Categories
- Accutane Lawsuit
- Ailments
- Auto Accident
- Business
- Email Advertising
- Email Marketing
- Home Based Business
- Internet Advertising
- Internet Marketing
- Legal
- Lionheart Assurance Solutions
- Online Advertising
- Pay-Per-Click
- Recyclable
- Redirected Traffic
- Scams
- Start A Travel Agency
- Web Directory Submissions
- Web Linking
- Web Marketing
- Web Site Promotion
- Website Advertising
Tag Archives: apis
PayPal Launches Send Money App for BlackBerry Devices
PayPal has launched a new "Send Money" app for BlackBerry. It is now available for free via the BlackBerry App World. "Have you ever gone to lunch with friends and forgotten your wallet, but remembered your BlackBerry? Well you longer have to be the friend who is constantly borrowing cash," says Eric Duprat from the PayPal Mobile team. The app lets users quickly send money to people around the world - anyone in their contact list. "Users can also easily stay on top of their finances by checking their recent history and account balance directly from their BlackBerry smartphone," says Duprat. The app is available in the U.S., Canada, U.K., France, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg, Ireland, Portugal and Australia. The app joins similar offerings from PayPal for Facebook , Android, and the iPhone. It's probably a good idea on PayPal's part to be readily available to anyone from as many means as possible. Much speculation has the service's competition heating up significantly in the near future. Both Facebook and Apple, for example, are rumored to be working on offerings that could intrude on PayPal's territory. Last month, PayPal opened up its global payments platform called PayPal X, which provides APIs and a developer portal. This should play a big role in the continued relevance of PayPal's service in an ever-growing mobile and social web. Continue reading
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged account balance, apis, apps, belgium, blackberry, Business, developer portal, ebay, facebook, finances, global payments, recent history, rim, smartphone
Leave a comment
PayPal Launches “Send Money” Facebook App
PayPal has introduced a new Facebook app for sending money. The app is designed to allow uses to use PayPal to send money to anyone starting from Facebook. Users only need the person's email address. PayPal Director of Product Marketing Heinz Waelchli explains how it works: Visit our send money application page and click on the "Get Started" button to install the application. Next just fill in the fields in the form and click the "Continue to PayPal" button. You’ll be taken to the PayPal site to log-in (if you don’t already have an account, you can create a new account in minutes). You’ll then choose your method of payment, if you use your PayPal balance or bank account to send money to friends and family within the U.S., it’s free. You can enter a personal message to your recipient if you like. Finally, click on the "send" button and that's it! Your recipient will be notified by email right away. The receiver can then log-in to PayPal to claim the money or quickly sign up for a new account. It's probably a good idea on PayPal's part to have a Facebook app in place before any really significant Facebook e-commerce system takes over . Last month PayPal opened up its global payments platform called PayPal X, which provides APIs and a developer portal. This is likely an important move for keeping PayPal relevant in the social eye as well. On another PayPal-Facebook-realted note, PayPal is in the middle of its second annual " Regift the Fruitcake " campaign, an event, which calls upon people to create virtual fruitcakes and give them to their Facebook friends to raise money for 25 different charities. You can read more about that here . Continue reading
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged apis, Business, developer portal, director, e commerce system, ebay, money application, paypal, social-networks
Leave a comment
New APIs Should Help MySpace Stay Relevant
MySpace has announced a new set of APIs . These include APIs for real-time streaming, status and mood commenting, open search, photo uploading, and an updated version of the post to/share API. "MySpace sees huge value in real-time data and believes sharing it will mature the socialization of content on the Web," said MySpace COO Mike Jones. "MySpace is building the next-generation content distribution platform and is opening up our floodgate of public data for developers to make compelling real-time experiences around the Web." The Real-Time Stream API allows the full MySpace activity stream to be pushed to third party sites in real-time. It is already being used by Google, OneRiot, and GroovyCorp. "MySpace made it really easy to integrate public MySpace data into our search engine," said Tobias Peggs, GM of OneRiot. "With access to this real-time data, we’re offering more comprehensive and meaningful search results to our users." "MySpace users are making a huge contribution to the realtime, social web by sharing millions of links with their friends each day," said Peggs. "We're delighted to have access to that information through the MySpace Real-Time Stream API." We've already seen what Google is doing : The Status and Mood Commenting API lets third party sites use MySpace status and mood updates and allows people to comment from those sites. Comments then appear in the user's MySpace activity stream, and users can interact with that stream without leaving the third party site. The Open Search API allows third party sites to include public MySpace profile information in search results. Users can search for people by name, profile type (such as musician, celebrity, comedian) or email address and filter search results by gender, age and location. The Photo Upload API lets users upload photos to MySpace from third party sites or MySpace Apps. It also enables creation of public or private photo albums. The updated version of the Post To/Share on MySpace API allows for the sharing of content from third party sites with a MySpace user's friends. When a user posts content from another site, it goes directly to his/her MySpace activity stream, creating a link back to the third party site. MySpace is even going so far as to host a " developer challenge " competition starting January 4 to encourage developers to come up with some cool apps utilizing the APIs. Developers will have the chance to win cash prizes and promotion on MySpace. These MySpace APIs could go a long way in keeping MySpace relevant in the era of Facebook and Twitter. Frankly, they are long overdue. The APIs mean that there can be a lot more useful apps implementing more functionality with MySpace. That means more ways users can keep using it. This and MySpace's acquisition of imeem could be huge for the future of the social network. Continue reading
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged activity-stream, apis, application development, mike jones, realtime, time stream, tobias peggs, user
Leave a comment
Twitter Improves Mobile Site
Twitter intends to offer all of its users an improved mobile experience in the near future, and in the meantime, a preview of its next-generation mobile site has become available. Continue reading
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
Tagged apis, Business, china, google-friend, ish, microsoft, mobile, s engineering, showcases, third party, twitter, twitter-mobile, user experience
Leave a comment
Digg’s New API Allows Digging of Stories and Comments
Digg released a new version of the Digg API today, which lets developers write and contribute data via OAuth. This API supports the digging and burying of both stories and comments. "In addition to the revamped API, we focused extensively on usability and have included an updated API documentation section on Digg with more detail on each API method including code and response examples," says Digg's Jeff Hodsdon. "Today’s changes, as well as our updates this summer to the API license, give developers much more freedom to create (and profit from) great new applications off the Digg platform." "To help showcase some of the new functionality, we’ve created a reference app off the new API, a streamlined version of the Digg site called DiggLite, which can serve as a blueprint for any basic Digg-based application," Hodsdon adds. "It includes a river of the most recently popular stories, which can be Dugg and buried remotely, and the means of breaking things down by top-level topics. You can find it at digglite.com or download the source code on Github." Developers interested in keeping updated on happenings with the Digg API can follow @diggapi on Twitter. Digg says it will communicate any API-related issues and downtime information through the Twitter account. At first, only a limited number of beta testers will be able to create apps that can write data, using the new API. Digg is requiring developers interested in creating apps to send a brief description (along with their Digg username) to api@digg.com. Related Articles: > Important Product Director Moving From Google To Digg > More Stories Get a Shot at the Digg Home Page > Digg to Get All Twitter This Year? Continue reading
Salesforce’s “Facebook for the Enterprise”
Salesforce.com has introduced a new enterprise collaboration application called Salesforce Chatter . A representative for the company bills it as a "Facebook for the Enterprise." "Content, applications and people will now have profiles, feeds and groups, enabling them to be deeply connected," she tells WebProNews. "In addition, developers will now be able to use the Salesforce Chatter platform to build social enterprise applications, and all 135,000 native Force.com applications will instantly become social." Salesforce Chatter lets users collaborate securely in real time with: - Profiles - Status updates - Feeds - Groups - Social Apps - Social Content (docs, spreadsheets, presentations, etc.) - Social Sharing Model - Twitter and Facebook - AppExchange (apps build on Force.com platform) - Mobile (available for BlackBerry, Windows Mobile device and iPhone) The Salesforce Chatter social platform includes a rich set of pre-built social components. Developers will be able to add profiles, status updates, groups functionality, feeds, and social content to apps. There is a set of APIs that let developers push data from any app into Chatter feeds, and there are Google, Facebook, and Twitter developer toolkits. Salesforce Chatter will launch in 2010, and will be included in all paid editions of Salesforce CRM and Force.com. A new Chatter Edition will be sold for $50 per user, per month and will include Salesforce Chatter, Salesforce Content, and Force.com. Related Articles: > Adobe Teams With Salesforce on New Flash Builder > Salesforce Launches Mobile App Update for iPhone 3.0 OS > Salesforce Gives Force.com Users Free Sites Continue reading