Monday, October 02, 2006

A plug for Squirl

Portland, Maine is small and not very tech-focused. There are few web companies, but no "Web 2.0" ones I was aware of of. So it came as something of a surprise to discover a VERY Web 2.0 company that even does cataloging, just like LibraryThing. What are the odds?

Squirl.info helps you keep track of your "collections." Got a trove of female action figures, PEZ dispensers, panda bear stamps, 45s, Star Wars-enalia, hobo nickels**, ticket stubs, or dead bugs? Put them up on Squirl and show the world. There's even some social networking built in, and the developers are adding features daily. Now, if you want, you can put your books on Squirl. But this isn't its strongest suit, and it's certainly not the focus.

Last week co-founder John McGrath and I met for coffee and hit it off. He's one talented guy. I really hope Squirl takes off. Alternately, I hope it tanks, he loses his job and he comes to work for LibraryThing. The two ideas are bickering on my shoulders. Anyway, John and I agreed to meet regularly and talk about and critique each others' sites. I'm expecting a lot of good to come from that.

So, check it out and let us know what you think of it. I admire its aesthetic. LibraryThing could learn from, even if I wouldn't want to go all-the-way Basecamp like they have. And we should add the ability to take pictures of your books separate from the cover shot. Book collectors would like that, I think.***

Squirl has been added to the "also on" list in your profile, if you want to link accounts, and John has gone ahead and enabled a similar feature over there. Maybe in the future we're have enough overlap that we can say "People who collect Perrier bottles enjoy reading Proust." Well, they do.

*It's even built in Rails!
**Issued during Hobo Joe Junk Pan's tenure as Secretary of the Treasury. (I don't get this!)
***Actually, Squirl only allows one picture per item now. I'm betting they allow more soon. It was the main complaint in an otherwise very positive review. That guy also reviews LibraryThing (but did he see all the fields?). Anyway, doing "collectible" books better is a priority for us, and one that our partner, Abebooks.com, can help us with a lot.

6 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

*It's even built in Rails!

Umm, Tim? What is built on Ruby on Rails?

10/02/2006 11:55 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Oh, boy. Another time sink. But I've been NEEDING this.

10/02/2006 3:13 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

"People who collect Perrier bottles enjoy reading Proust."

I believe that should be "People who collect madeleine recipies enjoy reading Proust".

That being said, I have added this temptation to the list of reasons for upgrading my computer system. When I have enough (and I'm very close), I'll smash the piggy bank.

10/02/2006 3:34 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

So I joined Squirl after Tim mentioned it in an earlier post, and my first collection is a featured collection today. Woohoo! :)

(That would be my Thai dictionary collection, really the only books I "collect" in that sense. I have other random things I'll be putting up soon enough.)

10/02/2006 8:58 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I have two things I don't like about Squirl that I saw just by going through the tour.

One: No lifetime membership. $20 for two years is still cheap, but that does start to add up...

two: Max of 5000 items per plus account holder, regardless of collection. I would need two accounts JUST for my sports card collection, if I chose to list each card separately. (I've got over 7500 collectable sports cards across four sports. These are unique cards, not multiples of the same card.) This would limit it too much for my purposes. :<

Would love to see more from them, so we can see the link between LT and Squirl grow big and strong...

10/06/2006 10:24 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

AWESOME!! After gettin' hooked on LibraryThing, I was hoping someone would come up with RecordThing for 45s and LPs. This fits the bill!

10/10/2006 6:16 PM  

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