Swivel: social data-sets
in yesterdays exclusive preview, TechCrunch referred to Swivel as the “YouTube for data”. though the term might not seem very easy to grasp per se, it really describes the web-application, which launched into public beta today, in a nutshell: Swivel allows users to upload & share arbitrary data-sets, containing all sorts of information organized in records (like f.e. a spreadsheet-data). data-sets can be shared, visualized, rated and mashed-up against each other. Swivel includes basic tools for statistical analysis like calculating correlation between two data-rows. for an example graph, check this comparison of subscriber-growthrate in Second Life and WoW.

Swivel’s data-import works pretty well (though their servers seem to be a bit overloaded at the moment, I’m receiving plenty of 500-errors). users can upload local .xls- or .csv-sheets or enter data into a html-form directly. features like importing .pdf/.doc-files and syndicating data from other websites obviously aren’t deployed yet - I figure a flexible XML-/RSS importer would be really nice too. while it’s easy to get your data into the system in a meaningful way (including common web-techniques like tagging), the user-interface needs a bit of polish in some other areas. in particular, I found it rather challenging to edit and filter data-sets or even to create graphs upon uploaded data (my guess is, that Swivel takes some time [hours?] to pre-process uploaded data, but there wasn’t any hint in this regard, hm). again, the application throws errors on certain actions (f.,e. hiding data-fields), but I guess that’s why it’s called a ‘preview’.
besides teething problems, Swivel seems to be one of the most innovative webapps I’ve tried out lately. for me, the biggest caveat seems to be the inability to assure data-integrity & -quality (in the end, what stops me from uploading, lets say, faked crime-statistics of Vienna?). assuming this way of sharing raw data takes off in a Wikipedian-way, Swivel will have to show us some innovations in this area too.






















Michael,
Thank you for the post and the detailed review. We know we have much work to do, and this morning in particular the hamsters in the server room running Swivel were getting a bit overwhelmed, hence the timeouts and the 500 errors. We’re feeling better now and are working hard on fixing and improving things here at Swivel.
Best regards,
Dmitry Dimov
Product Chief & Cofounder
http://www.swivel.com
hello Dmitry & thx for responding (so fast!)…
hope you didn’t get the impression I’m negative towards the product…sure there are glitches, but that’s what a public beta is about, imho. so, I’m looking forward to see which way Swivel will go…
greetings,
michael