Swurl

Swurl is a new lifestream service that can pull your latest activities from nineteen (currently supported up to 19) Web services into a blog-like format profile page. Upon you sign-up to this Swurl, you can straight away start to aggregate all of your online activities, even they didn’t require you to check your email for email verification. Playing around Swurl know that it play an important role in displaying all of an user’s Web life in a more systematically way and without any doubt, I think they’re in the middle in prospecting the bloggers that run their personal blogs with a focus on the personal life.
Since Swurl is relatively new on the Web, but they capture the opportunities not only supported pictures (Flickr), social network (Facebook), link (Digg), blog (wordpress), video (Youtube), review (Yelp), but they also supported the new frontier of social media such as FriendFeed. What is the main difference you can find on Swurl is the design, a blog-like format, with all the comments are systematically integrate to the user’s profile page. Although the first impression of Swurl profile remind me a lot of my previous blog theme, K2, but you can easily change the heading of the profile so that it suit your online identity. In many instances, social media aggregator like Swurl will help users to pull information through RSS feeds, but you’ll find it useful when you know the information obtained is usable.
One of the built-in features I think is very interesting is the “Timeline” view. From the Timeline view, I knew that I’m not everyday engaging on the Web, I’ve my off-Web real life too. However, the only thing I didn’t like is all the feed entries appeared on the Timeline have been reformatted to the Swurl URL link.
For the Web developers, there is an API of Swurl for them.









