The TalkBack Reader Response System was one of the first systems used on the Internet to allow people to respond to articles posted on a website. It was first used at Jesse Berst's ZDNet Anchordesk news site. It was created by Jon C. A. DeKeles.
Principle
The TalkBack system of Anchordesk allowed readers, once they came to a site, to respond by a form on the screen. This data was then sent by email to the editors, and was also written to a data file. The data was imported into a custom Access Database Publishing system. The editor could approve the post, and also respond. It was one of the first interactive systems created for use on the Internet with a news publication.
Anchordesk was one of the first sites that used email to send news to readers on a daily basis. At one point, emails went out to almost 3 million people a day.
Notes
- "Sidebar: Jesse Berst: The Personality Factor". TheFreeLibrary.com. 15 November 2000.
- Kaiser, Nathan (15 November 2000). "Interview w/ Jesse Berst, CEO of IZ.com". Npost.
References
The correct use of the name is TalkBack. With a capital T and B, and as all one word. ↩
Kaiser, Nathan (15 November 2000). "Interview w/ Jesse Berst, CEO of IZ.com". Npost. http://www.npost.com/blog/2000/11/15/interview-w-jesse-berst-ceo-of-izcom ↩