wsprivatebeta EDW's Library tagged → View Popular
The Online Storage Gang
-

-
The online storage market is evolving fast. In the past, users could expect no more than a simple service where files could be slowly uploaded and downloaded from a mapped virtual drive or a simple web based interface. Little competition (and the bursting of the bubble) led to very high prices for a minimal amount of storage.
- 1 more annotations...
The State of Online Feed Readers
-

-
Syndication is undoubtedly the heartbeat of the web 2.0 movement. A feed reader, the most common solution to consuming synidcated content, saves the user time by monitoring countless sites and sources and providing near real-time updates to one location.
Companies I’d like to Profile (but don’t exist)
-
1. Better and Cheaper Online File Storage
-
2. Blog/website Email Lists
- 7 more annotations...
Web 2.0 Companies I Couldn’t Live Without
-
There have been numerous 2005 “best of” and 2006 “predictions” posts over the last few weeks as the year comes to an end. I’m not going to write one of those. Giving out “best of” awards seems presumptuous to me, given that I’ve been blogging all of six months. And while predictions are fun, they aren’t all that useful in the end.
Web 2.0: The 24 Minute Documentary
-
A couple of weeks ago Michael Arrington got together with a number of startup CEOs and executives to video a discussion about Web 2.0. Participating in the discussion were Aaron Cohen (Bolt
), Scott Milener and Steven Lurie (Browster
), Keith Teare (edgeio
), Steven Marder (Eurekster
), Joe Kraus (JotSpot
), Jeremy Verba (Piczo
), Auren Hoffman (Rapleaf
), Chris Alden (Rojo
), Gautam Godhwani (Simply Hired
), Jonathan Abrams (Socializr
), David Sifry (Technorati
), Matt Sanchez (Video Egg
) and Michael Tanne (Wink
).
Swivel Aims To Become The Internet Archive For Data
-

-
Swivel
Co-founders Dmitry Dimov and Brian Mulloy start off by describing their company as “YouTube for Data.”
2007: Web 2.0 Companies I Couldn’t Live Without
-
A year ago I wrote a post called “Web 2.0 Companies I Couldn’t Live Without” and listed thirteen startups whose products made a real impact in my life. Those were the products that I loved, and used every day. I enjoyed sorting through the hundreds of startups that we had written about, and picking just a handful that made a real impact on my life. It was so much fun, actually, that I’m updating the list this year.
Selected Tags
Related Tags
Sponsored Links
Ads by Google
Diigo is about better ways to research, share and collaborate on information. Learn more »
Join Diigo

