US startup Xobni has launched an add-on software module for Microsoft Outlook
which the firm claims can organise a user's inbox by 'relationships'.
Displayed as a sidebar in Outlook, Xobni's proprietary technology analyses
emails in the same way that the human brain naturally understands communication,
according to the firm.
The data offers a quick glimpse into a user's contacts, and displays how they
have communicated and interacted with each other and which files have been
exchanged.
Xobni, which spells 'inbox' backwards, describes this as the "social
architecture buried in every inbox".
"Xobni analyses mountains of data and shows you information trapped in email
that is often lost or forgotten: your relationships, your communication habits
and the context around messages," said Matt Brezina, co-founder of Xobni.
"Exposing that data is incredibly valuable, as it reveals a network of
relationships that email software designed 20 years ago leaves disjointed. We
connect the dots to draw a clearer picture of every aspect of your life that
flows through email."
The company launched a public beta in 2007 but subsequently made the code
private owing to "overwhelming demand".
Reader comments