Check this out. I've been talking to Volunteermatch about event
aggregation. Very related to your most recent post. Basically, I
emailed them pitching event synication via RSS. They told me that
they have done deals with a few other websites (Feed America, and
DoSomething) that cost in the $10k range. I was stunned, so I wrote a
quick little parser and added their data to Eventfeed to prove how
easy it is.
Apparently she's not getting it... Suddenly I get a "Mr. Sylvan"
tone... I'm not sure how I feel about this. I don't want to
antagonize them, but I'm half inclined to stand behind "fair use"...
Thoughts, anyone?
Best Regards,
Aerik
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Aerik Sylvan <ae...@thesylvans.com>
Date: Fri, Feb 6, 2009 at 9:37 AM
Subject: Re: RSS feeds and event aggregation
To: Megan Kelly <mke...@volunteermatch.org>
Dear Megan,
I understand the "Mr. Sylvan" tone and will read the contract.
Did you consider the rest of what I had to say? I added your data to
demonstrate, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that using RSS to syndicate
data, is much more efficient that custom coding solutions? (That's
the whole purpose of the eventfeed website.)
I was very alarmed to hear the $10-20k estimates - that is exactly the
situation we should avoid. Non-profit websites can *easily* share
information with each other, to everyone's benefit.
Best Regards,
Aerik
On Fri, Feb 6, 2009 at 9:21 AM, Megan Kelly <mke...@volunteermatch.org> wrote:
>
> Mr Sylvan,
>
> Because you are not using our RSS feed for personal use, but rather, for
> a public site, you need to sign the attached contract.
>
> Thank you, Megan
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: asy...@gmail.com [mailto:asy...@gmail.com] On Behalf Of Aerik
> Sylvan
> Sent: Thursday, February 05, 2009 4:20 PM
> To: Megan Kelly
> Subject: Re: RSS feeds and event aggregation
>
> Megan,
>
> Thank you very much... hopefully I'm not misreading your email - I don't
> mean to put you on the defensive. I really appreciate your taking the
> time to talk to me.
>
> I want to point out something - if you take a look at
> http://eventfeed.org/search.php?loc=san+francisco,+ca&startdate=2009-02-
> 05&enddate=2009-03-05&q=love&go=Find+Events
> I believe you will find the top result ('ALL YOU NEED IS LOVE Help
> Benefit') is from Volunteermatch.
>
> I did this using your existing RSS feed - it took me about 20 minutes to
> write a parser (using an existing body of code). It's a little clunkier
> than having start time and end time in tags, but it works.
>
> The point I'm trying to make is that using RSS is a very, very good way
> to syndicate these events. In a very small amount of time I have
> volunteer search that is at least as rich - possibly better- than the
> one at DoSomething. Again, I'm not trying to sell anything - I'm
> promoting a standard way of doing things efficiently and cheaply so
> everyone can benefit.
>
> I'm doing all this to try to convince you of the simplicity and
> efficiency of my approach. Those websites don't need to spend $10-20k
> to integrate a volunteer search.
>
> Best Regards,
> Aerik
>
>
> --
> http://eventfeed.org - An Initiative Promoting Syndication of Events
>
--
http://eventfeed.org - An Initiative Promoting Syndication of Events
http://www.wikidweb.com - the Wiki Directory of the Web
http://tagthis.info - Hosted Tagging for your website!
--
http://eventfeed.org - An Initiative Promoting Syndication of Events
http://www.wikidweb.com - the Wiki Directory of the Web
http://tagthis.info - Hosted Tagging for your website!
Frankly, I'm still trying to decide what to do. If they threatened to
sue me, it might create some interesting PR... :-)
I should also provide this update: Megan wrote me again and told me
that the $10-20k figure included other tools and applications, not
just the feed. And she asked me to sign a contract again.
Thanks,
Aerik