Check in via Twitter

June 10, 2008

We’re extremely excited to announce that we’ve integrated with Twitter for sharing your location with your friends. If you’re headed out, look up your destination on Outalot and click “Check in Via Twitter”. Outalot will send a tweet to your Twitter account, so your friends can find out what it’s like, and where it’s at. Also, Outalot will update your location to the place you’re headed, so when you’re leaving the bar and need a late night snack, we’ll help you find the one that’s just steps out the front door.

Check in via Twitter

Many people have asked us how we’ll make it easier for users to let others know where they are through Outalot. Will we introduce a category called “Friends”? Will we push alerts to let you know that a friend is within a few miles of your current location? The release of several GPS-enabled phones, including yesterday’s announcement about the 3G, GPS-enabled iPhone, stokes our and other developers’ imagination with possibilities.

The issue, of course, with letting others know your whereabouts through an application is privacy. In a simple interface, how do you set limitations on what level of detail people can see about your current location? Which social networks do you tie into to let people know where you are? Once you start listing out all the possibilites, you see that a  complex interface is needed to handle LBS friend-finding. We’d hate to introduce unnecessary complexity into Outalot.

One step, we feel, in the right direction is not asking users to re-create a social network. We believe that the last thing someone wants to do at this point is reconstruct the network they already have in Facebook or Friendster. In addition, we are not convinced that a push alerting system is user-friendly, so we wanted a service where users would pull information about their friends’ location.

That’s why we decided to work with Twitter’s APIs in order to integrate sharing your location with others via Outalot. Here are some benefits to checking in via Twitter:

  • You can control who sees your location through your Twitter privacy controls. In other words, you can elect for the whole world to see where you check in, or have your updates only go to select friends.
  • You can also use the Twitter Facebook application in order to update your status in Facebook. The daisy chain of Outalot » Twitter » Facebook again prevents users from having to recreate any social networks or privacy controls within Outalot.
  • Finally, we don’t even require that you have a registered user account with us to take advantage of this feature

Please let us know what you think about our Twitter integration!


Fire Eagle and Location Sharing in Outalot

June 9, 2008

One of the most difficult things about using any location-based service is setting and maintaining your location. Lots of forces are working to simplify this: in particular, location-sensitive devices like the iPhone and GPS-enabled handsets will shake things up, but one cool software-only simplification is Yahoo! Fire Eagle.

We just launched synchronization with Fire Eagle. If you haven’t seen it yet, Fire Eagle is a location brokering service that allows you to share your location beyond the boundaries of an application. That is, if you set your location in one app, your location will be propagated out of the app into any other location-aware that you use.

If you have a beta invite to Fire Eagle, click on your username in Outalot to edit your settings, and enable Fire Eagle to get your location synchronized across Outalot and any other Fire Eagle-enabled site.


San Francisco Bay Area now supported, Shops added

May 13, 2008

Yesterday, we pushed two big changes to the service.

We now offer Outalot for the San Francisco Bay Area. Like New York City, you can simply enter your address/ZIP/intersection to set your location in this area, or you can switch the neighborhood view to the SF Bay Area:

Switching neighborhoods to SF Bay Area

We also launched a Shops category for both NYC and SF Bay Area, which includes categories like Clothing & Accessories, Eyewear, Home & Furniture, Pharmacies, etc.

Outalot Shops Icon


Mobile Maps in Outalot

April 9, 2008

We just pushed out some great new changes to the site.  The most noticeable new feature (for now) is Google mobile maps, now embedded in business details.

Enjoy!


Outalot allows fast and easy browsing: Gothamist

March 16, 2008

This afternoon, Gothamist posted a piece about Outalot:

“New Yorkers like to go out. A lot. A website aptly called Outalot allows fast and easy browsing of three nightlife basics: restaurants, bars, and movies…”

Continue reading the full post at Gothamist.

We appreciate all the positive feedback we’ve received from users who have found out about us through local media. Here are some user comments we received this week:

  • “It’s a service I personally need.”
  • “Am loving the application…”
  • “I just moved to Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn and read about Outalot.com on Thrillist so it’s definitely something that I will start using since I don’t really know the area yet.”
  • “It’s better than Yelp.”

We are grateful to users who tag, comment, and rate local businesses, and send us updates about what’s happening in their neighborhood like restaurant openings and closings. We want to provide the highest quality data possible and your support helps us do this. Please keep it coming!


Bars and Restaurants, rated on Google Earth

March 4, 2008

Here’s one little feature we put in as an experiment: KML for recent comments on Google Earth. If you have it installed, click on the icon under ‘Recent Comments‘ on Outalot and get a different view on what’s been happening lately:

Google Earth Screenshot

P.S. I also wanted to give a big thanks to the people who have helped us get to launch. Your contributions were unbelievably valuable! Please keep the feedback coming!

We’ll continue to keep this blog updated with what we’re up to, so stay tuned for new features, company news, stats we find interesting, job postings, incriminating photos of celebrities at our wild dot com parties, etc.


Outalot: Melbourne, VIC, Australia

March 3, 2008

A few months ago, my partner and I traveled to Melbourne, Australia, his hometown, to visit family. While we were there, we began entering Melbourne-area restaurants into Outalot. Even though we say on the site that Outalot’s currently available for NYC area, it actually contains a lot of data for Melbourne, too. Try changing your location to “Melbourne, Vic, Australia” or use an Australian postal code (eg, “3040, Australia”). You can even enter an exact street address “184 Rathdowne Street, Carlton, Vic, Australia”.


T-minus 1 day

February 28, 2008

Well, Jesse and I have been working on Outalot for nearly 4 months now and we’re going to launch the service tomorrow, so we decided we better setup a blog — like all web 2.0 companies — to keep people up to date on the service. We resisted the urge to tack a “beta” sign on our logo. For now, it’s only available for NYC, but we’re going to release more cities very soon. Stay tuned!