donderdag 20 december 2007
Web 2.0 summit 2007
Where are the greatest opportunities, and the greatest risks? At the Web's edge—the places where the Web is just beginning to take root: the industries, geographies, and applications that have yet to be conquered by the Web's wide reach.
For the past three years, the Web 2.0 Summit has explored ideas which have already begun to slip into the mainstream. This year, we'll highlight news from unusual suspects—the enthusiasts and dreamers touching the edges of spaces not yet conquered by the Web, as well as established players who are looking to expand into new and previously unimaginable realms.
How is the Web infiltrating new beachheads in areas we never thought it could—or would? What are the majors doing at the edge, at the loony "twenty percent time" at Google, in the labs at MSN, IBM, etc., that might inform entirely new applications, opportunities, even threats? What are the edge startups promising to redefine the center? What are the things we wish or know the Web can do, but so far, is failing us? What are the edges in terms of policy, politics, and morality? Bericht publiceren
Learn More about Web 2.0 Summit...
maandag 17 december 2007
Business aspects of social software and collaboration
Web 2.0, social software, blogs, wikis, instant messaging. New tools and new ways of approaching communication and coordination among customers, suppliers, and partners. Software to help companies share information has been around for more than 15 years. How do the new tools intersect with existing ones? How can you best leverage new technologies for faster time-to-market and increased customer satisfaction? What is the role of security in an increasingly open supply-chain communication system? We'll examine these questions and talk about current and future technologies and trends.
SlideShare Link
From: edbrill, 1 year ago
zaterdag 15 december 2007
Web 2.0 Video Search Engine Sproose
source: http://www.dutchcowboys.nl/socialmedia/12155
dinsdag 11 december 2007
Power of Google
The Social Control van Google komt heel goed naar voren in dit filmpje.
Does Google really worry about our privacy?
Tim O'Reilly: Graphing Social Patterns Conference Keynote
I'm at the Graphing Social Patterns conference in San Jose again today. I'm covering the event for Read/WriteWeb and doing a few interviews for Read/WriteTalk. This morning, Tim O'Reilly gave the 'developer keynote' for the conference. The presentation hit on three basic themes:
- Background on O'Reilly Media
- A Web 2.0 Refresher
- What I Want from the Social Graph?
Tim started off by talking about the idea that "new technologies first exploited by hackers, then entrepreneurs, then platform players." A few good examples were the move toward adoption of universal WiFi access or webservices from network wifi groups and screen scraping hacks respectively.
Facebook Report
Tim referenced the report on Facebook that O'Reilly Radar just released. You can see our coverage here. Basically, O'Reilly has been aggregating usage data from Facebook for a few months. They also normalized the data after Facebook shifted from reporting number of installs to true engagement. The most important finding from the report is that 87% of usage goes to 2% of applications. In other words, the Long Tail is not in effect for Facebook applications yet. Tim went on to segment this finding across different categories of applications, but it was consistent across all categories.
A Web 2.0 Refresher
Tim started by joking about the overuse of the term 'Web 2.0'. However, he felt it was important to offer a refresher on web 2.0 in light of the discussion on the "social graph" (see our explanation of the term here). He said that really web 2.0 is ultimately about "systems that harness the network effect to get better the more people who use them." In other words, it is about building 'collective databases.' He cited a paper by Dan Brickland entitled 'The Cornucopia of the Commons: How to get volunteer labor' (Dan was creator of the first spreadsheet Visicalc), which cites 3 Ways to Build Collective Databases:
- Organized Manual: Pay people (ex: Yahoo! Directory)
- Volunteer Manual: Get volunteers (ex: Wikipedia)
- Organized Mechanical: Architect systems to get smarter automatically (ex: P2P)
Harnessing Collective Intelligence
Tim commented that "every true web 2.0 company is building a database whose value grows in proposition to the number of participants -- that is, a network-effect-driven data lock-in - with accelerating returns to winners." Tim repeated his oft-quoted claim that the Google Page Rank algorithm was the first Web 2.0 application. He also pointed to some recent examples, like Wesabe and Mint
doing this in the Personal Financial Services space.
Facebook Can Be Doing Better
Next Tim transitioned to how he felt FaceBook could do better leveraging collective intelligence. He focused on the confirmation questions that Facebook requests, while that data is already available on the web. For example, he talked about friend requests from employees when data on the web already confirms they are employees. Also, O'Reilly Authors have requested to friend him and Amazon already shows they are friends. The fact this data exists is something we've explored reguarly with our coverage of the Semantic Web.
Questions you should be asking?
Tim wrapped up this section of his presentation by reviewing five questions that everyone should be asking:
- Am I doing everything I can to build applications that learn from your users?
- Does my application get better with more users, or just more busy and more crowded?
- If "Data is the Intel Inside" of Web 2.0, what data do I own?
- What user-facing services can I build against it?
- Does my platform give me and my users control, or take it away from us? (note: I personally spoke about this at the Always On Conference)
Conclusion -- What I Want from the Social Graph
Finally, Tim discussed what he believes we really want from social graph data:
- I want it to reflect my REAL social relationships (mine my phone and email)
- I want it to help me manage those contacts (how to reach them, updated status)
- I want to manage groups of people
- I want it to recognize asymmetry in relationships
- I want fine grained control over what I see and what I ignore. For example, he talked about wanting to see his daughter's flickr photos but not other updates.
- I want to discover interesting people and express the actual relationship.
What do you think? Is this what you want from your social graph data?
LinkedIn vernieuwd
Met een compleet vernieuwde site en een op maat gesneden nieuwsdienst wil Linkedin een Mekka voor professioneel netwerken op poten zetten, zo is te lezen op de site van ZDNet. Verder zijn ook applicaties van buitenaf welkom, maar de Facebook-achtige speeltjes houden ze liever buiten de deur.
LinkedIn, dat al meer dan 17 miljoen gebruikers telt, stelt de vernieuwde homepage vooralsnog alleen in bètaformaat beschikbaar.... lees meer bij dutchcowboys.nl
