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Intel Releases Mashups for the Masses

News_and_info writes "Intel has released an online tool called Mash Maker with the intent of allowing anyone to create mashups. They offer some training on how to use it, but the tool is fairly easy to use out of the gate. I see it more as a rudimentary semantic browser. From the article: 'Mashups have still not really penetrated the mainstream. My mother is not using mashup sites, and she is definitely not creating them. Even if there was a mashup out there that did exactly what she wanted, the chances are that she wouldn't know it existed, and would be confused by it if she tried to use it ... With Mash Maker, mashups are part of the normal browsing experience. As you browse the web, the Mash Maker toolbar displays buttons representing mashups that Mash Maker thinks you might want to apply to your current page.'"

10 of 180 comments (clear)

  1. What's REALLY needed by Colin+Smith · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is to wire the balls of whoever thought up the word "mashup" to the mains supply and to shock them until they repent and take it back.

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    1. Re:What's REALLY needed by springbox · · Score: 5, Funny

      That didn't work for "podcast" ..

  2. Re:What's a "mashup"? by 427_ci_505 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Web technology flexibility amazes me. Now we can boil it, mash it, stick it in a stew...etc.

  3. Mashups are... by Dr.+Stavros · · Score: 5, Informative

    Karma-whoring Wikipedia-link explanation of mashups. Thanks!

    1. Re:Mashups are... by glwtta · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's what I love about Wikipedia - often you don't even need to read most of the text, just the quality of writing tells you everything you need to know.

      "a Mashup is used in order to make a certain source of information exponentially more useful", translation: "complete bullshit; a nearly nonsensical term made up by some 14 year-old with a hard-on for MySpace".

      I sure hope these Mashups will be all Web 2.0, and lets not forget to crowdsource some folksonomies, too.

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      sic transit gloria mundi
  4. The "2.0" ness escapes more than newbies. by Chonine · · Score: 5, Interesting

    More power to those out there that edit wikis religiously, blog daily, use and create mashups, get their news through an RSS reader, can name their favorite 10 podcasts, share their Google calendars with their friends, have a FlickR and Delicious account, use 100 firefox plugins, and have an application-loaded Facebook among their many social networking sites - these can be some great tools with great utility to people.

    But for some reason, this newfangled web doesn't seem to appeal to me, my friends, or anyone I know. I'm a Computer Science Masters student, and my friends work in industry. Am I backwards? Antiquated? Should I be mashing it up? I do it like I have for years - an xterm, an email app, an IM app, and a tabbed-to-the-hilt browser.

    1. Re:The "2.0" ness escapes more than newbies. by klenwell · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But for some reason, this newfangled web doesn't seem to appeal to me, my friends, or anyone I know.

      I hear you. I actually had an idea the other day that I thought would be perfect for Yahoo Pipes. The thing was, the web page that was the source for the key data to be mashed-up, though a classic HTML data table, didn't offer an RSS feed. And Pipes doesn't seem to offer even the most basic page scraping utility. (If it does, I couldn't find it.)

      After playing around with Yahoo Pipes for a half-hour trying to make it work, I realized that with my knowledge of PHP, I could do this just as easily on my own. And have much more control over the process and end product.

      The conclusion I came to: anyone who is capable of imaginatively using these tools is probably more than capable of just rolling their own mashup using open-source scripting tools. I don't imagine most ordinary users are going to be able to create anything more inventive than a regurgitated RSS feed.

      Please correct me if I'm wrong. Anyone have any interesting examples of something produced with this kind of pre-packaged mashup tool?

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      Innovation makes enemies of all those who prospered under the old regime... -- Machiavelli
  5. WTF is a mashup? by noidentity · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Article summary could have had a few extra words summarizing what a "mashup" is. To me it sounds like what I do with my potatoes before I eat them.

  6. the truth is by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 5, Insightful

    older folks such as myself don't use this mashup crap because it sounds STUPID.
    The name alone implies that it's some sort of hap-hazardly created frankenstein stuff that 10 year olds create.
    The name does not indicate at all, in any way what a mashup is or does.

    It just sounds stupid and totally un-professional.

    No, I'm not trolling, this isn't flamebait, I'm giving MY take on it from the perspective of someone near 50 years old.

    Why not call this stuff, what ever it is, by a name that gives people a sense of what it's about?

  7. We did it! by redcaboodle · · Score: 5, Funny

    We actually slashdotted Intel.

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    -- Put crudely, the world is an extremely large problem instance. (Russel/Norvig Artificial Intelligence)