Yesterday’s New York Times article “Some Bling for Your Blog” got me thinking about widgets and plugins and how most of them are serve no real purpose to the average blog reader and simply frustrate them by slowing the page downloading. The article showed screen grabs of a few cool-looking widgets: the trivia game Blufr, the Streampad music player, and the fund-raising widget ChipIn. But do those widgets really add value — enough value to counterbalance the extra download time?
What I would have liked to have seen in the article is a list of the best of the bling. Well, since they didn’t, I will take a stab at it myself. And please jump in with your suggestions too, via the comments. Here are my personal favorites:
- Swicki “Hot Searches” Buzzcloud (from Eurekster)
- Recent Readers (from MyBlogLog)
- Flash Photo Stream (from Flickr)
- Preview Anywhere (from Snap)
- “What Am I Doing” Twitter Badge (from Twitter)
- Film Loops (from FilmLoop)
- Number of Readers FeedCount (from Feedburner)
- “I’m online” Skype buttons (from Skype)
- del.icio.us Tagometer (from del.icio.us)
- del.icio.us Linkrolls (from del.icio.us)
- del.icio.us Network Badge (from del.icio.us)
- Timelines (from MyTimelines)
- Link Count (from Technorati)
- Polls (from PollDaddy)
- Now Playing (from SIGamp)
- BuzzBoost (from Feedburner)
- Books in my Library (from LibraryThing)
and these which are not really widgets, but plugins (for WordPress):
- Ultimate Tag Warrior (tag clouds)
- Share This (add to social bookmarking services)
- Recent Comments
Plenty more widgets at Widgetoko
Forgot one other widget directory… Widgetbox
Comment by Stephan Spencer — January 19, 2007 @ 5:49 am
“Share This” for social bookmarks? Bzzzz.
I’ll take the social bookmarks tool:
http://www.toprankblog.com/tools/social-bookmarks/
and also the RSS button tool any day!
http://www.toprankblog.com/tools/rss-buttons/
Comment by Lee Odden — January 19, 2007 @ 8:11 pm
A colleague and I have found Streampad very useful for sharing one minute interviews or excerpts of interviews, both in terms of an industry (recruiting) service and to help promote an audiobook we have produced. I was wary, but I now think it’s a pretty neat product.
Comment by Des Walsh — January 19, 2007 @ 9:03 pm