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sign up for Mashup Camp 2?:
MashupCamp2 - MashupCamp!
new style conference
flickr coverage
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It would be interesting to figure out the entire list of people who have pictures with the mashupcamp tag and plot them out their pictures.
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my mashup camp pictures:
Flickr: Photo search results
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what I missed the second day:
The List of Mashup Demos (speed-geeking)
interesting sessions
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RapidDevPlatforms, including
Ning | Screencasts - Create an App from Scratch and
Bungee Labs - Coming soon
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ChicagocrimeAndScrapePI - MashupCamp! -- web-scraping -- didin't know someone put together
Wikipedia - Ontok for Wikipedia
interesting apps/systems
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Weather Bonk - Live Weather, Forecasts, WebCams, and more on a Google Map
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FlySpy and
Robert Metcalf with FlySpy on Flickr - Photo Sharing!
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Chao Lam, with http://clipclip.org:
Chao Lam of ClipClip.org on Flickr - Photo Sharing!
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jotspot developer:
ExampleApps - developer - JotSpot
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increased PHP functionality coming in open source from Zend: email, wrapper around Lucene, Feed.php, XML-RPC.
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salesforce.com and
Salesforce.com: System Status
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winner of best mashup:
Podbop - Berkeley, CA
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Eventful vs
Upcoming.org: Home Use both? Which API? (
EVDB API vs
Upcoming.org: API Documentation - Overview)
some coverage
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» Old-school conferences R.I.P. | Between the Lines | ZDNet.com
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» MashupCamp Day 2: The mashups | Between the Lines | ZDNet.com
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» MashupCamp Day 2: The mashups | Between the Lines | ZDNet.com
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Mashup.DarwinianWeb.com: The state of the mashupsphere -- early days of software industry projects, no products
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Podtech.net: InfoTalk Podcast Series -- Adam Green dissing this stuff
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thevoipdigest.com » Blog Archive » JavaScript web applications
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WSFinder: Mashup Camp: We had a good time at mashup. For me the highlight was a pow-wow of WSFinder, Programmable Web, and StrikeIron trying to figure out how to replace UDDI/WSDL with something simple and easy.
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thevoipdigest.com » Blog Archive » JavaScript web applications
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IBM sees PHP as a key to achieve this agility in application development. PHP can serve as a malleable front end to back end systems through Web Services or RSS. The demo used to make this point was of a project called QED Wiki, which is based on WakkaWiki. In addition to being a regular Wiki, where you can add content, QED is an application development environment where you can script applications based on wiki content and external data. The demo used a scenario of a major hardware store chain and how they can create situational applications based on weather conditions (sales depend on the weather conditions. Hurricanes = tarps and plywood. Snow = shovels and salt). With a little bit of script, similar to writing spreadsheet functions, Adam was able to create a nice little application based on data from NOAA and Google Maps showing the weather conditions of different stores within the chain. I think it was a stretch when David said that a typical store manager could put something like this together, but I see the point.
