twine

New Avast, Apple's $10,000 prize, and hot pizza: The Week in Downloads

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Top Download News and Features

Avast Free Antivirus updates to add VPN service and target Facebook Gmail for iPhone and iPadRead more

Choose your Twine adventure

These days, regular folks across the world are using free software to easily create homespun music, Webisodes, and movies, so why not interactive fiction? A little program called Twine (download for Windows or Mac) that brings a DIY ethos to text-based Web games has slowly emerged as a huge player in the indie-game scene. If you're new to Twine, it's freeware that lets users develop their own interactive stories and games. It enables players to determine their own adventures by clicking on hyperlinks scattered throughout the text.

Originally developed by Chris Klimas, Twine has been used by myriad … Read more

Ninja Blocks add spy power to everyday stuff

If your world isn't already complex enough, or if you're just a control freak, it's time to add some ninja to your life.

Sensor-equipped platforms called Ninja Blocks are designed to bring the Internet of things to a ubiquitous, open-source reality.

The result of a recent successful Kickstarter project that raised more than $100,000, Ninja Blocks obey simple "if this, then that" commands to add functionality to your environment through the Web.

For instance, when your friends are playing on Xbox Live a Ninja Block could trigger an action in your living room, like turning on a lamp. Or a Ninja Block could text your phone when a package is delivered to your door. You could also activate household lights or electronics via your Ninja by talking to Siri. … Read more

Wolfram Alpha: Next major search breakthrough?

Stephen Wolfram has a track record of scientific breakthroughs and some controversy. He received his Ph.D. in theoretical physics from Caltech in 1979 when he was 20 and has focused most of his career on probing complex systems. In 1988 he launched Mathematica, powerful computational software that has become the gold standard in its field. In 2002, Wolfram produced a 1,280-page tome, A New Kind of Science, based on a decade of exploration in cellular automata and complex systems. The book stirred up a lot of debate in scientific circles. Legendary physicist Freeman Dyson described the tome as &… Read more

Radar Networks delivers Twine 1.0

After less than a year, Radar Networks is going from beta to version 1.0 of its Twine "interest network" Web application based on Semantic Web technologies. "We are not spending four years in beta," said Radar Networks CEO Nova Spivack. "We have a minimal set of features ready for prime time."

The minimal set of interest network features allows Twine users to track and discover relevant organizations, products, people, places, tags, and items, such as photos, documents, and recipes, that match their interests. Twine has a social dimension in the way it leverages … Read more

Radar Networks readies new release of Twine

In March, Radar Networks launched Twine, an application that organizes information and connects people, places, companies, products, Web pages, videos, and photos. Along with Metaweb's Freebase, Powerset (sold to Microsoft), Hakia, Reuters' Calias, AdaptiveBlue and a few other start-ups, Radar Networks is trying to crack the code on building a piece of the semantic Web.

In a Times Online article, Web creator Tim Berners-Lee gave an example of how the semantic Web would work:

"Imagine if two completely separate things--your bank statements and your calendar--spoke the same language and could share information with one another. You could drag … Read more

On the road to the Semantic Web

The Semantic Web has been just around the corner for a few years. It turns out that bringing a semantic layer of metadata to the Internet is like climbing a mountain in flip-flops.

Tuesday night, Semantic Web mountain climbers Powerset, Radar Networks, and Metaweb participated in a salon at Powerset's San Francisco office, where I talked with them about their product plans.

Powerset gives wings to Wikipedia I got a preview of Powerset's search engine, which is due to go into beta in the coming weeks, according to co-founder and CTO Barney Pell and as reported by TechCrunch. … Read more

Tim Berners-Lee: Google could be superseded by the Semantic Web

The inventor of the World Wide Web, Sir Tim Berners-Lee, isn't satisfied living on his past laurels. At every opportunity he talks up the Semantic Web, which he calls the "Web of the future."

In a recent article in the Times Online, he said that what Google has done so far pales in comparison with what the Semantic Web will bring. Social -networking leaders Facebook and MySpace will eventually be trumped by networks that connect all types of things, not just people, he said. To be clear, he wasn't saying that Google is doomed.

In the … Read more

The Semantic Web takes shape, with Twine

This one is worth waiting for: Twine. Still in private beta, at its most basic it is shared bookmarking service. It blends additional concepts from newsgroups, forums, social networking sites, online databases, and wikis. There's a lot of semantic Web theory (and technology) underneath the interface, which still needs to evolve a bit, but even in this early stage it's a compelling product.

Twine lets you create or participate in topic areas called "Twines." Users post Web addresses, photo and video links, files, and text comments into a Twine. Twine goes to work analyzing the items and automatically finding tags for them. For example, when I created a "Web 2.0 reviews" Twine and added Webware, it automatically tagged it "applications," "business," "silicon valley," and so forth, which are keywords that Webware.com pages has in its HTML source. The service also tries to divine meaning from the pages and add its own tags, and it attempts to figure out the people and the locations associated with an item, and put that information in as well.

From all these tags, including tags that you manually attach to stories, Twine will then look up items that it thinks you will be interested in, as well as other Twine members that have similarly-tagged items in their portfolios. It also uses the strength of your connections to various other members to weight item recommendations.

The upshot of this is that its recommendations should be pretty good. Immediately after I entered in my Webware link, Twine recommended to me a video of Eric Schmidt (Google's CEO), a review of the Web 2.0 Summit Launchpad, and other items I thought I should definitely check out.

It's easy to get items into Twine. There's a bookmarklet that grabs URLs and images, and, if the item comes from a source such as Flickr, YouTube, or Amazon, additional metadata as well. You can also e-mail items into Twine, either to your own (or other peoples') Twine address or directly into a topic Twine.

Each item also gets a discussion thread, or you can make a discussion an item itself.

In a nutshell, Twine builds a semantic web (small w) from all the items, people, collections, and tags that are contributed to it. I think it does a killer job of weaving everything together. However, it's a rough cloth. The user interface appears straightforward at first, but it takes some study to understand what's going on and how to exploit it. As other writers have said, even at this early stage, with only 30,000 users, it's easy to see how Twine could contribute to personal information overload.

The database that Twine builds is as open as the company can make it. All pages can alternatively be viewed in machine-readable RDF format, and a two-way API is in the works. That's pretty cool, although Twine is neither a general-purpose social site such as Twitter nor a database such as Freebase, so I'm not sure who's going to bother creating applications for Twine. Though if the social aggregators (such as FriendFeed and Plaxo) want to do so, Twine's open strategy should make it easy.

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Radar Networks takes $13 million, readies Twine for the public

Radar Networks is prepping for a March public beta of Twine, a Web application that organizes information into a "semantic graph," connecting people, places, companies, products, Web pages, videos, and photos, and turning it into Semantic Web content.

In addition, the company raised $13 million in Series B funding from Velocity Interactive, Draper Fisher Jurvetson, and Vulcan Capital. The new capital will go toward building out the back-end infrastructure, which can be substantial as Semantic Web applications process and store large amounts of data, as well as adding staff as the business scales up, says Radar Networks founder … Read more