Web 2.0 presentation, Version 42

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October 15th, 2007

It’s time for some more updates to my Web 2.0 presentation. As usual, you can view this as a Google Docs presentation (the “ugly Betty” version), by clicking here; or you can download the sexy (Brad Pitt, or Angelina Jolie, take your pick) 18.2-megabyte PDF version, by clicking here.

Here are the changes/additions that I’ve made to the material:

  1. On page 19: I added a link to a smorgasborg of YouTube political videos
  2. On page 103: I added links to two YouTube versions of futuristic trends: “Did You Know?” and “Did You Know 2.0?
  3. On Page 15: I added a link to David Weinberger’s post about twittering, in which he introduces a variation on Linda Stone’s “continuous partial attention” concept, by describing Twitter as a form of “continuous partial friendship.”
  4. On page 108: I added a link to the “call for participation” for the May 12-14, 2008 “Where 2.0″ conference in Burlingame, CA.
  5. On page 39: I added a link to an Oct 11, 2007 TechCrunch article entitled “Wikipedia Hits Mid Life Slowdown
  6. On page 39: I added a link to a Wikipedia page showing graphs allegedly documenting the slowdown in editing activity on Wikipedia in recent months.
  7. On page 60: I added a link to the page describing Twitter’s API documentation
  8. On page 60: I also added a link to the page describing the API for Facebook
  9. On page 81: I added a link to a $279 Forrester case study about Northwestern Mutual’s “journey” to Enterprise Web 2.0 ; I also provided a link to a Yahoo Finance summary of the report.
  10. On page 81: I also added a link to a page in the “Enterprise Web 2.0″ site that has a collection of (two) case studies on introducing Web 2.0 in a corporate environment.
  11. On page 81: I also added a link to a PDF article, describing a case study of “SAP and Web 2.0″, describing SAP’s introduction of social networking — including wikis.

That’s all I’ve got for now; I expect to add some additional material later this week, based on news, products, information, and presentations at the Web 2.0 Summit conference in San Francisco. At this point, though, this presentation document has approximately 454 URL’s to various websites, articles, blogs, books, and other forms of information about Web 2.0 — which should be enough to keep you occupied for quite a while …

1 response about “Web 2.0 presentation, Version 42”

  1. Alexander Hayes said:

    Your right about the ‘ugly betty’ bit. Super Susan’s use the Slideshare alternative.

    Good presentation.

    Bad Betty.

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