Introducing Snowl: An Experiment with Messaging in the Browser

It looks like Mozilla is pushing the envelope on what's possible with the Web browser:

Conversing (a.k.a. messaging) is a common online activity, and a number of desktop and web applications enable it.  But with an increasing variety of protocols and providers, it’s getting harder and harder to keep track of all your conversations.

Could the web browser help you follow and participate in online discussions?

Snowl is an experiment to answer that question.  It’s a prototype Firefox extension that integrates messaging into the browser based on a few key ideas:

  1. It doesn’t matter where messages originate. They’re alike, whether they come from traditional email servers, RSS/Atom feeds, web discussion forums, social networks, or other sources.
  2. Some messages are more important than others, and the best interface for actively reading important messages is different from the best one for casually browsing unimportant ones.
  3. A search-based interface for message retrieval is more powerful and easier to use than one that makes you organize your messages first to find them later.
  4. Browser functionality for navigating web content, like tabs, bookmarks, and history, also works well for navigating messages.

Currently, Snowl is available in prototype form where only two messaging sources are supported, RSS/Atom and Twitter. Still, it's really interesting looking. Check out the full blog post for more info and screenshots.

Discuss this Article 15

bugfaceuk
on Aug 12, 2008
Do one thing, do it well.
mikegalos@msn.com
on Aug 12, 2008
If all you make is a hammer, you decide that putting a screwdriver on the end of a hammer is a great idea. This reminds me of when Lotus Development decided to turn 1-2-3 into Symphony and ended up with a Word Processor that used one cell of a spreadsheet as a page. (Lotus Symphony back in 1984 - not IBM's attempt to reuse the name in hopes the original will be forgotten.)
lotsamystuff
on Aug 12, 2008
"Do one thing, do it well." Like whom? Microsoft?
matt.brown
on Aug 12, 2008
Facebook has already done this in current generation browsers on their site. Nothing shocking here.
garychell
on Aug 12, 2008
Wish I had a hammer with a screwdriver on the end.
mikegalos@msn.com
on Aug 12, 2008
garychell Well, you may have found your product! (There is somebody to fill any niche)
gorath
on Aug 12, 2008
But, if you keep adding to the hammer, with a screwdriver on it's end, say by adding a toothpick, a pair of scissors, a nail file, tweezers, a tool for removing stones from horse's hooves, a few knives, a magnifying glass, bottle opener, and a USB memory stick, they what you've basically done, is declared war on Switzerland - albeit on equal terms!
tayme
on Aug 12, 2008
My plan is to drink enough screwdrivers to get hammered. --tayme
gorath
on Aug 13, 2008
Sorry, I know this is off-topic, but you gotta love this. Proof positive that a Dell laptop is coniderably more expensive (and I mean considerably) than an apple laptop. http://msmvps.com/blogs/brianmadsen/archive/2008/08/13/w00t-you-just-got...
Ocean
on Aug 13, 2008
Gorath, thats trolling. :-) >>Like whom? Microsoft?<< Well done. Anyway, this nothing more than an attempt to innovate. It hasn't become mainstream.
mikegalos@msn.com
on Aug 13, 2008
gorath Yes, but with the AU$!M service contract you get a red jewel icon for your desktop to show you could afford it!
gorath
on Aug 13, 2008
oooooh, red jewel! :D
tayme
on Aug 13, 2008
Oh wait...does Mozilla's use of a Snow animal mean that they are copying Apple's Snow Leopard?!? --tayme
gorath
on Aug 14, 2008
nope, it's a combination of snooty, and scowl.
Waethorn
on Aug 14, 2008
"does Mozilla's use of a Snow animal mean that they are copying Apple's Snow Leopard?!?" Does that mean that they had a preliminary version that sucked really bad, and now they're trying to cover it up with a miniscule update?

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