What Is Web 2.0? Short Version documentary
Uploaded by: Alspot
Video Description:
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).
The topics discussed included:
What is Web 2.0?
Are we in a bubble?
What are the business models that will work on the web today?
What is the role of publishers in a user generated world?
How important and how big is the early adopter crowd?
Tags for this video: 2.0 ceo sillicon tech valley Web
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To be saved paste this to 5 other videos. THIS IS TRUE
...such as Baby Boomer, Generation X, Generation Y & The Millennia (Internet) Generation the way sectors of people are classified on the time line.
So, we have web 1.0 trends, web 2.0 trends and then so on...
The question is: Is this just a passing phase or a fad in a 'bubble' that will be topped by a web 3.0 eventually...
Or will what is defined as web 2.0 fads sustain as the Way of the internet indefinitely?
...I think technology and the consumer market will embrace and help solidify what is defined as 'web 2.0'...
...but I do think that the dot com'ers of the web 1.0 trends were over zealous with what they thought was suppose to happen to work, bring acceptance, and/or success.
~tavis7g~
but what may be coined as web 3.0 (as technology and user participation increase) will gradually emerge
with traces of 2.0 still existing just as there are companies that survived the web 1.0 upset...
~tavis7g~
pls help
This documentary is trying to paint it as an "economical" issue. The truth is much more simple.
In web 1.0 there was a lot of hype and investment and money flowing around websites - in particular online retail. The actual finance and returns of various web 1.0 companies turned out to be much worse than expected.
This disparity between value, and perceived value, is a bubble - which "burst" in '99 when company results became public and analysts noted the low returns and shares dropped.
People selling the ideas of others are crooked thieves.
Web 2.0 does not exist.