Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or urlGulf Oil Spill - Latest YouTube Videos - 3 views
Web 2.0 Search Engine Of Links, Online Applications & Web 20 Sites - 17 views
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Simply search for a keyword of what your wish to make or work with to see the tools & related Web 2.0 links available (example search links: mashups, blogging, viral videos, clipart, designing, social tagging, AJAX apps, file storage/sharing, RSS feeds, anti-spam tools, CSS layout generators, image editors, DHTML codes, webmaster tools, calendars, data organizing, calculators, file conversions, Atom, sync, blog (URL) submits, web APIs, tutorials, etc).
Geolover - makes trip planning easy - 4 views
API Directory - ProgrammableWeb - 11 views
Dapper: The Data Mapper - 1 views
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Dapper is a service that allows you to extract and use information from any website on the Internet. For those familiar with web services, you can think of Dapper as an API maker. For the rest of you, Dapper allows you to build web applications and mashups using data from any website without any programmin
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How to make $ 40,000 in one month with very quickly. What you need. The latest American news article. Immediately visit www.killdo.de.gg www.fiverr.de.gg www.newss.de.gg www.reddit.de.gg www.newsbbc.de.gg
Cadmus - 1 views
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Usage: Hover the cursor over any cell in the matrix. A small box gives details on mashups for that API combination. Top links in hover box bring you to that API's reference page. Links in body of hover box take you directly to the mashup. Not all combinations have mashups & only those with the 'º' indicator currently have entries. Cells at the intersection of same API (ex: Amazon+Amazon) list any other examples for that API.
Note that there are two views into the matrix: the default view shows only those APIs for which mashups have been added to the database. The second view shows all APIs regardless of whether there's currently a mashup registered. It's big. Definitions: What is a mashup anyway? As always, it's good to check Wikipedia's definition, but essentially a "mashup" is a web-based application built through (creative) combination of data from multiple sources. Often, but by no means always, this data is retrieved by using a vendor's API such as those listed here. (An API? Also at Wikipedia.) Some recent press may also help explain: BusinessWeek's "Mix, Match and Mutate", The Economist's "Mashing the Web". Background: This is an experiment. It is intended to be both a reference point and also a visualization. What you see here today will change both in content and form shortly. I am quite interested in seeing the 'space' in which mashups exist. Clearly, some APIs such as Google Maps, appear to be more widely used than others. UI Issues: Cross-browser support is good but not complete. Sometimes it can b