Boxcar

Dec 16

[New Provider] - Dog Lovers, Check this Out!

Dog-lovers, listen up.

This may be one of the coolest Boxcar providers we’ve featured yet. It’s just that awesome.

The Doggy provider was created by Bernhard Üllenberg, of Germany.

And just so we don’t get your hopes up too much, we’ll go ahead and let our English-speaking users know that, yes, this provider is currently specific to locations in Germany.

In other words, we’re telling you about a really cool *concept* that is applicable to anywhere, and may well show up as a provider you can use someday, even if you don’t speak German. Got it? Ja? Das is gut. So keep reading, already.

Short version: This location-based site for dog owners offers local information and some really cool services, such as allowing you to connect with other dog owners in the area, get notifications about threats like poisoned food, and even track your walks.

We’ll let Bernhard tell you more: 

   
A.                                                             B.

A. The service is very much organized around your actual location. So you start with a page with status info (new messages, new friend-requests), news about lost dogs, and alerts about poisoned food (horrible threat to dogs) in your area.
 
B. Then we have a Radar, where you can see yourself and other users (if allowed by them) doing their dog walks. This helps you to decide where and with whom you’d like to share your dog-walk-time.
 
It’s also the central page to start to interact with other users: See their public profile, send a message, make a friend request.
 
C.                                                               D.
 
C. The idea behind the service is to stay in contact with other dog owners without the need to exchange personal information (phone number, name, address, etc.). When you meet somebody new on your walk, you tell him or her about the website and your username. Since registering is a matter of seconds (name, email, password and zip) you can befriend right on the spot. For communication there is a internal post system.
 
D. On the Android platform* (with Firefox) you can also track your walks. Motivate yourself to walk more and longer. We think about a point system (like other check-in-services) to make it a bit competitive.
 
E. (to the left)  
Statistics about your dog walks in the past. (Tracking and statistics are private data.)
 
Recently we also added social sharing features, where you have a simple Facebook/Twitter-style diary with a plain privacy model (private, public, for friends).
 
We have a very high percentage of females (approx. 80%) and some people think about our service as a dating site for dogs. ;)
 
I started out very much focused on creating a local vibrant community in Düsseldorf (and we were glad to get good press), before we extend it to other cities. 
 

Boxcar allows us to push the internal messages on time between users. As a website, we love having the ability to feature instant communication, which is typically a capability only or primarily of apps.

 You can sign up for the service here. Guten tag!                   - Bernhard Üllenberg
   
*Android users, we’re making progress on having Boxcar for you guys - stay tuned!

Dec 15

[New Provider] Mint (Web Analytics) & Boxcar-Pepper!

Want to spice up your web analytics and reporting? Mint is the service for you - simplicity and spice, in the form of a flexible dashboard that allows you to easily view visits, referrers, popular pages and searches, and more.

A single site license is just $30, so go check it out and browse some of the other cool features Mint has to offer!

And we bet you can guess what we’re going to say next…

Mint likes to call its plug-ins “Pepper,” and yep, you guessed it, there’s now a Boxcar-Pepper. In other words, not only can you have a cool and versatile dashboard…you can also get push notifications for those same stats, customizable to your preferences.

Unique visitors? Unique referrals? Page views? Learn when it happens.

Dec 12

Developers & Coders: Boxcar with Hook.io!

A while back a guy named Russ Bradberry created a node module that implements a node client for Boxcar’s APIs. Per Ejeklint, from Sweden, recently decided to take that functionality one step further and wrap it into a working hook with hook.io.

As he put it, “During my spare time I keep an eye on emerging technologies and quite recently discovered node.js and its impressive ecosystem. One particular node framework of interest is hook.io, an endeavor to develop a small and effective event based framework for just about any kind of I/O. You can see it as an Enterprise Service Bus framework for node. With hook.io it becomes very easy to develop highly modularized applications with excellent decoupling and minimal dependencies between modules.” 

Per also wrote an “introduction for dummies” that further explains the idea.

Per decided to write his own hook and make it available, so now it’s drop-dead-easy to incorporate Boxcar notifications to hook.io-based applications. Just get the API keys you need from Boxcar, install hook.io-boxcar, create your configuration file and start it up.

Voilá! You can then send notifications from any node process just by calling, for example:

hook.emit('boxcar::broadcast', 'Service XYZ up and running again!');

A real beauty of hook.io is that one doesn’t even have to stop any processes to deploy it. Just start the hook and it starts listening for the events that triggers it.

You can do all kinds of cool things with the hook.io functionality and Boxcar integration. Per told us his summer house is on the largest island in the Baltic Sea, and will soon be monitored and remote controlled by a hook.io based application. :)

*Please note: hook.io is now at version 0.8.4 and under rapid development so one can still expect small API changes, and the documentation is very basic.

Dec 09

[New Provider] - Plug Spy: MacBook Protection

One of the things we love to do is tell you about cool providers that do awesome things AND integrate with Boxcar to give you real-time push notifications when they do!

Today’s topic of choice is Plug-Spy. This useful service is designed to give you instant warnings if someone tries to steal your MacBook or even enter a wrong password in the standard OS X login panel. That way, you’ll get a notification on your phone right away, and can decide what next steps to take.

                 

Plug-Spy integrates seamlessly with Mac OS X and Apple iCloud “Find my Mac,” and will work with the newest generation of MacBooks. No Kensington Lock or Sudden Motion Sensor is required and you don’t have to remember an additional password or shortcut. You can read Plug-Spy’s blog post on the update here.

Plug Spy auto-activates when your screen is locked and starts an annoying high volume alert sound and sends a Growl (and now, Boxcar!) notification when your MacBook gets unplugged from the MagSafe power adapter.

With access protection enabled, you will also get notified when someone enters a wrong password in the login panel, tries to access your MacBook with a different user account, or restarts your Mac in Safari Guest mode.

Purchase PlugSpy for just $2.99 from the Apple Mac store or download a free 3-day trial here. Then, while logged into your PlugSpy account, go to the “Access” tab to set up Boxcar notifications.

Type in the email address you use to log into Boxcar with, and click “Test.” Done!

Dec 08

[New Provider] InvestorPA - Australia & New Zealand Stock Exchange Updates!

                 

Boxcar fans in New Zealand and Australia, or anyone interested in the stock exchanges for both countries (ASX & NZX), now have a new tool at their fingertips through InvestorPA’s integration with Boxcar. Read their blog post here.

It’s simple to sign up for the free service. You can have up to 50 stocks on your watchlist, receive push notifications and email updates, or access updates online.

Once you’re registered, go to your account settings and select “push notifications” to enter the email address associated with your Boxcar account, as shown below!

      

Nov 30

[New Provider] LeafPing: Track Envato Sales, Referrals, and Comments!

                     

Envato is a group of online marketplaces that allows freelancers and other creatives to have a place to sell their digital goods (WordPress themes, background music, Flash templates and more).

And Envato fans will be glad to hear that through the hard work and efforts of Justin Scheetz, creator of LeafPing (currently in beta), they can now get notifications of their Envato sales, referrals, and comments through either SMS or Boxcar updates.

To get started, sign in at LeafPing with your Envato credentials. And spread the word!

Nov 27

Goodbye, Google Buzz

Today we say goodbye to our friend Google Buzz.  As of a few minutes ago, you will no longer be able to add the Google Buzz service to Boxcar, nor will you receive notifications for it.

We hope to add support for Google Plus soon and are patiently waiting on API access for it.  As always, stay tuned here for updates.

Nov 25

[New Provider] WhoReadMe - Email Tracking!

Sometimes, you send an email off…and you have no idea if it’s been read. And where. And when. So you wait.

But you don’t have to sit around waiting for replies.

Now you can get alerts not only when you get important emails (via our Mail Service), but when other people have read your sent emails.

Which is more efficient, more fun, more awesome. And we’re all about awesome.

The trick is appending “.whoreadme.com” to email addresses when you send emails.

You’ll get a notification when your email is opened or forwarded. But guess what?

There’s more coolness on top of that.

More than just giving you a read receipt, WhoReadMe allows you to ALSO learn things like the browser and operating system of the recipient, an estimate of their location and distance from you, duration of read time, and much, much more, including advance scheduling of sending emails out and allowing you to set an expiration date for when emails will be destroyed.

You’ll probably come up with your own uses for this cool service, but some of the ones we can think of include giving yourself a good reason to make a follow-up call (if you haven’t gotten a notification saying an important email’s been opened), subtly checking in on progress of a project, or just plain having fun with the data.

Sound cool? But definitely. Here’s how you can get such coolness:

Nov 16

[video]

Nov 09

Coming soon: Boxcat!  =)

Coming soon: Boxcat!  =)