The service changes a little bit at a time, and frequently, and while I can't recommend anyone move their daily calendar on to it, it's an interesting service to keep track of the whereabouts and online activities of a small number of people you really care about.ģ0 Boxes is on to something. Supermail tells you when people open your messages and follow your links.ĬEO Narendra Rocherolle told me he hasn't taken any outside funding for 30 Boxes (he earned a few bucks when he sold Webshots to CNET in 2004), so he can experiment with the service's functions and interface without having Mr. The other is a browser plug-in called PowerTwitter, that enhances the standard Twitter browser page by showing on it extra items in the same way that Twapper does, as well as "unwinding" the compressed URLs that are often embedded in Twitter messages. The first is Twapper ( review), a mobile site that displays not just a cellular-friendly Twitter feed but associated other data from people you're following, such as their Flickr images. What the system does is not well explained on the site, and the site's terminology is not clear.Īs part of 30 Boxes' ongoing experiments with social timelines, the company has released two Twitter add-ons. Other parts of 30 Boxes remind us of its experimental nature. That keeps your calendar from becoming a visual assault. For example, it puts appointments on the calendar but other items (such as RSS feeds and Flickr updates) show up only when your mouse hovers over the dates the items are associated with.
![webshots mobile webshots mobile](https://www.businessinsider.in/photo/84850673/how-you-can-transfer-photos-from-mobile-to-laptop.jpg)
There are some elements to the 30 Boxes user interface that are very smart. This kind of tracking can be abused, but if you want to be sure your recipient is receiving and following links you sent, Supermail will tell you. It tracks responses to your e-mails-when users open the message or click on the links you send, you're alerted in 30 Boxes. The service has a to-do list mini-app as well, and it has its own e-mail application, called Supermail, that you can use to send Web links. They'll also get an invitation to join 30 Boxes, of course, and if they do they can have more control over what information that's associated with their e-mail address. The system will find their updates on Twitter and other services, and add them to your calendar. All you need to know is a person's e-mail address to add them in to your calendar. 30 Boxes reminds me Jaiku ( review), another personal feed aggregator, except it's oriented around the calendar scheme rather than the discussion-based scheme Jaiku is based on.Įveryone who uses 30 Boxes, and everyone who is added into a 30 Boxes stream, gets their own profile page ( here's mine). For example, 30 Boxes will put your blog updates, Twitter messages, calendar items, and Flickr photos on your calendar, as well as those from your friends. It's also an aggregation service for time-based updates from your social sites and for those of your friends. My 30 Boxes calendar also displays other peoples’ events, as well as my own Webware RSS feed (at right).īut 30 Boxes is more than an events calendar with a rudimentary understanding of scheduling grammar. It's got a special trick, in that instead of clicking on days and times to enter appointments, you can type in its single entry box something like, "Lunch, noon Friday with Frank," and it will create the appointment based on that. The easy part first: 30 Boxes is a nice little online calendar. But the world's changed a bit since then, and 30 Boxes has as well, so I recently took another look at this interesting (and experimental) app.
![webshots mobile webshots mobile](https://wallpapercave.com/wp/NsafsYS.jpg)
I covered the 30 Boxes online calendar briefly last September ( see story).