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Rockmelt

Rockmelt: Have you metRockMelt? Neither have most people, it seems - but the Web is certainly a-buzzin'avec the word of the mysterious new browser. Thank you to a history major in the New York Times RockMelt is becoming the darling of the technology community.

What exactly RockMelt, and who is behind all this? Most information available is sketchy at best. If you piece together, however, you can get a very rough picture of what the browser can be on. Here is an overview of what has been revealed so far.

1. RockMelt founders are two former employees of Opsware.

The guys have created RockMelt are Tim and Eric Vishria Howe, who both used to work at the company Opsware Network. Opsware was founded by Netscape founder Marc Andreessen and sold to HP in 2007.

2. Andreessen himself may be involved in RockMelt.

Andreessen invests in RockMelt, according to unnamed sources cited by The New York Times. Andreessen apparently referring to the project in an interview earlier this summer, well, the Times said he had "supported a very good team." Within minutes, The Times, Andreessen "seemed to regret his comment" and refused to elaborate.

3. RockMelt will be "different" from other browsers.

It is a statement vague, but Andreessen is quoted as telling The Times RockMeltwould stand out from the pack of browsers currently on the market, focusing somewhat on the "complex network of websites and applications" in which the Internet has evolved.

4. RockMelt may present a kind of Facebook integration.

One area of interest may involve some form of integration of social networking. A Times reporter claims to have seen references to a relationship-RockMelt Facebook in a privacy policy posted on both the homepage RockMelt. (The policy is no longer accessible from the site.) The journalist said that the policy has examined the presence of features related to a Facebook user ID, including integrated access to Facebook updates and other content.

The idea of a relationship with Facebook is taken by the documents published by the tech blog ReadWriteWeb. principal author of this blog, Marshall Kirkpatrick, said he got a start of construction RockMelt. He calls it a "desktop client for Facebook semi-independent", offering a screenshot for illustration.


Despite these reports, Facebook denies knowledge of any type of formal relationship with the startup. A spokesperson for Facebook has gone on record saying the company is "not aware of all the details on RockMelt and its product."

5. RockMelt can have its own URL shortener.

RockMelt registered the domain me.lt as reducing URL, claims ReadWriteWeb Kirkpatrick. He says the area has been listed on the homepage RockMelt until earlier this week.

According to DNS records, the domain was registered me.lt April 16 this year under the name "Klute-Thiemann Informationstechnologie GmbH & Co. KG." From now on, he points to a generic landing page server.

6. RockMelt team is definitely remain calm.

The guys involved in RockMelt definitely do not want to say much. Eric Vishria tells the Times he and his group are "very early stages of development," adding: ". Tell this stage is not helpful "

RockMelt website is provided with a form to register for updates as they become available.

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Author

Hi, Its me Hafeez. A webdesigner, blogspot developer and UI/UX Designer. I am a certified Themeforest top Author and Front-End Developer. I'am business speaker, marketer, Blogger and Javascript Programmer.

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