It seems reasonable to me, that you could have a robot which is
tailored specifically to
certain websites (programmable @ user end), in fact an app that spawns
robots, which,
before "fully creating" them, the user has to input website
interactivity details first.
i.e. User1 spawns Robot1: input1:URL input2:username
input3:password input4:purpose (nesting etc.)
Robot1 becomes available to publish the information from the
wave to the website accordingly by obtaining specific user
credentials.
On Nov 9, 5:43 pm, David Nesting <
da...@fastolfe.net> wrote:
> I'm not attacking the idea at all. Like I said, I'm working on the same
> thing, so I'd love to hear your ideas on some of these.
>
> authentication token, and have the gadget store *that* in the wave, and use
> that as your authenticator when the robot receives events saying that some
> content has been changed. I haven't thought through this very well yet,
> though. The issue of authenticating wave events is IMO a serious problem
> that precludes this type of robot, except for personal/experimental use.
>
> 6. If somebody besides the wave creator (stored by the robot) tries to edit
>
> > the main wavelet, the robot does not publish the result and resets the
> > content to the last published.
>
> I'd argue that it would be *desirable* to allow other participants in the