Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog
Go to: Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog
2 shares
Endless Conversation: The Unfolding Saga of Blogs, Twitter, Friendfeed, and Social Sites
via Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog by Dion Hinchcliffe on May 13, 2008
... to have. One reason is that blogging takes time and takes some skill, both in writing and using blogging tools effectively. Another is the rise of online social networking sites like MySpace, Facebook, and Hi5, which add a personal dimension to online interaction that many find more rewarding and relevant for them.But just like blogs made two-way conversations on the Web relatively chea...
[ Back to top]
1 shares
Windows Live and Kicking
via Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog by Dion Hinchcliffe on August 20, 2006
Editor's Note: Beginning with this post, we are pleased to announce the inaugration of our first contributing editor, Mark Scrimshire. Mark has been doing a terrific job covering all things Web 2.0 on his own highly informative blog and I've invited him to begin coverage here as well. This will help our readers get even more of the latest information on the next generation of the Web,...
Shared by: Evgeni L.,
[ Back to top]
1 shares
Thinking Beyond Web 2.0: Social Computing and the Internet Singularity
via Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog by Dion Hinchcliffe on August 24, 2006
... and tighter coupling between the online and offline worlds will accelerate science, business, society, and self-actualization." - Dr. Gary FlakeOf course, the effects of the next generation of the Web are just beginning to be felt and the world of software in 10 years will likely be somewhat recognizable by us, but only barely. I've been focusing recently on how we're beginning to see...
Shared by: Evgeni L.,
[ Back to top]
1 shares
FOO Camp 06: Plenty of Smart People, Self-Organization, and Web 2.0 Goodness
via Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog by Dion Hinchcliffe on August 30, 2006
... Camp 06 - 1st DayThe day's sessions began at 10:00AM and I headed off to Timeless Code, a great session put together by D. Richard Hipp, creator of SQLite, and Greg Stein, chairman of the Apache Foundation. Attended by David Heinemeier Hansson, Martin Fowler, and many others, the session explored how to make code last the test of time. We explored the fact that some organizations a...
Shared by: Evgeni L.,
[ Back to top]
1 shares
All We Got Was Web 1.0, When Tim Berners-Lee Actually Gave Us Web 2.0
via Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog by Dion Hinchcliffe on September 03, 2006
... nevertheless remains the underlying reason for coining it: clearly apparent, widespread new trends in the way the Web is being used. Of all the analysis I've read of the Berners-Lee podcast (and there's a bunch, read Dana Gardner, John Furrier, even Dead 2.0), it's Jeremy Geelan who has captured the real insight here with his post, "The Perfect Storm of Web 2.0 Disruption", where he ...
Shared by: Evgeni L.,
[ Back to top]
1 shares
Social Aggregators Emerge To Manage Digital Lifestyles
via Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog by Dion Hinchcliffe on March 18, 2008
... entries in this space mid-last year and so it's interesting to see how quickly Friendfeed has risen among the various players. Ease of use, visual elegance, and breadth of service tracking appears to be the competitive discriminator here, like it is with so many things in the Web 2.0 world. This morning Duncan Riley at TechCrunch covered the best ways to track Web 2.0 and he omitted s...
Shared by: Chris,
[ Back to top]
1 shares
The Growth of Open APIs: More Evidence That Web Services Drive Network Effects
via Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog by Dion Hinchcliffe on May 20, 2008
A few days ago Amazon Web Services evangelist Jeff Barr released a graph (Figure 1below) showing the growth of the bandwidth used by their global Web sites versus the bandwidth being consumed by their Web services. It's eye opening because of the dramatic growth in bandwidth being consumed by their customers via their various non-visual, data-only Web services. The adoption of...
Shared by: Haripako,
[ Back to top]