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7 items tagged “chris-messina”

2009

When APIs go dark, how do you do a data backup? (Answer: you often can't.) With public, microformatted content, there will likely be a public archive that can be used to reconstitute at least portions of the service. With dynamic APIs and proprietary data formats, all bets are off.

Chris Messina

# 9th February 2009, 8:46 pm / apis, archiving, chris-messina, data-portability, microformats

... Facebook will be hosting the second User Experience Summit for OpenID on February 10th. The goal is to convene some of the best designers that leading internet companies can muster, and bring them together to develop a series of guidelines, best practices, iterations, and interfaces for making OpenID not just suck less, but become a great experience

Chris Messina

# 6th February 2009, 12:19 am / chris-messina, facebook, openid, usability

2008

I think there's a great danger that, as a result of framing the current opportunity around "data portability", the story that will get picked up and retold will be the about copying data between social networks, rather than the more compelling, more future-facing, and frankly more likely situation of data streaming from trusted brokered sources to downstream authorized consumers.

Chris Messina

# 12th May 2008, 8:13 am / chris-messina, data-portability, socialnetworkportability

2007

Mailplane (via) A commercial OS X Gmail client built around a site-specific browser.

# 25th October 2007, 7:57 am / chris-messina, gmail, google, mail, mailplane, osx, sitespecificbrowsers

Site-specific browsers and GreaseKit. New site-specific browser tool which lets you include a bunch of Greasemonkey scripts. For me, the killer feature of site-specific browsers is still cookie isolation (to minimise the impact of XSS and CSRF holes) but none of the current batch of tools advertise this as a feature, and most seem to want to share the system-wide cookie jar.

# 25th October 2007, 7:56 am / chris-messina, cookies, csrf, greasekit, greasemonkey, javascript, safari, security, sitespecificbrowsers, webkit, xss

OpenID support in Blinksale (via) Blinksale + Highrise + Basecamp means you can run your small business on OpenID.

# 10th July 2007, 7:45 am / 37-signals, basecamp, blinksale, chris-messina, highrise, openid

factoryjoe: Design Patterns. Chris Messina’s collection of user interface design pattern screenshots, collated on Flickr.

# 10th April 2007, 11:22 am / chris-messina, design-patterns, flickr, ui