Fire Eagle was a Yahoo! owned service that stores a user's location and shares it with other authorized services.[1] It was created at Yahoo! Brickhouse by a team which included among others Evan Henshaw-Plath,[2] Tom Coates, Simon Willison, Jeannie H. Yang, Mor Naaman, Seth Fitzsimmons, Simon King, and Chris Martin.
Type of site | Location-based services |
---|---|
Available in | English |
Owner | Yahoo! |
URL | www |
Commercial | Yes |
Registration | Required |
A user could authorize other services and applications to update or access this information via the Fire Eagle API, allowing a user to update their location once and then use it on any Fire Eagle enabled-website. The intention of Fire Eagle was to serve as a central broker for location data.[3] Services which supported Fire Eagle included Pownce, Dopplr, Brightkite and Moveable Type.[4][5]
The Fire Eagle service was one of the first sites to use the OAuth protocol to connect services together.
See also
References
- ^ Kiss, Jemima (13 August 2008). "Yahoo launches Fire Eagle location tool". The Guardian.
- ^ Sathyaish Chakravarthy (13 March 2008). "Fire Eagle Emerging Communications". IT Conversations.
- ^ MG Siegler (12 August 2008). "Yahoo pushes its location platform Fire Eagle out of the nest so it can spread its wings". VentureBeat.
- ^ Schofield, Jack (13 August 2008). "Yahoo finally launches Fire Eagle, but you can hide". The Guardian.
- ^ Boulton, Clint (13 August 2008). "Yahoo Fire Eagle Lands as Location-Aware Platform". eWeek.
- ^ Tom Coates. "It's a bit sad that @fireeagle has finally gone down. Still, never mind, onwards and upwards".
- ^ Fire Eagle (7 February 2013). "Fire Eagle is down at the moment". Twitter.
External links