Intel
Intel researchers demonstrated Mashmaker last week at the company's Research at Intel Day

Intel makes mash-ups for the masses

Mashmaker application allow website customisation without programming

Tom Sanders at Intel Labs Day in Santa Clara

Intel is planning to release a closed beta next month of a tool that allows random users to customise the content of a website without any interference from the publisher. 

Intel researchers demonstrated Mashmaker last week at the company's Research at Intel Day. The application could expand a listing of rental properties, for example, with information about nearby restaurants.

Advertisement

The service dissects the contents of a web page and bundles it into categories. In a rental listing it recognises elements such as the property's price and address.

Mashmaker can then take the address information on other online services, such as restaurant listing site Yelp, and add a link to the restaurant overview.

The service currently relies on a server-based application where websites are loaded inside a frame. But a future version could rely on a browser plug-in, according to Rob Ennals, a senior researcher at Intel Labs in Berkeley, California.

Services that combine information from multiple sources in a single new service are known as mash-ups.

But mash-ups today rely on programmers combining information made available through XML standards such as RSS, or through application programming interfaces (APIs).

Most examples of mash-ups use Google Maps, for instance to display where people submit new Twitter postings based on their IP addresses. 

But setting up such services requires writing code, which puts the services out of reach of most users.

Intel's Mashmaker does not rely on XML or APIs. When available, XML tags provide an easy way to identify information. But users can also track down such information by looking at its structure.

A phone number, for instance, is typically jotted down in a few standard ways, and street addresses can be recognised fairly easy as well. It would be harder to pick out names of companies or people, however.

Mashmaker allows every user to create definitions of information items, and to build cross references. But it also relies on the collective wisdom of the masses by making the creations available to all other users of the application.

In the current version of the software, a user visiting a website will automatically receive suggestions for items that can be added without any coding.

Mashmaker adds the new information by adapting the original website. It stores the original website in a local cache, adds information from other sites and publishes the result on the user's screen.

Although this practice could raise copyright issues, Ennals does not expect any legal challenges because the application is not removing any advertising or breaking the website.

The project is confined to the research labs for now, and Intel has not decided whether it will be released to the public.

  • Have your say
  • Send to a friend
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Share

Tags:

Do you agree?

Related whitepapers

Related jobs

Most watched

eu flag

V3.co.uk weekly debrief, 6 Nov 09

This week, Europe decides what to do with illegal file sharers

Intel unveils its micro server platform

Small-enclosure systems take aim at hosting market

IT white papers

Search white papers

Top categories

Poll

Impact of Information Overload poll

Impact of Information Overload poll

What is the biggest problem your firm faces as a result of the data explosion?

View poll results

Advertisement

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Spotlight

eu flag

V3.co.uk weekly debrief, 6 Nov 09

This week, Europe decides what to do with illegal file...

Dell Adamo XPS

Dell launches ultra-thin Adamo XPS

World's thinnest laptop will be available by Christmas

Top 10 articles, 6 November 2009

The worst Microsoft products of all time, and a USB...

Iain Thomson

Pirate Bay shutdown could be inspiring online militancy

Recent Swedish attacks raise worrying possibility

Primary Navigation