If it's on a widget or about a widget, it's here

Showing posts with label widgets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label widgets. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Holiday Travel Helper


IT will cost me nearly $100 to visit my parents and sister over Thanksgiving.

Not that you can put a price on family, love, blah blah blah.

But, for those of us quite short on cash and high on miles to drive this holiday season, here's a handy (and well-done) gas pricer being promoted by Apple right now. You tell the widget your zip code, and the widget hooks up with Google Maps to find you the best prices on the way. Nothing is more frustrating than gassing up to the tune of $3.70 per gallon only to see a sign advertising $3.60 ten miles later. You can also choose to look only for a specific grade or all grades (in the picture, I was search for all grades...I'm just in a small town where most gas stations don't bother to offer more than regular.)

Though it seems to be a simple, low-importance widget, the way it pulls information and provides customized details from multiple, unrelated sites without forcing you to get online, find gas stations and then check their prices on each company's Web site makes it a strong widget.

Safe and happy travels!

Not-for-work Widget of the Day

Light Bulb Jokes

With over 1,000 light bulb jokes, you can offend every gender, sexuality, race and creed in your office! (see below...)

Far and away, funny4myspace has consistently had the most shocking/useless/borderline offensive widgets out there. I would have expected more out of the accessories for the social network that gave us Tila Tequila. Way to go.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Storytelling the Widget Way

THIS post comes from guest blogger Jared Novack, graphics developer for chron.com and endofprint.com mastermind.

"If you search through Google or Apple's widget library you'll find plenty of widgets from news organizations. But like much from established news organizations on the web, the product doesn't quite match with user's needs.

Let's take the RSS widget that lots of news orgs put out. What's the reason to use RSS in the first place? Aggregation. On my Google Reader I can pull in 100 different feeds. Sort them to make sense, and have all the news I'm interested in one place. An RSS widget basically just resegregates content into little (glossy) blocks.

My theory is that for a news org, these widgets are designed as a marketing tool. Sure, I can visit the Today show's web site for the latest cooking tips. But why miss the chance to stare at Matt Lauer on my Yahoo! Widget bar all day?

So what's the point of informational widgets? While the standard web site allows you to read information, the key to widgets is they allow you to monitor information.

My two favorite widgets are package tracking and flight times. A year ago if I wanted to track my Amazon shipment, I would go to my email, find the tracking number, go over to FedEx, find the US package tracking tool, paste the number... Now the widget automatically updates that information for me, and all it takes is a glance at my Dashboard to see when my DVDs are arriving.

So what news can you monitor as oppose to read? Stocks and weather are obvious areas already well tapped. But as the 2008 elections ramp up, poll data and results stream in from the primary states. Slate has a cool little feature called Election Scorecard on their site which is begging to be made into widgets. During the '04 elections electoral-vote.com became a sensation in the blogosphere for its aggregation of state poll data to predict the winner of the electoral college (as opposed to the Gallup and Zogby polls pushed in the MSM that focused on national totals).

The widgetizing of news speaks to the central problem of most news websites today. We still tend to think of news as a 600-word block of text instead of unfiltered information.

What's the best way to tell the story of the Iraq War's cost? An 800-word piece about the latest appropriation? Or a widget calculator estimating the total cost?

Much like blogs, the point of a widget isn't to have a widget, the point is it's another story form on the web. And for now, mostly untapped."


John Edwards Jott Widget

Zodiac Sex: Not-for-work Widget of the Day, 11/12

Not-for-work Widget of the Day, 11/18

White Fence widget: Getting the job done

Not-for-work Widget of the Day, 11/20

Not for Work Widget of the Day 11/21