Finding stuff that has fully adopted PubSub or PEP is harder but ... The BBC publish their current music tracks: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/radiolabs/2008/02/now_playing_in_the_cloud.shtml
An example implementation: http://radiofall.mibly.com/ Tivo uses XMPP: http://stpeter.im/?p=2131 In a slightly different direction ... Android uses it too for p2p messages. http://code.google.com/android/toolbox/google-apis.html Low Cost calls over XMPP with Flex http://blogs.nitobi.com/andre/index.php/2008/03/13/verb-exchange-and-nitobi-to-build-xmpp-client-with-flex-and-air/ Also the Vertebra ruby slides mentioned by Anders are here: http://brainspl.at/articles/2008/06/02/introducing-vertebra cheers, Steven http://livz.org -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Steve Ivy Sent: 25 June 2008 16:01 To: XMPP/Social Networking Subject: [Social] real-world non-chat XMPP? There's been a long discussion recently (some of which happened on this list) about open messaging between websites and between users on those websites, based somewhat on the current social network friends messaging model. I think there's a general consensus that XMPP can and should play an important role in this idea of an open, distributed, near-real-time network of websites, but I also think that there is disagreement on what the transition from xmpp's real-time network to the web's non-real-time, non-persistent network looks like. In the interest in understanding different ways that XMPP can be used/built on, I'm wondering if anyone has some examples of a real-world XMPP deployment for non-IM purposes? Perhaps something based on PubSub? Thanks, --Steve -- Steve Ivy http://redmonk.net // http://diso-project.org This email is: [ ] bloggable [x] ask first [ ] private
