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May 4, 2008 10:41 AM PDT

From Live Mesh to the Open Mesh

Posted by Dan Farber
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My friend Marc Canter has written a series of blog posts outlining the issues, constructs, technologies, and standards required to build out an "open mesh," as he put it. It's a kind of unified field theory for the Web.

Marc Canter

(Credit: Dan Farber)

Canter has been an evangelist for a Web without walled gardens. He also has a financial stake in the open mesh. He runs a company called Broadband Mechanics that has developed a white label social network and Web site creation service that depends on open standards.

The open mesh is not Microsoft's Live Mesh. The open mesh is "made up of vendors, standards, and glue code that connects a wide range of services, applications, and platforms together," Canter said. And, it has identity at the center:

"The key foundation set of constructs, web services and APIs to support when building the mesh - is the area of profiles, personas, friendships, relationships, social graphs and groups. It all starts with humans and every construct, element and component of the open social web we're building has to do with people."

ID is at the center of the open mesh.

(Credit: Marc Canter)

"Coming out of all this is an awareness of a new kind of infrastructure - which simulates the blood veins, nervous systems, skeletons, fire hose and neural networks of the open mesh. Its about RSS, Friendfeeds, XMPP, attention, two-way APIs, OpenID, DNS-like backbones and an international approach."

Canter recognizes that a completely unified and open mesh is more theory than practice:

"No one wants to give up control of their technology - so (by definition) the open mesh must be made up of a combination of open, free protocols and technologies with proprietary APIs and technologies."

At this juncture the underlying plumbing, or mesh, for the social Web is under construction. It's a good time to bring the issues to the forefront, before the mesh blocks out more than it lets in.

Dan Farber is editor in chief of CBS Interactive News, which includes CBSNews.com and CNET News. He has more than 25 years of experience as an editor and journalist covering technology. E-mail Dan.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 7 comments
by TPSradio May 4, 2008 11:51 AM PDT
Social Networking fascinates me, looking forward to following the footprints of technology!

KaRi
Long Beach, SoCaLifornia
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by Tony McCune May 4, 2008 12:21 PM PDT
This seems like the intersection of two technology thoughts, social networking and cloud computing. If we can make identity and computing objects portable we will see a new explosion of semantic web applications.
http://tmccune.blogspot.com/2008/04/stop-meshing-with-cloud-computing.html
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by Tony McCune May 4, 2008 12:21 PM PDT
This seems like the intersection of two technology thoughts, social networking and cloud computing. If we can make identity and computing objects portable we will see a new explosion of semantic web applications.
http://tmccune.blogspot.com/2008/04/stop-meshing-with-cloud-computing.html
Reply to this comment
by Astinsan May 4, 2008 12:27 PM PDT
Wasn't there a network topology named after this?
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by My-Self May 4, 2008 8:20 PM PDT
For me Open Mesh refers to this project :

http://www.open-mesh.com/
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by shmooth2 May 5, 2008 9:23 AM PDT
Canter has said he would willingly hand over all his users' data to the government if and when the government asked for it. He said he would not 'fight that battle'.

So, anyone currently using one of Canter's wacky fail solutions - best lawyer up - but even a lawyer won't be able to do much for you down in Gitmo.
Reply to this comment
by MyMesh_com May 6, 2008 3:12 AM PDT
www.MyMesh.com -- part of "the open mesh" with respect to the meaning in the context of this article, which has been a good read btw, /ac.
Reply to this comment
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About Outside the Lines

Dan Farber is the editor in chief of CNET News. He has covered technology for more than two decades, and he previously served as editor in chief of ZDNet, PC Week and MacWeek. Outside the Lines explores the intersection of business and technology.

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