Find It. Track It. Share It. - Found something cool and want to follow it? Let Trackle do the work for you. Get automatic alerts with up-to-date info from sources you can trust. Track Crime, Home prices, Travel deals, Sports scores, Local Events, Jobs, your own Name and a lot more.
Trackle, a personalized web and RSS feed tracker TechCrunch wrote about earlier this year, is making itself a whole lot more social today with the launch of a real-time search engine on the site that lets you follow other people’s Trackles. Trackle.com’s free web service provides personalized RSS feeds for data such as the latest crime in a user’s neighborhood, fluctuating airline ticket prices, how much a user’s house value is down this week, updated job listings, sports scores and more.
About Trackle: Trackle is a new service that tracks all of your personalized information on the Web, all in one place. Offering the industry’s most comprehensive index of popularly tracked categories, Trackle keeps tabs on everything in your life, from local, to social to shopping. The service is built with advanced algorithms that provide a layer of intelligence to the tracking process - ensuring timely and relevant results. Users get automatically notified over the Web, email or SMS whenever Trackle finds a match. Trackle is built on top of a robust tracking platform, designed to offer a wide range of tracking services. The service is completely free, secure and privacy compliant.
Trackle is a privately held company based in Sunnyvale, CA, and has been funded by NEA (New Enterprise Associates) and angel investors.

From ReadWriteWeb: In the past, we’ve looked at alerts service like Yotify and Alerts.com, and they each do a decent enough job of being your personalized web scout. But recently, we were introduced to Trackle, a new service in the same genre. At first, we’ll admit, our reaction to hearing there was yet another alerts service available was one of apathy - there are already plenty out there, including the old standby, Google Alerts - who needs another? As it turn out, Trackle was the one we were waiting for. After playing around with Trackle, it was clear that this one could be a winner.
Like Yotify and Alerts.com, Trackle is your personalized web scout. Instead of having to constantly revisit web sites and services for the news you want to follow, you can use Trackle to be updated automatically when there’s a change in whatever it is you’re following. Want to track prices of a new Canon camera? Want to know when your favorite band has a new album on iTunes? Want to get the latest sports scores? Trackle does all that and then some.

For the Facebook obsessed, a Trackle alert can notify you when someone sends you a message, adds you as a friend, posts to your wall, etc. Of course you can see all these things on Facebook, but with Trackle, you can set up an SMS alert for this. That’s especially useful for students and employees who have to deal with Facebook being blocked by their I.T. department or for anyone who doesn’t spend their entire day in front of a computer.
Bloggers and other information hounds will appreciate Trackle’s scouring agents that let you track anything on the web, including blogs, RSS feeds, news, and more. Although other sites allow this too, what’s different about the way Trackle works is that you can set up one alert but associate it with different keywords. So, for example, you could fill in “TweetDeck,” “Twhirl,” and “AlertThingy” as keywords you wanted to track across blogs, but save the whole alert as “Tracking Twitter Applications” instead of having each keyword as its own alert.
