Mix, Match, and MutateBy
Robert D. Hof in San Mateo, Calif. "Mash-ups"
-- homespun combinations of mainstream services -- are altering the Net. Looking
for a place to live last year, Paul Rademacher pored over Silicon Valley rentals on craigslist, the popular online classified-ad site. But the 3D-software engineer grew frustrated that he couldn't see the properties' locations on one map. So Rademacher hacked his own solution -- a Web site that combines craigslist rentals with search engine Google Inc.'s (Nasdaq: GOOG
- News)
map service. The listings on HousingMaps.com appear as virtual pushpins on maps of nearly three-dozen regions around the country. Click on one, and up pop the details. Since its public debut in April, the free site has drawn well over a half-million unique visitors. What
they're all seeing is nothing less than the future of the World Wide Web. Suddenly, hordes of volunteer programmers are taking it upon themselves to combine and remix the data and services of unrelated, even competing sites. The result: entirely new offerings they call "mash-ups." They're the Web versions of Reese's ("Hey, you got peanut butter on my chocolate!") Peanut Butter Cups. "The
Web was originally designed to be mashed up," says Google Web developer Aaron Boodman, the 27-year-old creator of a program called Greasemonkey that makes it easy to create and use mash-ups. "The technology is finally growing up and making it possible." That's
why mash-ups, named after hip-hop mixes of two or more songs, are starting to rock. Chicagocrime.org overlays local crime stats onto Google Maps so you can see what crimes were committed recently in your neighborhood. Another site syncs Yahoo! Inc.'s (Nasdaq: YHOO
- News)
real-time traffic data with Google Maps. Book Burro notices when you're shopping at an online bookstore such as Amazon.com Inc. (Nasdaq: AMZN
- News),
then taps into several other stores to show price comparisons. WILD,
WILD WEB Mash-ups portend big changes for software companies, Web sites, and everyone online. No longer just a collection of pages, the Web is morphing into a sort of global operating system, à la Microsoft Corp.'s (Nasdaq: MSFT
- News)
Windows. And now, people are learning to program Web 2.0 with much of the same innovative energy of the personal computer's early days. "It's the Wild West all over again," says Alan Taylor, a Monster Worldwide Inc. Web developer who created Amazon Light, a fast-loading version of Amazon's site that also includes services from Google, Yahoo, and others. The
upshot: People are seizing far more control of what they do online. In the process, those efforts are putting skin on the bones of Web services, the long-delayed promise of software and services that can be tapped on demand. "They're taking little bits and pieces from a number of companies and stitching them together in some clever way," Amazon Chief Executive Jeffrey P. Bezos noted recently. "You'll start to see the real power of Web services." At
the same time, these bottom-up efforts present tough challenges for the sites on which the new services are built. Mash-ups often use the data without asking first, then present it in unintended ways. Not surprisingly, some Web site operators have bitten back. Yahoo initially blocked one mash-up site from using its traffic data with Google Maps before relenting, and Amazon asked Amazon Light's Taylor to change how it linked to potential rival sites. "All this definitely keeps us on our toes," says Jeffrey S. Barr, Amazon's Web services evangelist. <
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