Web Two > this happens when your web 2.0 site becomes increasingly popular...
[the r e a l digital revolution] about two hours ago i was searching for "paris riots" at technorati: and then i wanted to bookmark "digg" at my del.icio.us account: but...
Some related posts from Technorati and Google.
[>> reemer.com] Web 2.0: Prosumer Media Conversation: One possible strategy is we don't monetize, we use Bloglines to drive users to other areas of uncle Barry's empire. If we don't monetize, our message is that we don't exist without our content providers.
[Laughing Squid] Web 1.0 Summit: This event is the brainchild of Chris Heuer, who was initially inspired by a conversation with Ted Rheingold at Webzine 2005 and Ted’s subsequent blog post on the Internet 37 Conference, his take on the Web 2.0 Conference. Web 2.1 takes further inpiration from the success of the numerous unconferences that have been happening lately: A BrainJam is a new type of event (inspired by BarCamp, Gnomedex, TechCrunch BBQ and WebZine 2005) that brings people from diverse backgrounds together to focus on a few key questions, sharing knowledge, collaborating, solving problems, demonstrating cool tools, networking and hopefully making the world a better place while having fun.
[Nick.typepad.com] Nick Bradbury: Web 2.01 Release Notes: Ajax is cool, but Web 2.0 isn't about the latest trend in technology - it's about "harnessing collective intelligence," involving customers in product development and taking advantage of the web's distributed nature. If you can do that with Flash or any other "untrendy" technology, that's great (unless they're geeks, your customers won't care as long as it works).
[Jeremy.zawodny.com] Jeremy Zawodny's blog: Web2 Archives: This is exactly the kind of stuff that can happen in the Web 2.0 world when vendors think of themselves as not just service providers or hardware vendors. If you think of yourself as platform for developers and invest a bit of support getting them started, a ton of interesting stuff seems to sprout.
[Btbytes.com] btbytes.com: web2.0: This (Asynchronous message passing between the View and the Model layers) doesnt work for standard multi-tier web applications, because the view is generated as HTML and sent to the client, where it sits dumbly until the end user does something to initiate an action. So the model cant asynchronously tell the view that something interesting happened, because the view isnt listening.
[Web2.wsj2.com] The Vicarious Web 2.0 Conference: Day One (web2.wsj2.com): at Read/Write Web has posted some excellent event streams from the conference as is typical of his excellent Web 2.0 coverage in general. Be certain to read his two posts from the conference today: Web 2.0 Conference: Yahoo - What's New in the Search Ecosystem: Users, Publishers, and Advertisers, Web 2.0 Conference: Ad Models: A New Approach to Marketing?.
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, Web2, Web Two