149 things andmar315 likes Explore more popular stuff on Tumblr

  1. Digg Reader Update!

    Over the last 90 days, the Digg engineering team — all 5 of them — has been heads-down building an updated take on the RSS reader. For our first public release, in time to (just) beat the shutdown of Google Reader, our aim has been to nail the basics: a web and mobile reading experience that is clean, simple, functional, and fast. We’re also introducing a tool that allows users to elevate the most important stories to the top.

    And so next week we will begin rolling out Digg Reader, version 1. We’re doing the launch in phases because, as you might have guessed, RSS aggregation is a hard thing to do at scale, and we want to make sure the experience is as fast and reliable as possible. Everyone will have access by June 26th. With all this in mind, we thought now would be a good moment to come up for air and share a little bit about the product you’ll see next week, and what else we’ll be adding over the next few months.

    image

    Given the compressed time frame for this sprint, we decided early on that we needed to focus on one type of user. We asked ourselves who had most to lose from the shutdown of Google Reader, and the answer was fairly obvious: the power user, the people who depend on the availability, stability, and speed of Reader every day. The good news is that these users are also the most eager to contribute to the development process. (Over 18,000 people signed up to provide feedback on the product.)

    image

    Here’s what we heard from them:

    • Make it fast.
    • Keep it simple.
    • Let me import my feeds and folders from Google Reader.

    So with that in mind, this beta release centers on these core elements of the product:

    • Easy migration and onboarding from Google Reader.
    • A clean reading experience that gets out of the way and puts the focus squarely on the articles, posts, images, and videos themselves.
    • Useful mobile apps that sync with the web experience.
    • Support for key actions like subscribing, sharing, saving and organizing.

    image

    image

    Launch is always an exciting moment, but it’s what follows that will matter most to our users. In the 60 days following launch, our focus will be on:

    • Android app.
    • Speed.
    • Integration with additional third party services (like Buffer, Evernote, and IFTTT).
    • Better tools to sort, filter and rank your reading lists and feeds, based on your networks, interests, likes, and so on.
    • Collecting and responding to user feedback.

    …and getting started on:

    • Search.
    • Notifications.
    • And of course, a button that, when pushed, automatically delivers a cronut to your desk. Uber for cronuts.

    We mentioned in a prior post that Digg Reader will ultimately be a ‘freemium’ product. But we’re not going to bait-and-switch. All of the features introduced next week, as well as many others yet to come, will be part of the free experience.

    While you’re at the beach and doing foliage cruises (or whatever people do in October), we’ll be spending the summer and fall building out a richer feature set, drawing heavily on users’ feedback, ideas, and requests. But first, we want to get the basics right, starting with a clean and uncluttered design and a powerful backend infrastructure than can operate well at scale.

    Thanks for your patience and stay tuned for next week!

    Digg

    1. A protester throws a Molotov cocktail during clashes with riot police in Istanbul’s Taksim Square on June 11, 2013. (ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images/Newscom)

      1. Lady Stoneheart should not have been in tonight's episode

        Read More

        1. Source: messynessychic.com

          That time someone found a Ferrari buried in their front yard.

          1. Source: k3do
            concept
            rawwr! final!!

            k3do:

            Godzilla “Google Doodles”

            1. moshi-kun:

              GAME OF THRONES 80/90s ERA CHARACTERS (Part 3)

              And here it comes!!! A third part quite feminine…

              1. Arya Stark, my favorite tomboy.
              2. Sansa Stark as a Beverly Hills student
              3. Brienne of tarth in armor ^_^

              STORE

              Thanx a lot for all your kind messages, this buzz around my pictures was unexpected!

              So, who’ s your favorite character?

              These are great!

              1. another introduction to BrowserID for WebFWD

                A few days ago, we chatted with the WebFWD teams about BrowserID. WebFWD is Mozilla’s initiative to fund and support creative teams that build on the Open Web. The WebFWD blog summarizes the chat, and includes the screencast of our presentation:

                Download Video: MP4, WebM, Ogg
                HTML5 Video Player by VideoJS

                1. New Persona Beta: Millions of Users Ready to Log In using Any Browser

                  Persona, Mozilla’s easy and safe way to log into your favorite websites, using any modern browser, is now in Beta 2. The goal of Persona is simple: we want to eliminate passwords on the Web. This release, packed with performance improvements and new features, brings us another big step closer to that goal. In particular, we’ve made it easy for users with existing Web accounts to log in without creating a new account or password. This brings secure login within two clicks for hundreds of millions of users worldwide, regardless of whether they’re on a desktop, tablet, or mobile phone.

                  We’ve recently seen a few notable sites implement Persona, including: Born This Way Foundation, Firebase and the Orion Project. These deployments highlight Persona’s simple implementation, ease of use, user-safety, and the fact that, because Persona is built by a non-profit, users – and only users – own and control their identity. Let’s show you Persona Beta 2 in action:

                   

                  Identity Bridging

                  The most important feature of Persona Beta 2 is Identity Bridging, where users can log into Persona-supporting web sites with their existing accounts. We’re starting with yahoo.com. Try it now on our sample site 123done.org: click “Sign in”, enter your yahoo.com email address, and go!

                  Websites that use Persona benefit from this improvement immediately: hundreds of millions of Web users are now ready to log in with just a few clicks. Users have complete choice and a simple flow: click one login button and select your preferred email address. Identity Bridging kicks in dynamically based on the user’s chosen email address.

                  The technical details behind Identity Bridging are detailed on the Mozilla Hacks blog. You can also read a detailed Q&A with Lead Engineer Lloyd Hilaiel.

                  More Improvements

                  Twice as Fast. We know performance is important to every site, so we made our button and popup load twice as fast. We’re working on more improvements as we go.

                  Use your Existing Accounts. We’ve bridged yahoo.com, but of course we built an open system: any domain can now become a Persona Identity Provider so users can reuse their existing accounts on any site that uses Persona.

                  Built Into Firefox OS. We built in support for Firefox OS and made Persona much faster on all mobile devices. This gives Firefox OS apps an even better experience when using Persona.

                  Adoption

                  Our adopters make us blush with the nice things they have to say about Persona.

                  Tara Tiger Brown of Born This Way Foundation commented: “Our mission at Born This Way Foundation is to promote a kinder, braver world where youth feel empowered to be themselves in a safe and supportive environment. In order to support our mission, we must keep our Born Brave Nation members’ identities and information safe. Mozilla Persona is a single sign-on online identity system that respects user privacy, very user friendly and simple to setup and maintain.”

                  Anant Narayanan of Firebase, makers of a scalable real-time backend that lets developers build apps fast without the hassle of managing servers, said “We added support for Persona as one of the authentication mechanisms for our Simple Login service, and we are very pleased with the result! The distributed nature of Persona and its elegant API makes it the ideal candidate for the types of apps we want people to build with Firebase.”

                  Ting, Tucows’s mobile phone service that makes sense, implemented Persona and said “The fact that user privacy is one of the foundations on which Persona is built means it’s the first single sign-in solution that we feel is worthy of recommendation and of implementation.”

                  Barry Warsaw, who runs the omnipresent GNU Mailman mailing list manager, added “GNU Mailman 3 chose Persona as our primary authentication mechanism because its email-based login system is a perfect fit for our mailing list software. All we need to identify a person is confirmation that they own their subscription address, and integrating Persona made that verification easy. Ideally, we’d like to do away with passwords altogether, and with Persona, this is now possible.”

                  Simon Kaegi of the Orion Project added “Persona is the simplest means of high quality authentication I’m aware of. In our UX review, Persona was clearly superior to OpenID.”

                  Discourse, the company rebooting online discussion forums, added Persona support to its codebase and enabled it on its own discussion site, adding “It has a very slick user experience, so we hope people try it out.”

                  Julius Schorzman of DailyCred, the instant CRM package for any web site, implemented Persona and remarked “We’ve seen from our internal metrics that more than 70% of users still prefer email and password authentication over social log-in like Facebook. Implementing Persona is actually easier than Facebook Connect, or any OAuth implementation we’ve seen.”

                  Acros Security, the third-party reviewers we brought in to audit Persona, told us “We’re quite impressed with the level of security [of Persona] and, although paranoid by design, we will be able to trust it with our own online identities.”

                  Your Turn

                  We’re building Persona in the same way we do everything at Mozilla: in the open, with your help and contributions. Now it’s your turn. Deploy Persona on your web site. Turn your domain into a Persona Identity Provider. Tell us what you need to make Persona even better. Want to fix it yourself? Send us a patch.

                  Together, in the open, we will continue to build a login system that is better: Better for users, better for web sites, and better for the Web.

                  UPDATE: We mistakenly attributed a quotation to the Eclipse Foundation’s Ian Skerrett. It should have been attributed to the Orion Project’s Simon Kaegi. The text above shows the correction.

                  1. Announcing the First Beta Release of Persona

                    For the past year Mozilla has been working on an experimental login system that completely eliminates passwords on websites while being safe, secure, and easy to use. Today we’re casting off the “experimental” label and announcing the first “beta” release of Persona.

                    Persona is ready to use for authentication: it works in all major smartphone, tablet, and desktop browsers, the user experience has been thoroughly reviewed and polished, we’re committed to the core APIs, and its infrastructure is highly available and stable.

                    What’s it like to integrate Persona? Check out this video from The Times Crossword:

                    “[Persona] was definitely easier than OpenID or OAuth because it can almost all be done on the client side in JavaScript.” — David Somers, News International

                    We haven’t just refined Persona, we’ve also significantly improved it since we first introduced it. Over the past few months we:

                    These changes have been well received and we’re seeing Persona gain traction outside of Mozilla. If you are a developer, now is the time to try Persona out. Persona is an open source project and we gladly welcome input and collaboration from the broader community via our mailing list or our IRC channel (#identity on irc.mozilla.org).

                    This is the first of many beta releases, and we have some fantastic things planned for the future.

                    So, what are you waiting for? Persona coexists well with existing login systems and only takes a single afternoon to integrate. What’s more, because Persona logins are based on email addresses, sites still maintain a direct relationship with their users. Check out the documentation and add Persona to your site today!

                    1. Prints are now available at http://society6.com/ScottParkIllustration/Star-Cars_Print

                      Loading more posts...