It’s been over a week since my last update, but in that time we’ve developed a whole bunch of cool new features, a number of which should be particularly interesting to bloggers. I’ll start with the more general additions.
We’ve integrated a full fledged wiki with Vino2Vino.com so that we can easily add historical, biographical, or other amorphous wine-related information to the system. Wiki articles for wineries show up on the winery page, as you can see on the pages for Larkmead Vineyards, Concannom, and Beaulieu Vineyard among others. In addition to the winery articles the wiki can be used to include information that would otherwise be missing from the system. For example, check out the articles for Mike Grgich (owner/operator of Grgich Hills), André Tchelistcheff, and The Wine Group.
We’ve also made some improvements in the UI department with a new profile page (you can find it by clicking “My Profile” at the top of the page after logging in) as well as a new look for the wine lists page. There’s new functionality here too. On the profile page you can upload your own picture (or “avatar“), and on the wine lists page you can browse any number of user-created lists as well as auto-generated lists that show wines you’ve rated, commented on, tagged, or blogged! Which brings me to the new features for bloggers…
From what I’ve been reading around the web, wine bloggers are not that impressed with the current generation of “Wine 2.0″ websites. One common complaint is that these systems offer no easy way to cross-post a blogged wine review (or to interact with blogging software at all for that matter). We’re working hard to address these concerns, and have started by implementing Linkbacks (pingbacks really) so that bloggers who link to a V2V wine or winery page from a post, and have pingbacks enabled, will automatically see a reciprocal link back from that page to their blog post. For example, if I link to a couple of wines I’ve found particularly good recently, you’ll see links back to this page on the V2V page for each wine. We’re of the opinion that this mechanism will benefit us, bloggers, and users in general by creating an aggregated list of blog posts that discuss individual wines and wineries. So next time you discuss individual bottles of wine in a blog post, link back to V2V so your readers can find additional info about each bottle, and ours can find out what you thought!
Even cooler, if you have an account on V2V you can go to your profile page and associate your blog with your account. (If you don’t have an account, get one now! it’s free, and it only takes about 30 seconds… what are you waiting for?) After linking your V2V account and your blog, you will be able to view a list of wines you’ve blogged about on your wine lists page. And just like any other list, you can export your list of blogged wines in the form of a wine widget or an XML Feed. Check out the widget displaying my blogged wines (to the right) for an example.
There are a number of other improvements and new features around the site, but this post is getting long so I’ll let you explore and find them on your own. We’re very excited about the new features, the blogging features in particular, and would love to hear what you have to say, so leave a comment or shoot us an email.