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    My name is Andrew Scott; I am currently Founder/CEO of the location based discovery startup Rummble and spend my time in Cambridge, London, San Francisco and anywhere else that there is interesting digital stuff happening - especially in mobile. This is a blog about social software, mobile and my personal whinges.

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Thoughts on Fire Eagle from Yahoo

March 7, 2008 — Andrew Scott

In Fire Eagles inaugural TechCrunch review, the line that jumped out was the terribly misguided leader “Fire Eagle launches with near zero functionality”. Were Fire Eagle a traditional location based service, this would likely be fair; but surely TC is missing the point. FE sits at the apex of services, providing a consistent route and API so that whichever consumer service a users uses, they can consequently propagate that update (at their discretion and convenience) to all the other services. In a nutshell this can be done:

pp_login_head_v3.png* Directly at the FE website / direct via SMS etc
* via an FE compatible app
* or via a future FE social app

The 3rd option is my concern; if only because users need to be very clear where FE primarily sits as a service. I’d even say there was a potential argument against FE producing a (e.g.Facebook) app because it should be the FE application developers who develop the apps and services which then utilise FE as the location propagator between them. This then retains value for the app developers in having their users interface directly with them. In this respect TC seemed to miss the point and failed to focus heavily enough on why IMHO FE is an important catalyst for all of us working in LBS.

This leads me to a final point, which is are there any plans to support signup of users to FE via the API (I haven’t checked so if it does apologies) in parallel and at the time of signup, e.g. when they signup to Rummble they become a member of FE by default? Likewise combining this with FE Support for OpenID would further accelerate FE’s chance of survival and acceptance as a defacto location propagation tool, and hopefully ensure users understand FE’s remit as primarily being the glue between services not a service itself (assuming of course that last point is true! :-)

Oh, and whoever said to TC that Fire Eagle is like “Twitter with location” should be shot — its a bad comparison for all sorts of reasons, not least because Blaine & co are still struggling to keep their services reliable, but mostly because it completely undersells the effect that an industry wide propagation service for LBS may have.

If the woman sitting next to me on this flight to SXSW doesn’t stop making deafening suction sounds chewing her boiled sweet … there will be blood.

Andrew.

Posted in Internet en general, Mobile social networks & Communities, Web 2.0 Web 3.0. Tags: fire eagle, fireeagle, lbs, location api, rummble. 1 Comment »

Fire Eagle open location API Launches (E-Tech 2008)

March 5, 2008 — Andrew Scott

E-Tech, San Diego – The first major development in a while that may help the Location Based Services out there realize their true potential. Sorry the video is poor quality; and the sound may be pretty dodgy too!

Posted in Mobile industry, Mobile social networks & Communities, Web 2.0 Web 3.0. Tags: brickhouse, fire eagle, fireeagle, lbs, location based api, open api, rummble, yahoo. 1 Comment »
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  • Twitter Updates

    • Guanabara in London's website- 10 clicks to find address. #fail. Should have used @rummble -stupid me. 10 hours ago
    • @dontgochanging don't forget to try Rummble- major upgrade coming soon too ;-) 10 hours ago
    • Rummbled 8/10 at Kurz & Lang, City of London http://is.gd/54RhK Genuine German sausage and beer, served with a smile. 13 hours ago
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  • Rummble is in Beta!

    Rummble is for people and places you love. It makes it easy to find who and what is nearby that you will like; at home or on the move on your mobile.

    For regular news updates and developer information about Rummble checkout the official Rummble blog Good Vibrations here.

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