Widgets

posted 02/24/08 by Rick Webb

What a weird term. As an economist, it always wigs me out. The co-opting of an intentionally generic term for a technical thing, except it’s such a vague and wide-ranging technical thing that it’s almost as vague as it ever was. Mac OS widgets. Open Social Widgets. Widgets as Facebook Apps. Widgets here, there, everywhere.
Technically, of course, we’re cool with all of them. Bring it. When people ask us about widgets, we ask what data is going where, and why? The primary value, we feel, of a widget, is getting a piece of information that is stored in one place to be shown in another place. Of course this can be extended to tools, as well, but viewed through the prism of marketing, information is where it’s at. Maybe it’s a testimonial. Maybe it’s a sale. Maybe it’s a top ten list. Maybe it’s the latest snipped of content from your community, shown in another community.
The web is now interconnected. Your content isn’t going to live in a walled garden. If you were the Wall Street Journal, maybe, but you’re a brand. You WANT your content, your information, your brand message, to be everywhere. That’s the whole point, right? Sometimes a widget is just what you need to get that content placed in a difficult environment.
And sometimes, they’re a total waste of time.

Here are some recent posts from our employees about Widgets:

Ghostly Discovery

I made a cool music discovery last night. Actually I can’t really take the credit for it as my husband pointed it out to me over a Gossip Girl rerun last night. He is the music snob in the house, I am lucky if I listen to anything besides Dan Zanes these days. Anyway, he showed me this iPhone application that is similar in concept to the site we launched for Getty last year, Moodstream.
It is essentially Moodstream for music and as an iPhone app. Not saying they ripped us off or anything because we can’t claim rights to the use of moods and dials. It just made me recall what I liked so much about the Moodstream concept. It was so simple and elegant that you couldn’t help but play around with it. The same is true for this application from Ghostly International. This might be just what I need to help me explore some music outside of the kiddie world.