Author Archive

New Homepage Revamp

Sunday, June 22nd, 2008

Yup, this is another look-we’ve-added-some-more-features post. These types of posts will become the norm as we churn away here, aiming to make a great product. This time the update was mostly aesthetic and aimed at helping new Skribit visitors understand exactly what we do. It’s a little slideshow showcasing some of our key features. Do you think it gets the point across? Let us know how we can help people understand what we do.

Skribit Homepage

Oh and if you received a few emails yesterday morning stating that some users had blogged a suggestion and the email provided no blog post link, that was our mistake. We had a bug on our end when we pushed the code live Friday night. It was fixed as of 11am on Saturday.

More Site Improvements

Saturday, June 14th, 2008

Continuing with our series of posts highlighting new enhancements from our latest release, today I want to show some of the most obvious changes. First off, the homepage no longer just displays a simple list of suggestions. We have changed it to provide more information about recent suggestions, popular suggestions and recently blogged suggestions.

Skribit homepage

The management page also received some tweaks, notably iconifying the main action links. One of our next releases will move those icons up to a toolbar in favor of clearing up the interface.

Skribit Manage Interface

Lastly, you might have noticed a few new options on the install page. Skribit now embraces multiple methods of interaction in addition to the widget. Since suggestions can also be given on blog profile pages, such as mine, you don’t need to use the widget if that’s not your thing. You can simply link to your profile page. However, as we have recommended with the widget, placement matters. The higher the badge, link or widget on your website, the easier it is for your readers to check out Skribit.

Skribit Embed Methods

As Calvin talked about in the last post, you can also interact with Skribit using your account’s RSS feeds – a sort of “roll your own” approach.

Interview with Skribit Co-Founder

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

Blogger Justin Hernandez interviewed me this week for Tivate.com, an inspiration blog of sorts that commonly interviews people doing interesting things on the interwebs. The interview covers where I get my inspiration from, challenges I’ve dealt with and what I have planned for the future. Oh and there’s a picture of my work desk if you want to see how dirty it is.

Stammy is a nice easy-going guy with a positive attitude. The most difficult thing about him is pronouncing his last name (Stam-uh-tee-you), hence the nicky Stammy. In this interview, Paul talks about his accomplishments, shows us his work desk, reflects on his public speaking skills and admires his idol Steve Jobs (with quote!).

Thanks for the interview Justin!

New: OpenID Support

Friday, June 6th, 2008

The Skribit team has been busy for the last few weeks and now we have something big to show for it. Our latest release has several notable new features but I want to focus on one of those now: OpenID and Clickpass support.

Skribit OpenID

OpenID is a free online identity service allowing users to manage and use a single digital identity on many OpenID-supported websites without the need for remembering additional accounts and passwords. To begin using OpenID, you will need an OpenID provider. Many providers exist but chances are you already have an account with a company (such as AOL or Yahoo!) that provides OpenID service.

Once you have setup an OpenID account you are given a special URL to login with. You can use that URL on Skribit, as well as with other OpenID-supported websites, and you will automatically be logged in after authenticating your OpenID account.

Clickpass LogoThis release also includes support for Clickpass. Clickpass is an OpenID provider and also has technology allowing users to login to Clickpass-supported sites with a single click.

Visit the Skribit login page to try out your OpenID account. If you have any questions about OpenID leave us a comment or checkout a post on my blog about why I’ve started using OpenID.

Looking for extra security? Try using Verisign as your OpenID provider and pair your account with a Paypal Security Key for two-factor authentication.

New Feature: Widget Customization

Monday, April 28th, 2008

Ever since we opened up the doors to the Skribit beta, we kept hearing that widget customization is a must. Today we pushed out a working widget customizer along with the ability to change the title of the widget. You can change everything from font, font size and border width to colors.

Skribit Widget Customization

These widget customization features are just the first steps on our way to completely revamping the widget as well as offering other ways of interacting with Skribit. As usual, feedback is always welcome.

April Showers Bring… Skribit Features!

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

What better way to wrap up April than with a few Skribit features? Let me be the first to say that these features are just the tip of the iceberg. We have a lot planned and are happy to announce that Erik Peterson has joined the Skribit core team, which also consists of Calvin Yu and myself. Below are some of the changes in this release. You will notice the widget has undergone a few changes. As a sidenote, we plan on heavily reworking the widget so if you have any thoughts to impart, please drop us a comment.

  • Fixed some issues with widget login and registration in Safari.
  • Users can now upload an avatar, which is currently being displayed on select pages on the website and will be better integrated throughout the site in the next release.
  • Removed the description from the widget – all you have to enter now is just the suggestion.
  • Widget changes: removed the “What’s Hoppin?” banner from the widget, moved the Skribit logo to the bottom of the widget, the top of the widget now says “What should I write about”, the suggestions box has a character countdown.
  • You can now vote on the blog profile page. You can get to this page by clicking on the “# of # suggestions” link at the bottom of the widget.
Skribit Votes on Blog Profile Page

Skribit in Public Beta

Sunday, March 9th, 2008

No longer do you have to wait for someone to approve your account after registering for Skribit. We’re ready to take on more people eager to give Skribit a whirl! All you have to do is signup and either add a blog if you’re a blogger, or just use the account to interact with other Skribit-enabled blogs.

If you’re making a suggestion via Skribit, the main benefit of registering for an account over being an anonymous suggestor is that you’ll be able to track your suggestions and see if they were blogged. It also gives the blogger an idea of who suggested each suggestion and therefore some incentive to write on the topic compared to writing for an anonymous user.

Along with Skribit’s leap into a public beta, there are a few new features such as email notifications for new suggestions and comments for suggestions. Skribit is still hopping and we have a bunch of ideas and features in the works. If you have any feedback, we’d love to hear what’s on your mind. Stay tuned.

The Skribit Pond Needs More Frogs!

Monday, December 17th, 2007

greater-duckweed-frog.jpg

Are you a hip & hoppin’ blogger with a nice following of readers? If you’d like to see what your readers care about, sign-up for the Skribit beta and let us know where to find you.

Yes, Georgia is in a drought, but we’re ready to grow the size of our pond!

Liftoff: Skribit Private Beta is Here

Tuesday, December 4th, 2007

It hasn’t even been a month since Atlanta Startup Weekend took place and Skribit has gone from an idea to an engineered application ready for deployment. After Startup Weekend, Skribit was in a closed beta for the co-founders to squash bugs and slap on a new design. As the guy who has been harboring the idea for Skribit for a very long time, it’s glad to say that we’re ready to let others test our app and take in some helpful feedback.

If you’re just joining us now, you might be interested in hearing what problems Skribit solves and what it can do for you, regardless of whether you’re a blogging maven or just a casual blog reader. First off, let me tell you where I’m coming from. To put it conservatively, I’m a blogging enthusiast. I love technology, sharing my knowledge with others and gaining wisdom from those that comment on my articles. The only problem being what to write about. Coming up with a truly original piece takes great effort and only happens once in a blue iPod.

Enter Skribit.

As a blogger you can use Skribit to get feedback from your readers as to what they want to see you write about. Your readers can register to use Skribit or provide you with suggestions anonymously. Suggestions can be voted upon and a myriad of magical algorithms displays the hoppin’ suggestions, or what we like to call skribits.

Readers get to keep track of suggestions they’ve made across all Skribit-enabled blogs and websites, discover related blogs and find other readers interested in the same topics. When a blogger posts an article from a reader’s suggestion, the post is linked to the suggestion.

Here’s a teaser screenshot of the My Blogs management page.

Skribit - My Blogs

Want to try it out for yourself? Head over to Skribit.com and signup!

Sponsor plug: Skribit would not be possible without great help from Media Temple webhosting. I gave Alex at Media Temple a call in the middle of Startup Weekend and we had a production server that night. When our development team wanted to switch to another Linux distribution, Media Temple was right there with us and promptly set us up another box. Thanks guys!