Wow, I loved this presentation! Feel like a programming kung fu master… – Will
Revenge Of Kick-Ass Mash-Ups with Punk Rock APIs
Kent Brewster
@kentbrew
- Notable Mash-Ups
- Google Maps Mash-Up: first recorded AJAX mach-up, probably inspired most of the state of the modern art.
- Flickr Blog badges
- Punk Rock: DIY ethic
- Other generative things
- lego blocks, erectors sets, refrigerator boxes
- original apple //e
- is your site sterile?
- users are cows, not customers
- real customers are coke and GM
- any unauthorized use is abuse
- Your existing API
- you already have an API: HTML
- you’re already being screen-scraped
- you know this
- If you open up an API, you get pinpoint data about how it is being used.
- Sterile APIs: HTML, RSS
- Generative APIs: Free.
- Punk Rock APIs: use generative APIs to turn sterile APIs into generative APIs.
- Job interview at netflix: asked to review code. looking through real source code, he found that they had cribbed his own code. hired.
- Netflix Bubble Widgets
- single line javascript include
- Pipes.yahoo.com
- this is why yahoo is still relevant. they are doing amazing stuff like pipes.
- Some very little javascript can do amazing things because it relies on Yahoo Pipes to do the heavy lifting.
- YQL: yahoo query language. amazing tool.
- select * from twitter.search where q=‘earthquake’;
- This works because the community contributes tables (see community tables) that actually do the fetching/parsing of the data.
- bit.ly/kb_twit
- bit.ly/kb_sxsw
- used YQL, and a bit of xpath.
- filtered results, nice presentation, runs fast.
- Advice for Hackers
- Go easy on the server. Since every request comes from a separate IP address, client-side mash-ups look like botnet attacks.
- Respect robots.txt
- Pipes and YQL respect robots.txt
- Create and pass an application ID even if it’s not required.
- Let the site now what you’re doing. They might hire you.
- Advice for Site Owners
- Build your API first. Build your site on your API, and then open it up to the community. Example: Flickr.
- Whitelist Pipes and YQL: It’s the right thing to do.
- They are giving you a free API caching mechanism
- Twitter has done it. If you are running up against twitter API limits, try it.
- How to open an API where you work
- Build an interesting mash-up
- Write the documentation for the API you wish you had.
- Don’t write a spec. Write the actual docs.
- Give it to the back-end guys.
- To Be Useful for Client-Side Mash-Ups
- Return Javascript
- Wrap the requested JSON in the client’s preferred Javascript callback
- To be useful for repeated calls… (some complicated stuff I didn’t get)
- something having to do with square brackets
- Every Javascript reply must have HTTP Status 200
- If it comes back with anything else, the browser won’t see the response and the calling script will hang forever.
- Demo the Last: Missing Kids CAPTCHA
- Questions…
- What if a call never returns?
- You have to set a timeout. Probably requires a global variable.
- Examples of business mashups? Examples of doing it to correct a company’s bad UI?
- People are more interesting to me… so not so aware.
- Don’t surprise anyone in your IT group. If you should it to your boss, and they think it is awesome, you’ve really stuck the IT group in a corner.
- If you’re a company, and you’ve never done this before, go talk to Mashery, or other companies like that.
Thank you William for this great summary on Mashups and APIs.
Regarding your point on “go talk to Mashery, or other companies like that”,
“other companies like that” are for example 3scale – http://www.3scale.net
I will be happy to answer questions and talk with companies willing to dive into the API world.
Guillaume Balas | VP Sales & Marketing Europe
3SCALE NETWORKS | Unleash the Power of your API!
mob: +34 619 824 976
email: guillaume@3scale.net
web: http://www.3scale.net
twitter: @guillaumebalas