Web 2.0 version 49

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November 16th, 2007

Once again, it’s time for an update to my Web 2.0 presentation. There’s nothing really earthshaking here, but the bits and pieces of new material help round out the overall picture of what’s happening in the Web 2.0 world.

As usual, the new version is available to you in several different formats. If you’d like to see it as an (ugly Betty) Google Docs presentation, click here. And if you’d like to make additions, corrections, improvements, or enhancements to this collaborative document, please sent me an email (”ed” at “yourdon”-dot-com); there about about a dozen registered collaborators now, though it doesn’t look like anyone has been brave enough to edit the material yet.

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If you’d like to download the 22.7-megabyte PDF file, which looks much prettier and now has more than 500 embedded URL links to various Web 2.0 books, conferences, articles, blog postings, and other resources, click here.

The same PDF document can be viewed and downloaded from my page on Slideshare; to access that, click here.

Here are the additions, changes, corrections, and refinements that I’ve added to this version:

  1. On page 20 of the material, I corrected a reference to the spring 2007 Virginia Tech massacre. I had incorrectly listed it as “UVA” (i.e., University of Virginia, which ain’t the same school at VA Tech; sorry about that). To compound the problem, the link to Wikipedia was broken. Oh, well …
  2. On page 74, I added a sub-bullet noting that Microsoft Windows Live was released from beta on November 6th. Civilization didn’t grind to a halt, but I assume it was significant news to at least a few people …
  3. On page 38, I provided an example of the “long tail” recommendation of making at least a portion of one’s product line free — the example being the proposal (in Europe) to provide “free cars.” Sounds crazy until you contemplate this intriguing factoid: he cost of the average used car in Europe is now cheaper than the cost of gasoline to drive it for a year.
  4. On page 19, I added a sub-bullet, noting Brady Forest’s blog on the “coincidence feed” feature of Dopplr, announced 11/7/07, and the related concept of REDUCING amount of information in a feed
  5. On page 51, I added a sub-bullet point, noting that a “pilot project” to experiment with external wikis doesn’t have to be a massive, high-risk effort. The example is an “emergent collaboration” effort involving SAP, Oracle, and others to develop a Twitter-based tool called “eventtrack.”
  6. On page 85, I added a bullet point with a blog summarizing IBM’s experience with social software, and its impact on knowledge management.
  7. On page 33, I added the wonderful mashup example of Google Maps’ “interactive transit map” for New York City. But I also deleted the bullet point listing the Google Maps mashup showing the location of the Southern California wildfires in Oct 2007 … because they’re all gone now, and there’s nothing to show.
  8. On page 116, I added a sub-bullet point entitled “Web 2.0 Manages to Sober Up
  9. On page 62, I added a bullet point listing Hungry Machine as an example of Ruby on Rails … actually, it’s not an example of a product per se, but rather the name of a company that develops Ruby-on-Rails apps for Facebook.
  10. On page 98, I added a bullet point listing a Nov 11, 2007 blog posting describing the recent activity by Nigerian scammers to use Facebook for phishing attacks. The fact that anyone falls for this stuff is mind-boggling, but even if their success rate is only one in a million, Facebook (and Myspace) are big enough now that a few scammers might be able to make a decent living…
  11. On page 47, I added some details to indicate that as of Nov 13, 2007, Flickr acquired its 2-billionth photograph. That’s a lot of pictures!
  12. On page 114, I added a bullet point with a link to a wonderful Internet love song, entitled “ROFLOMGLOLROFLMFAO

That’s it for now … I’ll start collecting items for version 50, which will probably take place sometime next week, in between bouts of Thanksgiving turkey-gobbling …

1 response about “Web 2.0 version 49”

  1. Grzegorz Scislo said:

    I was reading Web2.0V49.pdf (121 pages) and I’ve found a broken link. On the page 35 there is link “Pareto’s Princile” to Wikipedia – unfortunately it is broken.

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