Am I the only one who finds it a little creepy that they want anyone installing their browser extension to give them access to your entire browsing history?<p>I'd rather pay for each HowTo that I create or let them run an ad in middle of each presentation. This is seriously cool and has awesome possibilities but I'd hope they would reconsider their business model.
So as far as I understand this you can either embed this on a website or use the browser extension. Do you have any examples of it being embedded on a website?<p>I'm interested in adding something this to my webapp, but I'd need to see what it looks like first and I don't want to have to install the extension. I also don't want my users to have to install the extension.<p>I'm also looking into alternative projects like Joyride from ZURB [1] and Guiders from Optimizely [2].<p>1: <a href="http://zurb.com/playground/jquery-joyride-feature-tour-plugin" rel="nofollow">http://zurb.com/playground/jquery-joyride-feature-tour-plugi...</a><p>2: <a href="https://github.com/jeff-optimizely/Guiders-JS" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/jeff-optimizely/Guiders-JS</a>
many of the feedback which we got during private beta of whatfix are incorporated (<a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6019078" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6019078</a>)