TechCrunch
9/24/2007
Mark Hendrickson
Another product that aims to simplify your digital lifestyle is launching today. Give Fuser
access to your email and social networking accounts, and the website
will organize all of the messages from those accounts in one place so
you don’t have to bounce back and forth between multiple interfaces to
handle them.
Fuser is still in beta and I ran into a few glitches while testing
the site, but it certainly has promise. You can pull in accounts from
any IMAP or POP email service and the social networks MySpace
and Facebook
.
Once you have loaded your accounts, messages from all of them appear in
one collective inbox. It’s impressive to see posts to my Facebook wall
displayed like email messages next to my actual email messages.
Not only can you view messages from all of your accounts together,
you can also reply to them as with a normal webmail client. If you want
to reply to a Facebook wall post, you can hit reply and either leave a
note on your friend’s wall or send them a Facebook message. It’s quite
surprising how much of Facebook’s functionality Fuser has been able to
extract out of that social network’s website.
Beyond organizing all of your messages in one place, Fuser plays
around with the social network data to add a little functionality. You
can view a “leaderboard” of your social network friends to see who
communicates with you most frequently. Friends are ranked according to
how many times they have sent you messages or posted on your wall, and
you can view rankings according to certain time periods. Nothing
terribly revolutionary, but their attempts demonstrate how it is still
possible to mash up Facebook data from outside of the developer
platform.
Fuser is free and supported by discreet AdSense advertisements. Check out Orgoo
for another message aggregation service. Orgoo, which presented at TechCrunch40
last week, differs from Fuser by integrating instant messages, video
conferences, and SMS messages instead of data from social networking
accounts.