2011
Wordpress.com Adds Wordpress, Twitter And Facebook Comments (In That Order)
by sbrothierFollowing in the footsteps of commenting systems Echo, Disqus and Intense Debate, WordPress.com has launched WordPress, Twitter and Facebook authorization and identity systems for its own commenting platform, in that order. The blog host didn’t even have the WordPress.com option before.
2010
Is This Thing On? - Cognition
by sbrothierSpeaking of experiments, there’s our comments section. Everybody knows inline blog comments are going the way of the BBS and Gopher sites of yore. We’re not ready to say “comments are dead” (we’ll leave that for Wired Magazine’s next cover story) but we have noticed the smell, and we’re doing something about it.
2009
JS-Kit ECHO
by sbrothier & 11 others, 1 commentthe next generation commenting system. It’s the way to share your content, and watch the live reaction. You can quickly embed Echo on WordPress, Blogger, or any website and turn your static pages into a real-time stream of diggs, tweets, comments and more.
JS-Kit ECHO
by sbrothier & 1 otherthe way to share your content, and watch the live reaction.
Publishers can quickly embed Echo on any site and turn their static pages into a real-time stream of diggs, tweets, comments, ratings and more.
Chirrup, a comment system for Twitter by Angry amoeba.
by ycc2106Chirrup is comment system which uses Twitter as a datastore.
2008
Contextual Discussions - The most important feature of cyn.in
by dhirajThe best thing about collaborating via comments is the fact that the comments always remain attached to the content (or the context) of the stuff that you were working on. Its always search-able and reference-able by any body else that is interested in or joins the team.
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