Simple Mashups Creator (SMC)

This website helps a user create a simple mashup that combines functionality from across multiple websites. An immediate use is to perform a repetitive task. Ideally, the user keeps "SMC on" and simply goes about doing their task by navigating from one website to the other. SMC records the URLs visited (but not necessarily the non-URL related functions performed such as forms completed after arriving at a webpage invoked by the URL) and publishes them all on the SMC website on a page allocated to the user and accessible to the user via a user-specific URL (e.g. www.smc.com/username), username and password. To perform the task the next time, the user visits SMC, thereby building traffic for SMC. Additional feature could be sharing of a user's page with the entire SMC community, so that other users of SMC can benefit from how to perform the same repetitive task. In a way, this makes SMC a deeper version of a HowTo website that not only describes in words how to do something but actually lets the user do it through a few mouse clicks.

Example: Domain transfer from one registrar (say, Yahoo!) to another (say, GoDaddy). This task involves several steps, including back-and-forth visits to the websites of Yahoo!, GoDaddy, Hosting Provider (say, HostGator), registrant's email account (say, Yahoo!).

Benefits:

To the user of SMC: Error-free performance of repetitive tasks.

To the owner of SMC: Advertising revenue for (say) Google AdSense ads placed on SCW.

Questions:

1. How does the user keep "SMC on" while visiting the basic websites required for performing a given task? By doing nothing (ideal!)? By keeping SMC open in a browser window (not too bad a method)? By downloading and installing an SMC browser plugin / toolbar (not an ideal method)? by downloading an SMC software and installing on local PC (not ideal method at all)?

Competition as at Aug 2012:

1. sqworl.com. Does not record URLs. User has to manually enter the various URLs. Does not permit any form of annotation, so user has to keep referring to another source to figure out what to do after arriving at the URL-invoked webpage.

2. Serena.com. Business Mashups. Requires a downloadable software to be installed on the local PC. Also appears complex and positioned for more complex business processes, rather than for simple mashups.

3. IFTTT. Connects multiple industry-standard web services via "recipes" e.g. If I post an update on my Facebook page, post the same update on my Twitter timeline.