration
Socialcast Collaboration
Olark CRM
Saratoga CRM
Gelato Dating
DocVerse Document Management
Liaise Email
Kampyle Feedback
Rypple Feedback
StockTwits Finance
Vayusphere Messaging
Gnip Messaging
Cleartext Messaging
Kaazing Messaging
Real-Time Innovations Messaging
TIBCO Messaging
Isode Messaging
Twitter Microblogging
Yammer Microblogging
AllVoices News
Tweetmeme News
Mixx News
Thoora News
Fwix News
YourVersion News
bit.ly Search
Rankspeed Search
Evri Search
Faroo Search
Cluuz Search
BoilingPage Search
BuzzFeed Search
MicroPlaza Search
HighNote Search
Tweetag Search
OneRiot Search
CrowdEye Search
itpints Search
Topsy Search
Twazzup Search
Tweefind Search
Collecta Search
Google Search
Scoopler Search
Surf Canyon Search
Wowd Search
Yauba Search
Pachube Sensors
Cliqset Social Media
Nomee Social Media
Social Mention Social Media
UberVu Social Media
BackType Social Media
Disqus Social Media
IntenseDebate Social Media
JS-Kit ECHO Social Media
FiltrBox Social Media
Monitter Social Media
Radian6 Social Media
Pip.io Social Media
Aardvark Social Media
Yahoo! Meme Social Media
Omgili Social Media
Jive Software Social Media
Foursquare Social Networking
Loopt Social Networking
Vyoom Social Networking
Yelp Social Networking
Twones Social Networking
Facebook (and FriendFeed) Social Networking
Enjoysthin.gs Social Networking
Streamy Social Reader
Threadsy Social Reader
Seesmic Social Reader
TweetDeck Social Reader
Brizzly Social Reader
PeopleBrowsr Social Reader
LazyFeed Topics
Twingly Topics
Praized Media Twitter
Chartbeat Web Monitoring
Clicky Web Monitoring
Woopra Web Monitoring
PBworks Wiki

Have we missed your favorite? Let us know in the comments!

Loading mentions Retweet

Filed under // realtime

Comments (0)

Oct 1 / 6:44am

Ten Useful Examples of the Real-Time Web in Action

by Rafa

Ten Useful Examples of the Real-Time Web in Action

Written by Marshall Kirkpatrick / October 1, 2009 6:06 AM / 1 Comments

The Real-Time Web - it's more than just immediate delivery of Twitter messages to an always-on mobile device, disrupting the concentration that civilization is based on and bringing a rush to crazed social media addicts obsessed with the hottest new buzzwords. No, there are scores of companies building and selling systems today that deliver very real value via the real-time web.

We've interviewed 40 companies in the real-time web market in preparation for the forthcoming ReadWrite Real-Time Web Summit and a companion research report. Below are nine solid examples of real-time web technology that illustrate what it is and why it's important - and one possible future scenario that's important enough it has to be discussed as well.

 

Here's our list of ten cool companies or services that make use of real-time web in what they do. Most of the companies discussed below are already registered to attend the Real-Time Summit.

The real-time web isn't just about immediacy, it also offers things like presence information, syncing, efficiency and responsiveness.

10. Search

There are many different real-time search engines that approach search in many different ways. People think that real time is just Twitter and sure enough, some of the search engines put Twitter search front and center. Few search only Twitter, though - there are only about 3 million links shared on Twitter each day.

Most real-time search companies believe that's not enough to power a full index and rely on other sources of additional links to look at, often from the click-streams of users who have downloaded their software and opted-in to exposing their online behavior anonymously. A combination of links from Twitter, other online sources and the clickstreams of users powers search engines like Wowd, OneRiot and Faroo.

9. Twitter as Trigger

Seattle startup Evri uses data from Twitter in a very interesting way. It watches for emerging trends on the site and when something is becoming a hot topic of conversation - Evri uses that as a trigger to prompt a query to other sources for information on the topic.

Patrick Swayze is being talked about a lot all the sudden on Twitter? Time then to ping mainstream news sources, image search and his Wikipedia page to check for updates. Evri then uses that updated information to build the topic pages it serves up in partnership with its publishing company customers.

8. Real-Time Publishing

Ted Roden, the founder of artsy social sharing site Enjoysthin.gs, says that ever since he started pushing new shared items live to the browsers of people on his site - the time people have spent on Enjoysthin.gs has jumped substantially. With an effective User Interface, a flowing river of news can be a very compelling way to consume content.

7. Real-Time Discovery

YourVersion and LazyFeed are two real-time discovery services that unearth blog posts, web pages and other resources about topics of interest to users. They are like broad, topical, personalized blogsearch with good spam control. These services are fun and useful. LazyFeed consumes both PubSubHubbub and RSSCloud feeds in real-time as part of its topical blog search and YourVersion won't disclose what technology it uses but says the company has been working on real time since before it was cool.

6. Real-Time Sharing

There are more companies online than you can shake a stick at that create a shared experience for remote users but one particularly interesting one is the just-launched Pip.io. Pip.io uses AJAX and XMPP to let users perform the communication functions of social networking (messaging, person to person sharing) through an "apps in the browser OS" metaphor. It includes presence information (your avatar glows green if you're online) and chat while doing things like watching YouTube or Netflix videos.

5. The Real-Time Web of People

Aardvark is a question and answer service that determines what topics you know about and who your friends are, then lets you ask the service questions. Those questions are routed to the most qualified people within two circles of your friends and the rate of prompt, satisfactory responses is the only thing that outdoes the glee-inspiring user experience by either Instant Messaging through a bot intermediary or on the company's new iPhone app.

Aardvark says that by knowing who in your extended social network is available at any given time, it can tap into social knowledge - the real-time web of people. Presence information is a key asset of the real-time web.

4. Real-Time Relationships (And Up-selling)

Olark is an XMPP system that puts a chat window on top of any webpage you publish and ties the communication with page visitors in to your favorite IM client. The system lets users do sales support for people who might otherwise leave a passive website upon having problems or unanswered questions.

3. Reputation and Issue Tracking

Many companies in the field of reputation and topic tracking are realizing that new publishing technologies warrant the creation of new listening technologies with faster response times. Discovering that a topic has been discussed online isn't difficult, but in the business world these discussions happen often enough that the real-time search has to be combined with rapid text, sentiment or conceptual analysis. "If you're looking at an individual story a human will beat a machine to death," says real-time text analysis service Lexalytics, "but on the aggregate a machine will do the same to a human."

Unusual grammar, deciding when a series of real-time blips constitute an event of interest and how to present a river of data for business users are all issues that real-time-savvy reputation tracking services wrestle with in building their products.

2. Pushing Financial Data

Real-time infrastructure company Kaazing uses HTML5 Websockets to push bits of financial data to web interfaces for banks. Many of those banks had been using only locally installed software in order to maintain secure persistent connections with a data source, now Kaazing helps them capture the benefits of applications on the web.

All kinds of data could be delivered in new ways using emerging push technologies. The most interesting use case we've heard of so far, though, may be a very big one that could take a long time to become reality.

1. Real-Time Push to Replace Web Crawling

PubSubHubbub co-creator Brad Fitzpatrick, a serial innovator who's been essential in the creation of social networking, OpenID and other technologies, says he thinks that real-time push technologies could someday replace the need for most of the web crawling his employer Google does to maintain its index. If all webpages were PubSubHubbub enabled, for example, they could simply tell a Hub about any changes they had published and Google could find out via that Hub. There would be no reason for Google to poll websites for changes over and over again.

Fitzpatrick says that when Facebook-acquired FriendFeed started consuming PubSubHubbub feeds for subscribing to Google Reader Shared Items, traffic from FriendFeed to Google fell by 85%.

That's a huge win for efficiency. So the real-time web could make the entire web a much leaner beast.

The web as synced-up, low-latency, highly efficient, presence-aware discovery, sharing and communication tool? That's just the beginning of the vision.

Come and join us to discuss these kinds of ideas and more at the ReadWrite Real-Time Web Summit on October 15th. If you can't make it in person, plan to watch selected sessions by live streaming video that day.

These are important developments with a whole lot of potential to change the way we use the web and what we can do with it.

Loading mentions Retweet

Filed under // realtime

Comments (0)

Oct 1 / 1:23am

Heapr, monitoriza

by Rafa

http://www.heapr.com/#l=twitter&q=[eroski,el+corte+ingles,mercadona]&p=[[1],[1],[1]]

Loading mentions Retweet

Filed under // realtime twitter

Comments (0)

Sep 30 / 6:56am

13 Ways to Monitor Your Brand on Social Media:

by Rafa

Loading mentions Retweet

Filed under // realtime

Comments (0)

Sep 28 / 3:05am

Top 50 Real-Time Web Companies

by Rafa

50 Real-Time Web Startups

These companies are listed in alphabetical order. Once again, please use the comments section to add other startups that should be on our radar. You can also of course voice your agreement or disagreement about our choices!

AllVoices; Breaking News, Current Events, Latest News and World Events.
bit.ly (betaworks); URL redirection service with real-time link tracking.
BoilingPage; Find popular webpages among people in real time.
Cleartext; Enterprise Messaging Software as a Service.
Cliqset; Merging, Organizing and Sharing Social Information.
Cluuz; Web search engine featuring semantic cluster graphs, image extraction, and tag clouds.
Collecta; monitors the update streams of news sites, popular blogs and social media.
CrowdEye; Real-time Social Search.
Daylife; A point & click tool to create dynamic content portals.
Faroo; Real Time Search.
FirstRain; search-driven research.
Fwix; a local news site designed to show you the most recent and relevant information in your area.
Google; adding real-time web to search.
HighNote; Search, track and share the real-time web.
Insttant; Real Time People Generated News.
Isode; Messaging and Directory Server Software.
itpints; Real-time web search engine.
Jive Software; Social Business Software (SBS).
JS-Kit ECHO; next generation commenting system.
Kaazing; Enterprise Gateway extends real-time messaging and live data delivery to the Web.
Lexalytics; Sentiment and Text Analysis.
Liaise; an email add-on that analyzes the free-text contents of your emails as you write them.
MicroPlaza; Popular topics and news from the Twitter public timeline.
oneriot; real-time search engine.
PBworks; Collaboration, Intranet, Extranet, Project Management.
PeopleBrowsr; Social Search, Sentiment and Conversation Mining Dashboard.
Perpetually; keep up to date on your competitors.
PostRank; Discover the best blogs, find and follow topic experts and influencers.
Present.ly; a micro-blogging communication tool for your company.
Radian6; Social Media Monitoring, Measurement and Engagement.
Real-Time Innovations; Real-time messaging middleware and design expertise.
reddit; User-generated news links.
Scoopler; real-time search engine.
Scout Labs; web-based application that finds signals in the noise of social media.
Seesmic; manage your lifestream from Facebook & multiple Twitter accounts.
Shareaholic; An extension to share and bookmark web-pages on popular social sharing and bookmarking services.
Superfeedr; Real-time feed parsing in the cloud for web-developers.
Surf Canyon; Free Browser Add-On for Real-Time Personalized Search.
Sysomos; Business Intelligence for Social Media.
Thoora; delivering the news attracting the most buzz and discussion.
TIBCO; business integration and process management software company that enables real-time business.
Topsy; search engine powered by tweets.
tr.im; URL shortening.
Tumblr; light blogging service.
Tweetdeck; desktop Twitter client.
Twitter; micro-blogging.
Vayusphere; an enterprise software company dedicated to the acceleration of a corporation's time critical and frequently used business processes.
WebTrends; Enterprise Customer Intelligence.
Wowd; a tool for finding popular information, in real-time.
Yauba; Privacy safe, real-time search engine.

Loading mentions Retweet

Filed under // realtime

Comments (0)

Sep 25 / 8:09am

Welcome to your notable world | Evernote Corporation

by Rafa

Loading mentions Retweet

Filed under // realtime

Comments (0)

Sep 25 / 2:58am

PostRank Launches New Dashboard to Track Engagement Around Blog Posts

by Rafa

Loading mentions Retweet

Filed under // realtime

Comments (0)

Sep 24 / 8:37am

PeopleBrowsr

by Rafa

Loading mentions Retweet

Filed under // realtime

Comments (0)

Sep 24 / 3:57am

Trendsmap - Real-time local Twitter trends

by Rafa

Loading mentions Retweet

Filed under // realtime

Comments (0)

Sep 24 / 2:10am

¿Qué es la web en tiempo real?: el caso Twitter

by Rafa
Publicado el 23 de September, 2009

TwitterVoy a utilizar a Twitter como el ejemplo principal de cómo funciona el fenómeno de la web en tiempo real, uno que está en boca de todos como lo estuvo la computación en nube hace menos de un año y la formación de redes sociales antes que eso.

Fijémonos en dos números para hacernos una idea de la magnitud de este fenómeno: la cantidad de personas que utiliza Twitter (44.5 millones en junio de 2009) y la adquisición de FriendFeed por Facebook.

¿Qué es la web en tiempo real?

Como sucede con otras tendencias de innovación recientes, no hay una definición exacta, pero podemos identificar varias cuestiones que este nuevo concepto implica:

  • Es una nueva forma de comunicación
  • Crea un nuevo estilo de contenido
  • Es en tiempo real (inmediatez)
  • Es pública y tiene una gráfica social explícita asociada a él
  • Lleva implícito un modelo de federación

Una nueva forma de comunicación

Twitter puede ser visto como una nueva forma de comunicación porque tiene protocolos y procedimientos propios del servicio. Es un flujo de mensajes casi sincrónicos y su tono es conversacional y auténtico (en su mayoría).

El límite de los 140 caracteres puede ser considerado una restricción, pero a la vez hace que el contenido sea generado de manera realmente interesante:

  • Ha facilitado el uso de la plataforma y ha tenido impacto en la tasa de adopción del servicio.
  • No tienes que crear un perfil extensivo como sucede con las redes sociales y con los blogs.
  • Los mensajes se suelen referir a un solo elemento (un producto, un pensamiento, un evento, etc) y suelen incluir algún juicio emocional o evaluativo de él. (Me gusta esto, me cae mal aquello…).

Esta naturaleza de los tweets quiere decir que podemos medir la actividad que un tema en particular puede llegar a generar y el sentimiento generalizado que provoca. En combinación con otros factores, este seguimiento que se le puede dar a un tópico, en combinación con otros usos, permite una experiencia bastante interesante.

El contenido que generamos

Como ya dijimos, la web en tiempo real provee al mundo una nueva masa de contenido que, al contrario de los emails o mensajes instantáneos, es extremadamente público. Además, las APIs permiten a terceras personas utilizar la información y extender el alcance del contenido.

El consumo de este contenido parece ser únicamente la lectura de mensajes de las personas que sigues, pero hay más que eso. Cuando Twitter fue lanzado, sin el alcance ni las celebridades que tiene hoy en día, parecía ser algo interesante, pero no era algo con apariencia de ser indispensable o de peso. El tiempo fue justo con Twitter y ahora que la gente tiene un mejor conocimiento de cómo utilizarlo, los canales se han vuelto fascinantes con más reacción, más comentario y más profundidad.

A esto agreguemos la adquisición de Summize y su rebautizo con el nombre de Twitter Search en Julio de 2008. Esto provocó que los usuarios tuvieran la posibilidad de tomar un grupo de palabras y etiquetas para “resaltar” el contenido que les interesa dentro del flujo de mensajes en Twitter. Esta nueva capacidad reveló otra capa del valor que tiene la plataforma porque ha permitido que las personas accedan a hilos de información sobre un tema particular. Esto ya ha sucedido de forma emblemática con casos como el de Irán. ¿Se recuerdan?

La búsqueda en tiempo real y el filtrado que necesita aún son primitivos de cierta forma, pero se están haciendo grandes esfuerzos en mejorar. El factor que hace la diferencia entre el contenido que genera la web en tiempo real y el resto de contenido en formato digital es simplemente la accesibilidad, siempre que esté acompañada de la inmediatez y la fidelidad del contenido.

Conversaciones públicas y las gráficas sociales

Las conversaciones que toman lugar dentro de la corriente de la web en tiempo real llevan con ellas una gráfica social particular. La audiencia de una persona que publica información en la web en tiempo real no es desconocida, como puede que suceda con los blogs.

Cada usuario comunicándose en Twitter tiene un grupo de seguidores, cada uno de los cuales tiene más seguidores y que forman una gráfica social que permite que un solo mensaje tenga suficiente eco para ser consumido públicamente. Estas gráficas contienen una cantidad razonable de información que identifica a cada uno de los usuarios que contiene. En el caso de Twitter, esto incluye un nombre, un sitio web y una breve descripción.

Hay muchas personas interesadas en desarrollar sobre la plataforma de Twitter y otros servicios de la web en tiempo real porque sus características permiten obtener valores derivados de su contenido e interactividad. Una persona puede monitorear el flujo de la información y producir valor derivado para organizaciones, marcas, políticos y otros que desean saber sobre lo que se está hablando, quién lo está escuchando y la recepción en general que tiene determinado tema.

El modelo federacional

Un gran número de fuentes generan y consumen la información generada en tiempo real. Como resultado, muchas de estas compañías se están convirtiendo en portadores de la información de sus redes hacia otras.

Esto conlleva más que el simple hecho de estar abierto y permitir la importación y exportación de la información. La web en tiempo real está desarrollando un modelo de transmisión federacional en donde las compañías están de acuerdo en facilitar la transmisión de información y mejorar la experiencia de los consumidores finales dentro del ecosistema.

Loading mentions Retweet

Filed under // realtime

Comments (0)