• All Posts
  • Application Development
  • Customer Success
  • Enterprise 2.0
  • News & Events
  • Product Updates
  • Tips & Tricks
  • Enterprise Social Software Blog

    REST Beta Coming Soon

    We’ve been mentioning, here and there, an impending release of a REST API for Socialtext. As soon as next week, the code and docs will be close enough to say, “let’s do a Beta.” Watch here and on the Socialtext Open Source Wiki for an announcement explaining how to participate. We’ll be providing free workspaces to developers that don’t already have their own.

    What can you do with a REST API to Socialtext? We don’t really know. Sure, we have things that we want to, and will, do with it to improve our systems, but because it is RESTy and because we designed it to be this way, it is very flexible and general. The data is there, you do what you want.

    Here’s some things we’ve already done:

    • Socialtext::Resting, an evolving Perl library for manipulating the resources presented by the API. The distribution includes strut, a command line diddle-your-workspaces tool. Kirsten Jones and I (Chris Dent) built Socialtext::Resting.
    • News Boy, put together by Zac Bir and Matt Liggett, is a desktop application for OS X for browsing Socialtext content on multiple servers. We’ll get editing added in the next few days, and release it when the Beta starts.
    • The Violator, a prototype AJAX interface to Socialtext. It’s called the Violator, because thus far it blows away any sense of good browser accessibility behavior. Look for this on the Socialtext Open Source Wiki in a few days.

    Some ideas we’ve had, but need more time, help or encouragement to complete:

    • Adaptors for moving information between database systems such as SugarCRM and a Socialtext workspace, allowing more flexible tracking of customers, products or whatever else.
    • Restaurant reviews in a Socialtext Wiki, created in a mashup with Google Maps. Go both directions: find restaurants on the map and read or create reviews, or read and edit reviews and then find them on the map.
    • Using the API to generate an IMAP interface to Socialtext: Wiki in your mail!

    I’m sure Socialtext users have plenty of ideas. If you want to give your ideas a shot, watch this space for more info, and watch the Open Source Wiki recent changes for developments. We’re looking forward to the fun.

      Leave a Reply

    About This Blog

    Weblog on gaining business results from social software.

    On this blog, Socialtext staffers and customers explore how companies can gain the most business value from their use of enterprise social software, including microblogging, social networking, filtered activity streams, widget-based dashboards, blogs and wikis.

    Search

    Find us on Facebook

    Read blogs from our team members:

    Archives

    Recent Posts

    Socialtext and NetDocuments: Document Sharing at its Finest

    Eugene Lee, February 7, 2012


    What’s Next for Online Piracy

    Eugene Lee, January 26, 2012


    Enterprise 2.0: It’s not just for knowledge workers anymore

    Michael Idinopulos, December 9, 2011


    Turning Serendipity into Probability

    Michael Idinopulos, December 1, 2011


    Why Socialtext 360 = Success

    Mark Sylvester, November 15, 2011


    Social Training for Social Software

    Michael Idinopulos, November 1, 2011


    Socialtext 5.0

    Alan Lepofsky, October 3, 2011


    Socialtext introduces Socialtext 5 – welcome to the power, the ease and the flow of the future!

    Sarah Dulak, September 28, 2011


    CIO Insight Interview with Eugene Lee

    Britta Meyer, September 22, 2011


    Learn How the DAU Is Improving Collaboration and Education

    Alan Lepofsky, August 15, 2011


    Recent Tweets


    The Motley Fool's Social Intranet is the Jingle

    Free Webinar, February 14, 10am PST (1pm EST)

    Join us and The Motley Fool for a unique view into Jingle, The Motley Fool’s social intranet.

    The Social Intranet: Where Work Gets Done

    Free Whitepaper

    This white paper describes the evolution of the corporate intranet – from static repository to the primary workspace knowledge workers use in their daily activities. Learn how to build a solution that becomes a place where work really gets done.