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Mark Gibbs shares Web site tips and provides advice on getting the most out of your apps.
I've been watching the evolution of Webtops - essentially analogs of PC desktops delivered via the Web - since they first emerged. This area of Web applications is fascinating because the technical and operational challenges involved in delivering a workable and useful Webtop are not trivial. Moreover, once the tech stuff has been achieved a Webtop publisher's biggest challenge is getting users to adopt their services as either augmentations or replacements for their existing desktops.
One of the latest and for me one of the most intriguing entrants into this market is eCirkit.
A small digression is in order here: To everyone developing Web applications, Web sites, blogs, or anything else online – stop with the "e's" already! It is e-gregious and e-nnoying and it smacks of a lack of creativity that doesn’t add anything to your branding. OK, now I’ve got that out of my system we can continue …
ECirkit is a Webtop that implements a portal-based service combined with social networking facilities.
Once you’ve logged in you are presented with your community page. This community page is a static portal interface that shows a summary of your login details; the last eCirkit pages you visited; your contacts list, your media (videos and photos you’ve collected); your “Portfolio” (comments from other users, your bio, your blogroll, the RSS feeds you watch, your bookmarks; your “Vault” (200MB of file storage for any purpose you please); and your collection of things you want to sell.
All eCirkit pages include a menu bar that allows you to change the page to your Webtop page where you can open dynamic windows that deliver whatever features you want to use, the Contests page (we’ll come back to this), a Help page, and something called “CirkitVision” that plays a promo video about the service and from which I couldn’t figure out how to return to the rest of the service … I put that down to beta teething problems.
There're also buttons on the menu bar to open any the service’s facilities as dynamic windows. These facilities include all of the Community features as well as e-mail (this can interface with your POP accounts as well as with eCirkit’s internal messaging), instant messaging (within eCirkit only), forums, account settings, and search in separate movable, resizable Webtop windows on top of your home page.
Mark Gibbs is a consultant, author, journalist, columnist and blogger.
Comments (1)
WebtopsBy Anonymous on February 2, 2009, 12:53 amA faily simple webtop I use is Deskie. It works kind of like a web bookmarks page/desktop. Plus it doesn't even have an e on the start!
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