Twitter announces Starling

Just after getting sucked in to plunking three comments down on Dave’s post about decentralized Twitter I read up on Twitter’s Starling open-source release.  Were the developers at Twitter reading the minds of the community or what?  Or are they really that in sync with their customers?  Great news all around.  And a wise move.

Primarily I’m happy to hear that they’ve got a solid block to base their system on, “When other parts of the Twitter site go down, Starling stays up.”  From that block they can build out and have a scalable system.

And we’re going to help them build it.  Developers and customers and companies desiring to tie in to the magic are going to help build upon that block.  Heck, I’ve been buried in queue management…  I’m looking forward to seeing what they’ve got under their hood.

iofy widget – from the new platform

Something cool my team has been working on… The iofy widget. We use our latest 3.0 platform, providing download, syncronization, and drm (if desired).

The 3.0 platform allows a customer or partner to plug in content and make it available for download via our download manager. If desired, the content can be secured with industry standard DoD level DRM and made available for purchase

Many people that make viable content do not have a method for monetized distribution. Many companies with content have problems with monetization.

In order to make a title available, a content provider simply provides an RSS feed to iofy. The content from that feed is converted and made available for mass consumption (if desired).

Problem solved?