January 30, 2008
Blist’s web lists, sticky Flypaper and sprouting widgets
Palm Desert, California: One of the themes of DEMO 08 is new web services that allow ordinary users to create content in forms usually left to the professionals.
Blist, Flypaper and Sprout showed how anyone could easily create databases, Flash presentations and widgets respectively.
Kevin Merritt, Blist chief executive, said mainstream users until now have tried to wedge all their data into an Excel spreadsheet. Blist in its list view looks like an Excel spreadsheet, with some columns you might not expect. Its impressively simple interface allows users to drag in columns such as star ratings, document links and pictures. Long lists can be included in single cells and icons can be inserted from drop-down boxes. There is the standard database record view and also a calendar view to show when tasks are due. Filters can be created just by dragging the relevant columns into a box and defining the criteria for them.
Flypaper says it has developed the easiest way to tell stories that stick on the web by bringing the power of custom Flash programming to everyone. Flypaper provides Flash page templates and model presentations that can be edited and adapted with drag-and-drop objects. It is also building a community of users that will share their models and extend its library. It demonstrated how to create a CV with text, pictures and video elements that will play in Flash like a YouTube clip. In fact, it can be posted directly to sites like YouTube, Facebook and MySpace.
Sprout has a similar widget creation tool, with pre-built templates and drag-and-drop features. It allows users to publish to a range of websites, make instant changes and see how much their widgets are being used through analytical tables and charts.
So now that anyone can do this web content thing, it looks like Flash programmers and widget developers are going to be relegated to the same lowered status as photographers and ….journalists.











Blist looks incredibly refined and simple despite it’s power. I wonder how much it will actually be able to impact on the demand for database solutions givent he requirement to understand the use and flexibility of such a solution to require it in the first instance!
Posted by: LifeDesign | January 30th, 2008 at 9:59 am | Report this commentGood point. It’s a solution in search of an audience that knows it has a problem.
Posted by: Chris Nuttall | January 31st, 2008 at 4:52 pm | Report this comment