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This weekend Michael Arrington (Techcrunch) pointed to the failure of Fold.com, one of the web 2.0 websites which aims to provide a personalized AJAX home page similar to Googles Personalized home page, Netvibes and others... today the domain name fold.com is for sale ! Michael was worried in January where there was a new AJAX Homepage launched almost every two weeks. While some companies succeed
More than 5,000 companies count on our digital courses and more to guide their teams through the tools and technologies that drive business outcomes. We can help yours too. New AI policy for O’Reilly authors and talent O’Reilly president Laura Baldwin shares the company’s ethical approach to leveraging GenAI tools and ensuring O’Reilly experts are compensated for their work. See it now It’s time t
We all know the plushy, rounded, pastel-coloured faces of Web 2.0. MySpace. Digg. Flickr. The achingly trendy Silicon Valley startups that are selling for millions to big media conglomerates and making their founders into stars. Tom Anderson. Kevin Rose. These are the pinups of the Web 2.0 generation - but little do they know the monster they've created. My firm belief is that the net effect of t
At the end of last year, I posted on the relevance of Web 2.0 technologies for the enterprise. Over the past couple of months, this theme has received a lot more attention, prompted in large part by the writings of Dion Hinchcliffe and by the discussions at two industry gatherings – SPARK/MIX 06 and Software 2006. (For those who have not been following my blog, I attempted my own definition of Web
Newsweek’s April 3 cover story finally gives checkout-stand placement to “Web 2.0,” everyone’s favorite new tech buzzword. You’ve probably seen the phrase before—in the blogosphere, in the New York Times’ coverage of dot-com executives seeking a second act, or in Wired’sprofile of Tim O’Reilly, the tech publisher who envisions a Net that entices us to contribute as well as consume. But like its pr
Give your service away for free, possibly ad supported but maybe not, acquire a lot of customers very efficiently through word of mouth, referral networks, organic search marketing, etc, then offer premium priced value added services or an enhanced version of your service to your customer base. Examples: Skype – basic in network voice is free, out of network calling is a premium service Flickr – a
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