User Interface
Snowl
Conversing (a.k.a. messaging) is a common online activity, and a number of desktop and web applications enable it. But with an increasing variety of protocols and providers, it's getting harder and harder to keep track of all your conversations.
Could the web browser help you follow and participate in online discussions?
Snowl is an experiment to answer that question. It's a prototype Firefox extension that integrates messaging into the browser based on a few key ideas:
- It doesn't matter where messages originate. They're alike, whether they come from traditional email servers, RSS/Atom feeds, web discussion forums, social networks, or other sources.
- Some messages are more important than others, and the best interface for actively reading important messages is different from the best one for casually browsing unimportant ones.
- A search-based interface for message retrieval is more powerful and easier to use than one that makes you organize your messages first to find them later.
- Browser functionality for navigating web content, like tabs, bookmarks, and history, also works well for navigating messages.
The prototype supports two sources of messages: web feeds and Twitter. And it exposes several interfaces for reading them: a traditional three-pane "list" view, targeted to active reading of important messages, a "river of news" view, based on the concept popularized by Dave Winer, designed for casual browsing; and a "stream of news" view that fits into a sidebar for keeping an eye on incoming messages while doing other things.
Get Snowl
To try out Snowl, install the latest release. But don’t forget that this is a preview release of a labs experiment, not a stable release of a finished product, and there are bound to be bugs and other issues. If you really want to live on the cutting edge, try out the latest development build instead.
Get Involved
Let us know what you think about Snowl in the discussion forum and IRC channel, browse bug reports, report a bug, and check out the source code.
License & Credits
The prototype code is released under an MPL/GPL/LGPL tri-license. Most icons are from the Silk icon set by famfamfam, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 license. The OPML icon is from the OPML Icon Project, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.5 license.Project Home | Latest Release | Dev Build | Bug Reports | Report a Bug | Source Code | Roadmap | Discussion Group | IRC Channel
Latest
Updates 
- Snowl 0.3pre2 (06.24.2009)
- Snowl 0.3pre1 (06.16.2009)
- Snowl 0.2 (01.12.2009)
- Introducing Snowl (08.06.2008)
Discussions 
- Snowl 0.3pre2 released
24 June 2009 | 7:10 pm - Snowl 0.3pre2 draft blog post
24 June 2009 | 1:47 pm - updated development build
23 June 2009 | 5:55 pm - Re: 0.3pre1 draft blog post
16 June 2009 | 12:49 pm
