This link has been bookmarked by 17 people . It was first bookmarked on 04 Mar 2008, by amy monaghan.
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12 Mar 09
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10 Feb 09
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18 Apr 08
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04 Apr 08
ted ingrahamThere’s something quite brilliant, from a corporate–consumer–marketing perspective, about the term Web 2.0. Its very name – Web 2.0 – embodies new–and–improvedness: a new version, a new stage, a new paradigm, a new Web, a new way of living.
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03 Apr 08
mark pickettsInteresting article and worth reading about web 2.0. A refreshing critical view of web 2.0 and the bandwagon
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This is the writeable generation, a generation of young people who think of media as something they read and something they write – often simultaneously. This is a generation of content creators, a generation of young people who with the help of Web 2.0 tools know how to create content, how to share content, and how to converse about content. This is the generation for whom broadcast media – and its silent, obedient audiences – is rapidly fading and for whom conversations make more sense than lectures. This is a new generation with new writeable behaviors and it’s hard not to be hopeful about that
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This is the writeable generation, a generation of young people who think of media as something they read and something they write – often simultaneously. This is a generation of content creators, a generation of young people who with the help of Web 2.0 tools know how to create content, how to share content, and how to converse about content. This is the generation for whom broadcast media – and its silent, obedient audiences – is rapidly fading and for whom conversations make more sense than lectures. This is a new generation with new writeable behaviors and it’s hard not to be hopeful about that.
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02 Apr 08
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This is the writeable generation, a generation of young people who think of media as something they read and something they write – often simultaneously. This is a generation of content creators, a generation of young people who with the help of Web 2.0 tools know how to create content, how to share content, and how to converse about content. This is the generation for whom broadcast media – and its silent, obedient audiences – is rapidly fading and for whom conversations make more sense than lectures. This is a new generation with new writeable behaviors and it’s hard not to be hopeful about that.
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Tomaz Lasica reflection with a brief historical on Web2.0 and some salient points on commercial aspects of W2.0 (Don’t believe corporate hype. Corporations exist to make profits, not public goods. Usually, when they say “community” they mean “commerce,” an
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17 Mar 08
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12 Mar 08
Joseph KrausInteresting article in First Monday.
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04 Mar 08
Page Comments
There’s something quite brilliant, from a
corporate–consumer–marketing perspective, about the term Web 2.0. Its
very name – Web 2.0 – embodies new–and–improvedness: a new version, a
new stage, a new paradigm, a new Web, a new way of living. Attached to
any old noun, 2.0 makes the noun new: Library 2.0, Scholarship 2.0,
Culture 2.0, Politics 2.0.
Hyping new media is nothing new, but lately the marketing meme
machine behind Web 2.0 appears to be set on overdrive. It was within
such an atmosphere that many contributors to this special issue of First Monday
met in Vancouver, Canada to share our critical perspectives of Web 2.0.
The meeting was the annual conference of the Association of Internet
Researchers (AoIR) and the title of our panel was “Critical
Perspectives on Web 2.0: Surveillance, Discipline, Labor.” I was asked
then and now to offer an afterward. Then and now I organize my thoughts
around history, hype, and hope.
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