Web 2.0 Summit Conference News


Web 2.0 Summit assembles a select group of thought leaders and innovators to explore the services, applications, businesses, and models that are reshaping the Internet.


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Charities That Embody Web Squared Theme to Receive Donations of $1000 from Tickets Sold

SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 6 - Kiva, The Girl Effect and charity: water, have been selected today as Web 2.0 Summit’s philanthropic partners. O’Reilly Media and TechWeb, co-producers of the event, are pleased to announce their alliance with these three deserving organizations that embody the theme of Web Squared. In a spirit of charitable support within the Web 2.0 Summit community, Web 2.0 Summit registrants are encouraged to support one of the Web Squared charities by registering with a charity code that donates $1000 to that organization. For more information, visit: http://www.web2summit.com/.

Web Squared, this year’s event theme, is inspired by a new direction for the Web, one that opens new business opportunities and new possibilities. Charity suggestions were solicited and received from over 70 members of the Summit community, using social media platforms like the Web 2.0 Summit Facebook page and Twitter. The three charity organizations selected from the submissions demonstrate the event’s Web Squared theme by putting inspiration into action and creating change on a broad scale. These worthwhile organizations include:

* Kiva: the world’s first person-to-person micro-lending website, empowering individuals to lend directly to unique entrepreneurs around the globe for the sake of alleviating poverty.
* The Girl Effect: rooted in the work of the Nike Foundation, which has been joined by the NoVo Foundation in a shared mission to create opportunities for girls, and for the world. Adolescent girls are uniquely capable of raising the standard of living in the developing world.
* charity: water: a nonprofit organization bringing clean and safe drinking water to people in developing nations, using 100% of public donations to fund water projects.

Read the full press release.

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San Francisco, CA, August 31, 2009 - O’Reilly Media and TechWeb, co-producers of the Web 2.0 Summit, are asking for help in choosing three charities that embody the spirit of Web Squared to partner with for this year’s Web 2.0 Summit, happening October 20-22, 2009, at the Westin Market Street in San Francisco. Proposals are being accepted at the Web 2.0 Summit Facebook page at bit.ly/W2Charities. Deadline for submissions is September 7. Web Squared, this year’s event theme and the title of the white paper by Tim O’Reilly and John Battelle, addresses the evolution of the Web from the emergence of Web 2.0 to its current and future state. The authors see a new direction for the Web, one that opens new business opportunities and new possibilities for impacting the world’s most pressing problems. Web 2.0 Summit is therefore looking for charity organizations that are innovative and affecting change on a broad scale as partners for this year’s big event.

“The inspiration behind Web Squared made it clear that we must embrace not only disruptive change, but also a ‘pay it forward’ attitude if we’re going to create change on a global scale,” said John Battelle, Web 2.0 Summit program chair. “We’re looking forward to partnering with organizations that are embracing change and putting inspiration into action.”

Read the full press release.

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White Paper Previews Key Concepts for Web 2.0 Summit’s Sixth Anniversary

SAN FRANCISCO, June 23 - O’Reilly Media and TechWeb, co-producers of the Web 2.0 Summit, announce the release of a white paper and an accompanying webcast on Web Squared, which will define the next phase of the Web. The free webcast is scheduled for Thursday, June 25th at 10:00 am PDT, and the white paper will be available on the conference web site shortly thereafter. To sign up for the webcast visit http://www.web2summit.com/web2009/public/content/webcast.

The Web Squared white paper, by Tim O’Reilly and John Battelle, addresses the evolution of the Web from the emergence of Web 2.0 to its current and future state, illustrating how the principles articulated in 2004 have evolved the Web so dramatically that they fundamentally changed the game. The authors see a new direction for the Web, one that opens incredible new business opportunities, and enormous new possibilities for impacting the world’s most pressing problems.

Read the full press release.

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Invitation Requests Now Being Accepted

SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 18 — Web 2.0 Summit, which took place Nov. 5-7, 2008, focused on how the Web can help solve the world’s most pressing problems, creating interest that sold the event out for the fifth consecutive year. The theme “Web Meets World” explored how the Web is changing the world — touching healthcare, finance, global warming — while simultaneously engaging those outside the industry to look to the Web for solutions. Scores of speakers challenged the current economic malaise with their revolutionary ideas for Web 2.0 innovation, business growth and problem solving. Due to the positive response, conference organizers have begun accepting invitation requests for Web 2.0 Summit 2009 taking place in San Francisco October 20-22.

The invitation-only Web 2.0 Summit featured a lineup of notable speakers including former U.S. Vice President and Nobel Laureate Al Gore, Elon Musk of Tesla Motors, Arianna Huffington of the Huffington Post, Shai Agassi with a Better Place and Lance Armstrong. Program chair John Battelle, chairman and publisher of Federated Media, and co-moderator Tim O’Reilly, founder and CEO of O’Reilly Media, presented a program in which more than 70 extraordinary thinkers and leaders in healthcare, genetics, energy, the environment, finance, global business, and politics spoke. An intimate setting capped at 1,000 attendees gave everyone a chance to participate and engage with these thought leaders through incisive plenary sessions, cut-through-the-hype conversations, rapid-fire “high order bits,” “show me” presentations and in-depth workshops. All keynote videos and presentations from the conference can be found at http://www.web2summit.com.

Read the full press release.

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Closing the summit is former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, who famously went from losing the 2000 presidential election to winning an Academy Award for the global-warming documentary An Inconvenient Truth and a Nobel Peace Prize. He came to the Web 2.0 Summit to talk, at least in part, about Current Media, a Web video company he co-founded that partnered up with Web darlings Digg and Twitter to cover the election last week.

Read more.

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Riding the tailwind of an historical election, Web 2.0 Summit set out to establish the Web as part of that history thanks to a dynamic, provocative panel that included Arianna Huffington (Huffington Post), Gavin Newsom (yeah, that one: Mayor of San Francisco), and Joe Trippi (political consultant).

Read more.

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Dr. Larry Brilliant, today’s first speaker at the annual Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco, has marked a turn in the tone of this seminal conference. Brilliant, a long-time philanthropist who has spent his life helping fight disease around the world, is the executive director of Google.Org, the search giant’s attempt to make a difference in the world, and he opened the main stage conversations and “high order bits,” with John Battelle and Tim O’Reilly.

Read more.

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As part of the continuing theme of do-good at Web 2.0 Summit 2008, Lance Armstrong, unretired cyclist-cum-philanthropist extraordinaire took the main stage as the dinner keynote. This was the only appearance he agreed to honor after announcing his cycling comeback and his visit was much anticipated. It didn’t disappoint.

Read more.

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Sold-out Event Explores the Intersection of World and Web

SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 3 — TechWeb and O’Reilly Media, Inc.,
co-producers of the annual Web 2.0 Summit (http://www.web2summit.com),
announced that this exclusive event has sold out for the fifth consecutive
year. The event’s program will look at how the technologies, values and
cultures of the Web can address the world’s most pressing limits. Web 2.0
Summit, which takes place November 5-7 at the Palace Hotel in San
Francisco, will bring the great minds of our time together this week as
leaders of the Internet economy turn their attention to the solutions the
Web can provide to the world at large.

With complex systems seemingly reaching their limits, it has become
apparent that the Web provides an avenue for new ways to address these
limits. The Web’s greatest inventions are, at their core, social movements.
Reflecting that growth, the program has expanded to include leaders in the
fields of healthcare, genetics, finance, global business and politics.

Read the full press release.

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Priceless Items Donated in Support of Change

SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 29 - TechWeb and O’Reilly Media,
Inc., co-producers of the annual Web 2.0 Summit, announce the benefiting
organizations and lots of the “Web Meets World” auction, which will take
place on the evening of Wednesday, November 5 at the Palace Hotel in San
Francisco. The proceeds from the event will benefit three charity
organizations — the Lance Armstrong Foundation, WITNESS and Green For All.
For more information visit: http://www.web2summit.com.

Sponsored by Microsoft, the “Web Meets World” auction is inspired by
the theme of looking beyond immediate needs and into a space that
transforms limits into opportunities. The selected auction beneficiaries do
just that. The Lance Armstrong Foundation, LIVESTRONG.org, unites people in
the fight against cancer, providing useful information and tools people
with cancer need to live life on their own terms. WITNESS uses video and
online technologies to open the eyes of the world to human rights
violations, empowering people to transform personal stories of abuse into
powerful tools for justice and policy change. The third organization, Green
For All, promotes green-collar jobs and opportunities for disadvantaged
communities working to build an inclusive, green economy strong enough to
resolve the ecological crisis and lift people out of poverty.

Read the fulll press release.

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From John Battelle’s Blog, Chair of Web 2.0 Summit:

As you all know by now, I’m asking for your help in preparing to interview folks on stage for Web 2 next week. Your responses have been inspiring, and I am compiling them all into documents I use during the interview process.

Read more.

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Web 2.0 Summit kicks off on November 5 and the full schedule, including workshops, is now available. Registration for the Web 2.0 Summit is by invitation only and space it limited to maintain an intimate setting for conversation and collaboration. However, we’re eager to accommodate you if we can, so request an invitation. We’ll let you know quickly if there is space available.

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Web 2.0 Newsradar spreads the word about Al Gore at Web 2.0 Summit by reposting Tim O’Reilly’s announcement.

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BuzzTracker says the announcement about Al Gore at Web 2.0 Summit is its most blogged piece on Mr. Gore.

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Yahoo! Buzz runs the announcement that Al Gore will speak at Web 2.0 Summit.

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Listen to this mechanical reading of the Boing Boing post about Gore coming to Web 2.0 Summit.

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David Pescovitz writes about the terrific speakers scheduled for Web 2.0 Summit:

Our fearless band manager John Battelle is the co-host, along with Tim O’Reilly, of the Web 2.0 Summit, a huge confab where Internet heavyweights talk big vision. Combined, John and Tim know everyone on the Internet (and their brothers) and so they always line up great talkers. They’ve just announced the speaker list for this year’s Web 2.0, to be held November 5-7 in San Francisco. It’s no “insider baseball” Internet conference. Indeed, the big thematic question of Web 2.0 2008 is: “How can we apply the lessons of the Web to the world at large?” Folks like Al Gore, Lance Armstrong, Saul Griffith, Elon Musk, and Michael Pollan will attempt to provide some answers.

Read the rest here.

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Tim O’Reilly on the exciting news that Al Gore will join the conversation at Web 2.0 Summit:

As I wrote last month in What Good is Collective Intelligence if it Doesn’t Make Us Smarter?, at this year’s Web 2.0 Summit, we’re focusing on how what we’ve learned from the web over the past decade can be applied to solve the world’s hard problems. That’s why I’m really excited to see that John Battelle has persuaded Al Gore to join us.

One of those hard problems that requires all the intelligence we can throw at is global warming. And there’s no one who deserves as much credit as Al Gore for getting it on our collective radar. Through persistence, vision, and hard work, and a real mastery of the new tools of global media, he made all of us pay attention. His work has been a textbook demonstration of the power of media to change the way people think.

That’s Gore’s continuing focus, with his role at Current TV. He’s also joined Kleiner Perkins as a partner involved in cleantech investing.

When I first saw Gore talk about climate change at the TED conference in early 2006, everyone wanted to know what we could do about it. People are still struggling to answer that question, but it’s clear that technology can play a large role: helping us to monitor and measure the rate of change in crucial environmental variables, creating feedback loops that change behavior at both macro-levels (like carbon markets) and personal levels (like home energy monitoring); creating green data centers and low-power devices; creating new forms of renewable energy generation or storage, new materials that require less energy to create; alternative fuels and vehicles. The list goes on and on. (Reminder: we’re looking for innovative “web meets world” startups for the Web 2.0 Summit Launchpad.)

Of course, global warming is far from the only “web meets world” theme that we’re exploring. The conference will cover everything from the latest trends on the web (the rediscovery of e-commerce as a business model, cloud computing, social networking, mobile applications, and the inevitable platform wars) to politics, global disease detection, personal genomics, private space industry, and even military infotech. Speakers I’m particularly excited to see, in addition to Vice President Gore, include Tony Hsieh (@zappos, for those of you who see him continually on twitter), Elon Musk (who’s got to have the coolest portfolio of investments since retiring from PayPal, with SpaceX, SolarCity, Tesla Motors all under his wing), and Michael Pollan, who’s completely changed the way many of us think about food. Check out the confirmed speaker list, but keep in mind that there are more yet to come as John and I firm up the program.

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John Battelle announces a splendid addition to the Web 2.0 Summit:

Those of you following my posts around the theme of this year’s Web 2 Summit already know that we’re expanding the scope of the conference this year, and asking a core question: How can we apply the lessons of the Web to the world at large? From my post outlining the theme:

As we convene the fifth annual Web 2.0 Summit, our world is fraught with problems that engineers might charitably classify as NP hard—from roiling financial markets to global warming, failing healthcare systems to intractable religious wars. In short, it seems as if many of our most complex systems are reaching their limits.

It strikes us that the Web might teach us new ways to address these limits. From harnessing collective intelligence to a bias toward open systems, the Web’s greatest inventions are, at their core, social movements. To that end, we’re expanding our program this year to include leaders in the fields of healthcare, genetics, finance, global business, and yes, even politics.

Increasingly, the leaders of the Internet economy are turning their attention to the world outside our industry. And conversely, the best minds of our generation are turning to the Web for solutions. At the fifth annual Web 2.0 Summit, we’ll endeavor to bring these groups together.

To my mind, no person better exemplifies the merging of these two worlds than former Vice President (and Nobel laureate) Al Gore, the Chairman of Current TV. Gore and CEO Joel Hyatt started Current as “a new breed of media company that works with its young adult audience to create media that informs, enriches and inspires,” by integrating online and offline media, a very Web Meets World endeavor indeed. Readers may recall that Gore recently joined Kleiner Perkins as a partner focused on green issues, as well. And we are very pleased to announce that VP Gore will be joining us at the Web 2 Summit this year.

Others joining VP Gore include Elon Musk, of PayPal, Tesla, SolarCity and SpaceX, Larry Brilliant, the head of the Google.org foundation, and Michael Pollan, author of many wonderful books on our relationship to food, including my favorite: The Botany of Desire. The full lineup is truly wonderful, and we’re still adding speakers.

Requests for invitations can be found here, this is going to be one special event.

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RIchard MacManus supports the “Web Meets World” Auction by offering free passes for the best auction item ideas:

This year the Web 2.0 Summit conference (5-7 Nov) is hosting an auction to benefit a few innovative organizations that are solving big problems.

To show our support for this initiative, ReadWriteWeb is running a competition in this post.

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Tim O’Reilly asks for, and suggests a few of his own, ideas for Web 2.0 Summit auction items:

We’re looking for suggestions as well as donations. For example, what might O’Reilly donate that would bring a big price for the target charities? For example, how much would you donate to have us organize a mini-foo camp for a company, bringing together cool hackers in the company’s area of interest? (But suggestions are best if you have some kind of angle on actually helping to make them happen.)

Check out the latest suggestions in the comments and read Tim’s entire post here.

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SAN FRANCISCO - July 30, 2008 - TechWeb (formerly CMP) and O’Reilly Media,
Inc., co-producers of the annual Web 2.0 Summit, announce the Web Meets
World Auction at Web 2.0 Summit on the evening of Wednesday, November 5,
at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco. The first Summit auction illustrates
this year’s theme of applying what we’ve learned from the Web to help
solve our world’s most pressing limits. Keynote speaker Lance Armstrong,
the cancer survivor, seven-time Tour de France winner and founder of the
Lance Armstrong Foundation who recently joined with Demand Media to launch
LIVESTRONG.COM, will autograph a Trek road bike that will be auctioned off
with other priceless items during Web 2.0 Summit’s Web Meets World
Auction. All proceeds from the auction will benefit charity. Complete
information about the Web Meets World Auction can be found at:
http://en.oreilly.com/web2008/public/content/auction.

“In planning for the Web 2.0 Summit event this year, we have been inspired
to look beyond our immediate needs and into a space that transforms limits
into opportunities,” said John Battelle, Web 2.0 Summit’s Program Chair.
“With that in mind, we’ve asked our speakers, including Lance Armstrong
and others, to help us host this auction and provide the Summit community
at least one concrete way to support change.”

The Web 2.0 Summit team will solicit donations, and donation ideas, from
individuals and companies within the community and then choose the 10 most
promising and unique offerings to auction after the conference dinner.
Lance Armstrong, the seven time Tour de France winner and founder of the
Lance Armstrong Foundation and LIVESTRONG.COM, will donate an autographed
bicycle that he signs on-stage during his interview with John Battelle.
All proceeds from the event will benefit three charities, including
WITNESS.org, which uses video and online technologies to open the eyes of
the world to human rights violations.

Members of the Web community can contribute to the success of the Web
Meets World auction by joining the Web 2.0 Summit Facebook community and
suggest which charities should benefit from the auction and what you would
consider a priceless donation. Individuals or companies who would like to
offer auction items should email: auction@techweb.com.

Web 2.0 Summit takes place November 5-7, 2008 at the Palace Hotel in San
Francisco. The event is produced by partners O’Reilly Media, Inc. and
TechWeb and is moderated by John Battelle, Program Chair. Attendance is
limited to maintain an intimate setting and foster dialog among
participants. General attendee registration is by invitation only;
requests for invitations are being accepted through mid-September. Media
credentials are also extended by invitation only.

For more information on Web 2.0 Summit and to apply for an invitation,
please visit:
http://web2summit.com

To read coverage from Summit 2007, please visit:
http://conferences.oreillynet.com/pub/w/62/news.html

To view select video from last year’s Summit, please visit:
http://web2summit.blip.tv/

About TechWeb
TechWeb, the global leader in business technology media, is an innovative
business focused on serving the needs of technology decision-makers and
marketers worldwide. TechWeb produces the most respected and consumed
media brands in the business technology market. Today, more than 13.3
million* business technology professionals actively engage in our
communities created around our global face-to-face events Interop, Web
2.0, Black Hat and VoiceCon; online resources such as the TechWeb Network,
Light Reading, Intelligent Enterprise, InformationWeek.com, bMighty.com,
and The Financial Technology Network; and the market leading,
award-winning InformationWeek, TechNet Magazine, MSDN Magazine, Wall
Street & Technology magazines. TechWeb also provides end-to-end services
ranging from next-generation performance marketing, integrated media,
research, and analyst services. TechWeb is a division of United Business
Media, a global provider of news distribution and specialist information
services with a market capitalization of more than $2.5 billion.
*13.3 million business decision-makers: based on # of monthly connections

About O’Reilly
O’Reilly Media spreads the knowledge of innovators through its books, online services, magazines, and conferences. Since 1978, O’Reilly has been a chronicler and catalyst of leading-edge development, homing in on the technology trends that really matter and spurring their adoption by amplifying “faint signals” from the alpha geeks who are creating the future. An active participant in the technology community, the company has a long history of advocacy, meme-making, and evangelism. For more information, visit: http://oreilly.com.
O’Reilly is a registered trademark of O’Reilly Media, Inc. Other products mentioned may be trademarks of their respective companies.

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Fourth Edition Launch Pad Addresses the World’s Need for Change

SAN FRANCISCO - July 10, 2008 - TechWeb (formerly CMP) and O’Reilly Media, Inc., co-producers of the annual Web 2.0 Summit, today announce the Launch Pad program, a unique public forum designed to uncover the most promising Web startups, is open for submissions. The theme for this fourth edition Launch Pad, Web Meets World, spotlights the industry’s best startups that use the Web’s culture to change the world. For more information on submitting your company or product for this year’s Launch Pad and to complete a submission form, visit: http://en.oreilly.com/web2008/public/content/launchpad. The Web 2.0 Summit takes place November 5-7, 2008 at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco.

Launch Pad’s focus will be on startups in the fields of alternative energies, social entrepreneurialism, microfinance, developing economies, political action, renewable technologies, and other innovative areas. Web 2.0 Summit Launch Pad will provide Web 2.0 companies a chance to present in front of six leading venture capitalists from Internet and Green backgrounds, while receiving raw, real-time feedback from both judges and audience members.

“The conversation is no longer just about the Web, rather about the bigger social movements driving the Web’s greatest solutions,” said John Battelle, Web 2.0 Summit’s Program Chair. “We’ve adjusted our Launch Pad to reflect the natural progression of the conversation and, most importantly, to present the Web’s most promising innovations.”

The Web 2.0 Launch Pad’s judging panel of venture capitalists will sponsor the program, thus eliminating company participation fees. Any company in any stage of financing can compete for a slot on stage, whether or not they are launching a new company or product. Judges will select the finalists who will compete at the Web 2.0 Summit event and receive up to ten minutes on stage to present to the entire Web 2.0 Summit audience and the VC judging panel.

“We’re honored to be a part of Web 2.0 Summit’s Launch Pad: Web Meets World. It allows us the unique opportunity to learn about those Web companies working to improve the complex problems facing industries outside the Web- something invaluable for Panorama Capital,” said Chris Albinson of Panorama Capital. “Together with the Web 2.0 Summit’s audience, we’ll uncover those shining stars working to build a better future.”

Submission deadline for Web 2.0 Summit Launch Pad is September 10, 2008. Final determination of the Launch Pad companies will be made by John Battelle, Web 2.0 Summit’s Program Chair, in concert with VC judges including Chris Albinson of Panorama Capital, Vinod Khosla of Khosla Ventures, and Mike Goguen of Sequoia Capital.

Web 2.0 Summit is produced by partners O’Reilly Media, Inc. and TechWeb and is moderated by John Battelle, Program Chair, and O’Reilly CEO Tim O’Reilly. Attendance is limited to maintain an intimate setting and foster dialog among participants. General attendee registration is by invitation only; requests for invitations are being accepted through mid-September. Media credentials will also be extended by invitation only.

-For more information on Web 2.0 Summit and to apply for an invitation, please visit:
http://web2summit.com

-To read coverage from Summit 2007, please visit:
http://conferences.oreillynet.com/pub/w/62/news.html

-To view select video from last year’s Summit, please visit:
http://web2summit.blip.tv/

About TechWeb
TechWeb, the global leader in business technology media, is an innovative business focused on serving the needs of technology decision-makers and marketers worldwide. TechWeb produces the most respected and consumed media brands in the business technology market. Today, more than 13.3 million* business technology professionals actively engage in our communities created around our global face-to-face events Interop, Web 2.0, Black Hat and VoiceCon; online resources such as the TechWeb Network, Light Reading, Intelligent Enterprise, InformationWeek.com, bMighty.com, and The Financial Technology Network; and the market leading, award-winning InformationWeek, TechNet Magazine, MSDN Magazine, Wall Street & Technology magazines. TechWeb also provides end-to-end services ranging from next-generation performance marketing, integrated media, research, and analyst services. TechWeb is a division of United Business Media, a global provider of news distribution and specialist information services with a market capitalization of more than $2.5 billion.
*13.3 million business decision-makers: based on # of monthly connections

About O’Reilly
O’Reilly Media spreads the knowledge of innovators through its books, online services, magazines, and conferences. Since 1978, O’Reilly has been a chronicler and catalyst of leading-edge development, homing in on the technology trends that really matter and spurring their adoption by amplifying “faint signals” from the alpha geeks who are creating the future. An active participant in the technology community, the company has a long history of advocacy, meme-making, and evangelism. For more information, visit: http://www.oreilly.com/.
O’Reilly is a registered trademark of O’Reilly Media, Inc. Other products mentioned may be trademarks of their respective companies.
###

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“Today, Tim issues a call to action for Web 2.0 to take its opportunities more seriously, and provide significantly more value to the world,” writes Matt Asay.

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Martin LaMonica applauds Launch Pad’s shift in focus, “So the Internet may be maturing and the nature of innovation broadening. But it’s still exciting.”

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Tim explores the focus of the Web 2.0 Summit Launchpad, “Web meets world.”

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Last Friday, BW posted this excerpt from BW columnist Sarah Lacy’s book, describing how the co-founder of Netscape backs a social networking site named Ning.

Dawn Applegate

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This video is actually from the Web 2.0 Berlin event, but offers a great definition of what the phrase Web 2.0 means:

Tim O’Reilly on Web 2.0

Dawn Applegate

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More coverage from Web 2.0 Summit from LaNacion (albeit in en espanol!):

En San Franciso, durante el Web 2.0 Summit, la marca finlandesa de celulares presento una nueva computadora de mano mientras Apple, paradojicamente, anunciaba mejoras para su iPhone

Dawn Applegate

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LaNacion’s coverage from Web 2.0 Summit. The reporter said that was the story was in the top ten of most viewed stories that day…

Mark Zuckerberg, ex estudiante de Harvard, es el cofundador y CEO de la ultima nina mimada de las redes sociales online; estuvo en el reciente Web 2.0 Summit realizado en San Francisco y revelo detalles del boom

Dawn Applegate

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More coverage from LaNacion from Web 2.0 Summit, this time on Google Health:

Por que la marca mas valuada del mundo pone en cuestion la salud?; en pleno debate por la seguridad social en EE. UU., en el Web 2.0 Summit de San Francisco, la empresa revelo su interes por esta problematica

Dawn Applegate

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This was published on the site of the oldest and second largest newspaper in Argentina regarding Web 2.0 Summit:

San Francisco fue la sede de la Web 2.0 Summit, un encuentro sobre las tendencias web actuales y futuras; organizado por Tim O´Reilly y companias líderes como Facebook, Microsoft, Nokia y Google, hubo importantes anuncios

Dawn Applegate

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This article is in Japanese but covers social media news from Web 2.0 Summit:

Web 2.0 Summit Report — Next edge; social graph in the real-world society

Dawn Applegate

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Sarah Lacy, who is working on a book about the rise of Web 2.0, attended Web 2.0 Summit and gave her spin on the Facebook/MySpace debate:

Those were among the few nuggets of news emanating from O’Reilly Media’s annual Web 2.0 Summit, which also featured Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who said as little as possible about reports he’s lining up financing that could value his company at upwards of $10 billion

Dawn Applegate

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David Carr attended Web 2.0 Summit and filed this report yesterday:

Half an hour into the party, there was a ripple of excitement, and people started murmuring and pointing toward the door. When the crowd parted, I expected to see Mark Zuckerberg, the young overlord of Facebook, or Steve Ballmer, the battle-hardened Microsoft veteran. Then again, this is a MySpace party, so maybe Britney Spears or Lindsay Lohan? Instead, it was Rupert Murdoch — old school, old media, and at 76, just plain old. From the reaction of the crowd, it might as well have been Lindsay Lohan. He was overwhelmed by an immediate onrush of hospitality as the geekerati lined up to get a word with him.

Dawn Applegate

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Interesting article on Web 2.0 Summit:

The bubble question also lurked in the minds of many attendees at the Web 2.0 Summit conference in San Francisco last week. Along with Facebook, search and online advertising juggernaut Google has an even scarier valuation. In Google’s case, Wall Street justifies its market cap of around $209 billion because of what analysts consider is a huge untapped sector of the advertising market that has not yet moved to the Web.

Dawn Applegate

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Dean Takahashi covered Web 2.0 Summit:

John Battelle and Tim O’Reilly opened the Web 2.0 asking a question, “Is this a bubble?” Few folks raised their hands in the ballroom of the Palace Hotel. But this is the land of the faithful. True believers are the ones who are starting Internet companies in social networking and media

Dawn Applegate

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More from Web 2.0 Summit from eWeek:

CEO Mark Zuckerberg parries dogged questions about online advertising.

Google Health: I’m Feeling Yucky

Dawn Applegate

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Joel Dreyfuss has some interesting theories of everything new sounding familiar at Web 2.0 Summit:

At one point during the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco this week, I thought I’d fallen into a time warp. I suddenly found myself listening to pitches that might have been appropriate in the 1990s at a mainframe computer convention, not a cutting-edge event like this summit is billed.

Dawn Applegate

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Richard MacManus, a Web 2.0 Summit veteran filed the following stories:

2007 Web 2.0 Summit Review: How the Web 2.0 Conference Has Evolved Over 2 Years

MySpace Evolves - Developer Platform Details, Partnerships, Growth Figures

Twine: The First Mainstream Semantic Web App?

The New Era of Semantic Apps

Web 2.0 Summit 2007: Mary Meeker and Internet Trends

Web 2.0 Summit 2007: Mark Zuckerberg

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Mark Zuckerberg’s appearance at Web 2.0 Summit had many mentions in the media, here is what USA Today’s Jefferson Graham had to say:

Much has been made of the youth of 23-year-old CEO Mark Zuckerberg (left) of the red-hot social network Facebook.

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Lots of stories from Web 2.0 Summit from CRN/Channel Web, here’s a good one:

Among the many buzzwords associated with the Web 2.0 hype, none has quite the cachet as “open.” Yet no idea is more profoundly troubling to the companies trying to build profitable Internet businesses.

And for the rest of the coverage:

Summit Coverage

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Business Week sent a few reporters to Web 2.0 Summit, which resulted in the following stories:

Summit Coverage

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Clint Boulton of eWeek wrote this piece regarding John Battelle at Web 2.0 Summit:

Reporter’s Notebook: John Battelle puts the screws to Mark Zuckerberg in a thrilling grilling.

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Reuters filed tons of stories from Web 2.0 Summit, here are most of them:

Reuters Coverage

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This is an article filed by Reuters regarding Web 2.0 Summit:

Start-up companies at the Web 2.0 Summit this week displayed confidence that the Internet has become a big enough home, with hundreds of millions of users, for many of their projects to find a market.

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Bloomberg covered Web 2.0 Summit like crazy, this will link you to their stories:

Web 2.0 Summit Coverage

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Blog Talk Radio uploaded a few broadcasts from Web 2.0 Summit, you can listen to them here:

PodCasts on Web 2.0 Summit

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Barron’s publishes several pieces, including Tech Trader Daily. This link will show you all the stories on Web 2.0 Summit:

Barron’s Coverage

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This is an interest follow-up piece from Web 2.0 Summit, but also addresses the Graphic Social Patterns conference which will become an O’Reilly conference in the new year…


“Everyone woke up and realized this was not a minor thing they did,” said Dave McClure, a Silicon Valley investor and the organizer of last month’s conference, Graphing Social Patterns: The Business & Technology of Facebook. “Now everyone is trying to copy and implement their own version of that.”

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Jon Fine, reporter at Business Week wrote this column about Web 2.0 Summit:

…this New York media guy (read: storyteller) traveled to the Web 2.0 conference in San Francisco, at which a smart set gathers to discuss, among other things, how technological change inflects media.

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Yes, it’s in German… but it’s a solid article on social networking from Steffan Heuer of Technology Review who attended Web 2.0 Summit:

Wenn es bislang noch irgendwelche Zweifel daran gab, dass das Mitmach-Web auch die letzten Winkel der etablierten IT- und Medienkonzerne durchdrungen hat, wurden sie beim diesjährigen Web 2.0 Summit ausgeräumt.

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This panel at Web 2.0 was amusing, Mitch Wagner sums it up:

The Web 2.0 Summit got a delightful dose of reality from a panel of a half-dozen baby boomers, giving the point of view from a group usually unrepresented at industry conferences: The ordinary Joes and Janes who have to use the technology the industry builds.

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Interesting story that seems to support the notion of a bubble forming, from Web 2.0 Summit:

The money was great… Larry and Sergey were focused… but a panel of ex-Googlers revealed why they have now gone off to build their own Web 2.0 fortunes.

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Looks like “Web 3.0″ is getting bandied about, but for now here is a story from Web 2.0 Summit:

Silicon Valley has painted a picture of the web in 2030, and it is very powerful - and very smart - indeed

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Richard Martin covered most of the news stories from Web 2.0 Summit, here is his article on Launch Pad:

Last week at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco I ran through the contestants in the startup beauty pageant known as Launch Pad, and asked for readers’ votes on the one Most Likely to Succeed. The results are in — plus I’ll reveal the actual winners chosen at the summit.

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Thanks to Marc Orchant for mentioning the presentations from Web 2.0 Summit, found here:

A number of the interviews conducted by Tim O’Reilly and John Battelle at the Web 2.0 Summit last week in San Francisco have now been posted online at blip.tv including Battelle’s interview with Steve Ballmer of Microsoft which was one of the highlights of the event for me.

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Once again Bobbie Johnson does a thorough job reporting from Web 2.0 Summit:

eBay confronts $1.4bn Skype disappointment

$10bn for Facebook? Maybe, but the real value lies in the ads

Microsoft remain tight-lipped over Facebook


Murdoch plans new role for Wall St Journal

Microsoft keeps hunting as part of online battle with Google

Facebook founder says social networking sites in it for the long haul

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Steven Pearlstein covered Web 2.0 Summit last week and published the following in his column about a tech start-up and speaker Rupert Murdoch:

For the next two minutes, the two scheming entrepreneurs traded stories, the jowly septuagenarian media mogul filling in some details of how he broke the newspaper printers union on London’s Fleet Street

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AT&T makes the following announcement at Web 2.0 Summit:

AT&T Inc said on Friday it plans to participate in an upcoming government auction of airwaves in the 700-Megahertz spectrum band, but it is still deciding whether to bid for a portion of the spectrum reserved for open access

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Oliver Starr and Marc Orchant have been covering the Web 2.0 Summit:

Events tend to swirl at the Web 2.0 Summit. The pace of speakers appearing on the main stage is frenetic and there are so many interesting conversations, demos, and briefings taking place in the lobbies and hallways of the Palace Hotel.

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Oliver Starr reports from Web 2.0 Summit:

O’Reilly and the CMP Media team did something that I hope will become a standard across not just our industry but every industry; they gave everyone a tree to be planted in each of our names via TreeNation

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And a counterpoint to the previous article, this is another view on Google/Facebook at Web 2.0 Summit:

I have to say that until now I thought Josh Quittner was a pretty smart guy.

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Josh Quittner’s piece on Google:

Why Google is spooked by Facebook and would dearly love to squash it, says Fortune’s Josh Quittner.

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San Jose Mercury News reports on Web 2.0 Summit’s new companies and big business:

On the ground at the Web 2.0 Summit. Web 2.0 is the label for Internet companies that live on hype, hope and swelling online audiences. For years, they have incubated their technologies and made bold promises about changing the world. Now there are signs these youthful ventures are becoming real businesses.

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Web 2.0 Summit was picked up on KQED:

This week opens the much anticipated Web 2.0 Summit taking place in San Francisco, with everyone from Rupert Murdoch to the founder of Facebook on hand to cut deals and promote their vision for the web.

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Coverage of Web 2.0 Summit:

You don’t need to be a developer to create mashups or FaceBook apps.

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International coverage for Web 2.0 Summit:

Opinions on the Web 2.0 Summit are varied across the blogging sites as excitement surrounding the event mounts

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Kara and John have been posting from Web 2.0 Summit:

All Things Digital

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John Musser is covering Web 2.0 Summit for Programmable Web:

At the Web 2.0 Summit yesterday MySpace’s Chris DeWolfe and Newscorp’s Rupert Murdoch unveiled some of their plans for opening-up MySpace. They’ll be doing this in stages over the next few months.

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Popular Science covered Web 2.0 Summit this week, here are some of their stories:

Popular Science At Summit

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Mostly video, but here’s what Loic LeMeur has been up to at Web 2.0 Summit:

LeWeb

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Here is coverage from the Launch Pad at Web 2.0 Summit:

Today’ Web 2.0 Summit ended with a Launch Pad session where six startups each got six minutes to pitch their companies to the crowd and a panel of venture capitalists. Here’s a thumbnail sketch of each with my initial impressions

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PC Magazine’s Natali Del Conte filed this story from Web 2.0 Summit:

According to panelists at the Web 2.0 Summit on Thursday, startups that fight to be the next “It” platform probably won’t survive the Web 2.0 era. Startups that fight to be a part of the platform have a far better chance.

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Web 2.0 Summit coverage:


We live by routines. In January, we make resolutions for the new year. In November, we give thanks at Thanksgiving. And in October we go to the Web 2.0 Conference and try to outdo each other with our declarations of “Bubble 2.0″.

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The figures on attendance are due to be corrected, but here is the Web 2.0 Summit coverage from David Louie:

These are faces you may not know, but they’re people shaping the future of the internet.

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Mitch Wagner’s report from Web 2.0 Summit’s informal press gathering:

John Battelle of Federated Media, Tim O’Reilly of O’Reilly Media, and Eric Faurot, senior VP at CMP, got together this afternoon to put out an overview of the Web 2.0 Summit and look at the future of Web 2.0 in cell phones, sensors, and

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This story orginated with Investor’s Business Daily but ran on CNN. Money regarding Web 2.0 Summit:

Don’t call Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) a one-trick pony. According to CEO Steve Ballmer, it’s a two-trick pony.
If recent investments pay off, the software king also will become a three-, maybe four-trick pony as it pushes further into entertainment and Internet advertising./a>

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PC World is here at Web 2.0 Summit, here is their story about Bruce Chizen (picked up from IDG):

At this week’s Web 2.0 Conference, Adobe CEO Bruce Chizen talks about why Photoshop won’t be a hosted application, what he thinks of Microsoft’s Silverlight, and Google’s Gears.

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For you readers who are fluent in German, here is the coverage of Web 2.0 Summit from Stern.de:

Stern.de Coverage

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The Launch Pad “Venture Capital” Edition took place last night at the Web 2.0 Summit. Realius won “Most Creative” G.ho.st won “Best Presentation,” and CleverSet took “Best in Show” and “Most Likely To Exit First.”

Here is a link to all the participant’s news regarding the event:


New “TripIt To Me” Feature for Road Warriors is Unveiled at Web 2.0 Summit

Realius at Web 2.0 Summit Launchpad

Click Forensics Selected to Present at Web 2.0 Summit - Company to Speak at Conference’s Prestigious Launch Pad Event for Early-Stage Web 2.0 Start-ups

CleverSet News

Spiceworks News

G.ho.st news

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One of the hardest working journalists here at Web 2.0 Summit has been VentureBeat’s Mark Coker. Here are a few more stories from Summit:

Here are the companies presenting at today’s Launchpad event at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco: G.ho.st, Realius, Cleverset, Click Forensics, TripIt and Spiceworks.

Surprise: Mary Meeker offers skepticism about U.S. tech industry

Microsoft’s Ballmer: MSFT will acquire 20 companies a year

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Web 2.0 Summit’s a big topic for the Valleywag:


At last, I understand the vision of synergy between News Corp. and Dow Jones. It’s all about Kara Swisher, basically. The abrasive, pint-sized reporter-turned blogger spent dinner at Web 2.0 Summit locked in conversation with gregarious, pint-sized megamogul Rupert Murdoch,

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News release from MySpace and Skype from Web 2.0 Summit:

MySpace, the world’s most popular social network, and Skype, the leading Internet communications company, today announced a partnership to empower the MySpace community with voice communications.

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Mitch covers Bruce Chizen at Web 2.0 Summit:

In an era when content gets given away for free and funded by ads, how does Adobe survive — and thrive? Adobe CEO Bruce Chizen answers at a Web 2.0 Summit Q&A.

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Bobbie Johnson is a busy, busy reporter here at Web 2.0 Summit, here’s another:

The chief executive of eBay answers questions on her company and her thoughts about how you make it work.

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Continued coverage from Michael Calore at Web 2.0 Summit:

For the last few months there’s been a lot of talk on the net about the Web 2.0 Address Book — a technology that knows where you are and what you are doing.

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Live blogging by Mitch Wagner at Web 2.0 Summit:

It’s a little after 3 on the opening day of the Web 2.0 Summit. I’ve alienated thousands of my fellow conference attendees by elbowing my way to the front of the crowd of people waiting to get in so I could score myself a seat next to an electrical socket. It’s like _Mad Max_ here folks — hordes of barbarians fighting each other for access to precious supplies of juice.

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Julie Sloan from Wired, on Web 2.0 Summit:

I chose instead a session where Marc Canter of Broadband Mechanics and Joseph Smarr of Plaxo extolled the many virtues of open data and the many open platforms that weren’t using it to their best advantage.

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The Merc’s Mark Boslet is onsite writing about Web 2.0 Summit:

Web 2.0 dynamo Facebook said that an initial public offering is still years away but that it’s making progress on a “financing” that some reports claim could value the start-up in the billions of dollars.

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Bobbie Johnson’s continued coverage of Web 2.0 Summit:

Microsoft chairman Steve Ballmer takes the stage in San Francisco to answer questions about the software giant and its future.

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Another great story from the Technology Chronicles, covering Web 2.0 Summit:

Google is a “threat and a friend,” today’s Internet companies are too expensive to buy and rival Facebook is cool but not that cool, News Corp.’s Rupert Murdoch said.

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An article from Information Week’s Antone Gonsavles regarding Mark Zuckerberg’s appearance at Web 2.0 Summit:

Mark Zuckerberg estimates an additional 400 workers will be needed to help enable developers to build third-party applications that run on top of Facebook services.

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This is Computeworld’s take on the the Steve Ballmer talk from this morning at Web 2.0 Summit:


Microsoft CEO says Popfly tool can help non-programmers build Web 2.0 software

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Sonoma County’s local paper, the Santa Rosa Press Democrat, filed this story about Web 2.0 Summit. It’s always great to be featured close to home:

SF conference highlights the growing importance of creative collaboration between the Web’s biggest players

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More Web 2.0 Summit coverage from Heather Haventstein:

Facebook.com co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg gave some hints Wednesday about what’s on tap from the current Web 2.0 darling: a possible advertising network and the ability for users to export the data from their profiles to outside applications.

MySpace opens its platform to developers

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One of the more interesting presentations on the first day of Web 2.0 Summit was Marissa Mayer’s presentation on Google Health. This is Computerworld’s Heather Havenstein’s coverage:

Less than two weeks after Microsoft Corp. announced plans to support online personal health information records, Google unveiled plans to follow suit.

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It’s always good to get covered by the BBC, this was in the UK version regarding Web 2.0 Summit’s guest speakers Rupert Murdoch and Chris DeWolfe:

Social network MySpace is to allow third-party developers to build applications for the site.

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Here’s an interesting post regarding Web 2.0 Summit:

It would be good to be this hot.

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Bobbie Johnson is here covering Web 2.0 Summit and filed this story yesterday:

A host of CEOs, movers and shakers are assembling in San Francisco for the Web 2.0 Summit

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A very perceptive article that references Web 2.0 Summit:

Internet companies with funny names, little revenue and few customers are commanding high prices. And investors, having seemingly forgotten the pain of the first dot-com bust, are displaying symptoms of the disorder known as irrational exuberance.

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A very nice opening article from the Tech Chronicles regarding Web 2.0 Summit:

Don’t bother calling any Internet executives this week. You probably won’t have much luck with start-up entrepreneurs either.

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Michael Calore is onsite at Web 2.0 Summit and filed this story:

For the last few months there’s been a lot of talk on the net about the Web 2.0 Address Book — a technology that knows where you are and what you are doing.

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Information Week writes about Web 2.0 Summit:

Now in its fourth year, the Web 2.0 Summit has moved past trying to define what Web 2.0 is and isn’t. Looking ahead to the conference, here are the concepts and issues I most want discussed at the show:

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Paul Boutin, Owen Thomas and others of Valleywag hit the 2.0 Web Summit early this morning and posted the following stories:

http://valleywag.com/tech/web-2′0-summit/

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More news from Web 2.0 Summit, this time from iQuestions:


Biggest Names in Technology to Convene at Web 2.0 Summit

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Another great article regarding Web 2.0 Summit from TimesOnline’s Jonathan Richards:

The chief executives of Facebook, MySpace, eBay and Viacom, among others, are gathering to discuss the future of ‘web 2.0′

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News from Richard MacManus from Web 2.0 Summit:

Today Microsoft is announcing two strategic partnerships, with enterprise software company Atlassian and RSS solutions vendor NewsGator.

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A post that covers what it’s like to be a blogger at Web 2.0 Summit:

Opinions on the Web 2.0 Summit are varied across the blogging sites as excitement surrounding the event mounts

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Web 2.0 Summit sponsor HP announced the following today on day one of the conference:

HP today announced new relationships and print capabilities with several major web properties - including Disney.com, Windows Live Spaces, Flickr and the Graffiti Application for Facebook - to make it easy for people to print relevant, customized content from the web.

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Mark Coker at VentureBeat filed the first Web 2.0 Summit coverage:

Web 2.0 Summit, co-hosted by O’Reilly Media and CMP, kicks off this Wednesday at San Francisco’s Palace Hotel. A who’s who list of Web 2.0 digerati will converge for three days of deal making, partying and more deal making.

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Michael Calore of Wired got a headstart on covering Web 2.0 Summit:

The Web 2.0 Summit kicks off next week here in San Francisco. Epicenter’s Julie Sloane and I will be there, blogging and passing out cards (and just plain passing out).

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Here is the latest news for Web 2.0 Summit:

Sponsors Plan to Unveil New Strategies and Innovations at Sold-Out Event

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The latest news from Web 2.0 Summit, the details on the Web Bowl:

Competition Offers Everyone the Chance to Participate

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Exciting news from the Web 2.0 Summit Conference this morning, we have just confirmed Rupert Murdoch and Chris DeWolfe as guest speakers! The entire schedule is now live as well. For the full details, read the release below:

2007 Web 2.0 Summit Announces Program Lineup

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This release discusses the VC panel at Web 2.0 Summit, John Battelle announces changes and exciting additions to this year’s event:

VC Panel News Release

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Web 2.0 Summit chair John Battelle blogs about the VC panel and the changes being made in this year’s format:

This year we’re doing something new - having a panel of VC judges who critique your presentation on stage.

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Alisa Leonard, Social Media Consultant makes some amusing commentary on the idea of an invite only event being the hallmark of having “made it.”

Ah, the private, invite-only beta, the hallmark of any self-respecting Web 2.0 start up– first there were the coveted Joost invites (which, I had courtesy of the 2007 Web 2.0 Expo, thanks O’Reilly!)

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The audience of this blog is marketing folks who are deciding which conference is right for them. O’Reilly’s Web 2.0 Summit and ETech are both mentioned…

So which conference should we sponsor?
I went to ETech this year and regretted that we did not sign up for a sponsorship (silver or bronze).

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Susan is a venture capitalist and gives Summit a nice plug in this post:

This was my motivation behind putting together a Virtual Worlds/Casual MMO panel at the Web 2.0 Expo and for including the panel on “Virtual Items: Mainstream or Not” at the Virtual Goods Summit.

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The definition, according to the Miami Herald:


The definition of Web 2.0 differs depending on whom you ask.

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By all accounts, the Summit “Premiere Dinner” in San Francisco was a great networking event, as well as being a planning session of sorts for the upcoming Web 2.0 Summit. Industry pundit Kara Swisher had the following to say:

Web 2.0 Dinner and Schmoozefest

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We’re beginning to post audio from the Web 2.0 Summit on the Conversations page. New podcasts are scheduled to arrive weekly, so visit often.

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“Developers at the Web 2.0 conference are offering web users an escape from the hassle of remembering usernames and passwords across multiple web sites,” observes Evan Prodromou in this LinuxWorld.com article that was picked up by NetworkWorld.

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Over on LinuxWorld.com, Evan Prodromou writes:

Web services, software-as-a-service, and per-node, per-hour rent-a-grid computing are meeting in the middle. Web sites, companies with server software roots, and open source developers are converging on new ideas for business IT that blur the lines between APIs, services and software products.

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Michael Liedtke writes: Although conditions haven’t returned to the feverish levels of the dot-com boom, the Internet’s business atmosphere is clearly heating up.

The latest symptoms of the escalating exuberance bubbled up this week at an elite gathering called the Web 2.0 Summit — a 3-year-old event billed as a mere conference until the organizers renamed it this year to underscore its exclusive status.

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Dan Farber writes: Nick Carr was at this best synthesizing the week that was-the Web 2.0 Summit-and he wasn’t even there. I agree with other bloggers, commentators, writers, reporters, pundits, podcasters, vloggers, journalists and user generated content creators who said that the Web 2.0 Summit, which I covered extensively, didn’t produce any great revelations or a great step forward for the global Web. It was more about scraping money off the table as the money-VCs, IAC, Fox Interactive, Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and others-were auditioning startups in the hallways and in private rooms.

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Ross Mayfield writes: John Markoff writes in the NY Times that Web 3.0 is coming.

Apparently he missed my post last week, for There is no Web 3.0. The funny thing about my summation last year (Web 2.0 is Made of People!) is the web has always been that way — and always will. At first glance, John seems to think the next web is made of machines.

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Adam Lashinsky writes: Despite lofty predictions for MySpace and YouTube, almost no one in the current Web wave is making money - except Google. That could be a good thing for investors, argues Fortune’s Adam Lashinsky.

For a couple of years now, Internet-industry cognoscenti have cringed at the expression “Web 2.0″. It’s one of those catch-all phrases that started with a fairly specific definition (more on that in a bit) but has mushroomed into meaning essentially anything the person who evokes it wants it to mean.

What became clear at the loftily renamed Web 2.0 Summit, held last week at a posh hotel in San Francisco, is that the frothiness of Web 1.0 has returned and that Web 2.0 really is all about “the Google” and how everyone else relates to it.

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Search upstart challenges Googlewith help from international array of investors.

Hakia said it has raised $11 million in its first phase of funding from a panoply of investors scattered across the globe who were attracted by the company’s semantic search technology, which the upstart aims to make superior to Google’s search engine.

The company is currently beta testing the search engine at its web site and previewed it at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco last week.

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Forbes’ Adam Lashinsky writes:It’s time for Silicon Valley to accept the same laws that govern the rest of American business, says Fortune’s Adam Lashinsky.

A key tenet of life in Silicon Valley is that the technology industry is different from other businesses.

Employee compensation in the stock option culture is different. Accounting typically follows its own set of rules. Performance metrics that businesspeople elsewhere wouldn’t recognize are coin of the realm here. It’s an obnoxious attitude that nevertheless undoubtedly fuels a good deal of the tech industry’s outsized success.

This distinct form of exceptionalism was on display at last week’s Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco during a particularly illuminating panel discussion, “The Pirate and the Suit.” It featured DJ-mashup artist Eric Kleptone, who created the wildly popular “A Night at the Hip Hopera,” and David Munns, vice chairman of EMI Music.

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Matthew Creamer writes:If the term Web 2.0 means anything at all to major media companies, it’s that having a potent way to get video content in front of consumers-and pull in a growing pile of ad bucks-will determine the winners from the losers. Last week’s Web 2.0 Summit, probably the highest-profile annual gathering of media and tech bigs, demonstrated that the answer to a single question determines a media company’s worth to Wall Street and advertisers: Does its digital strategy include a way to distribute both copyrighted and user-generated clips? The haves: Google and News Corp. The have-nots: pretty much the rest of ‘em, from Yahoo to the New York Times Co.

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John Markoff writes:From the billions of documents that form the World Wide Web and the links that weave them together, computer scientists and a growing collection of start-up companies are finding new ways to mine human intelligence.

Their goal is to add a layer of meaning on top of the existing Web that would make it less of a catalog and more of a guide — and even provide the foundation for systems that can reason in a human fashion. That level of artificial intelligence, with machines doing the thinking instead of simply following commands, has eluded researchers for more than half a century.

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For one evening, at least, it felt like the good old days again.For those around for the first bubble, this week’s Web 2.0 conference in San Francisco felt awfully familiar. A big name rock act, hipster god Lou Reed, was brought in Wednesday night to serenade blue-shirted, cell phone packing dweebs.

Big name tech companies like Intel competed with old media powerhouses such as The New York Times to show their Web 2.0 credentials.

In a week of second, and third, acts Web 2.0 impresario John Batelle, publisher of the late, lamented, Industry Standard was most impressive, presiding, once again, over a week of sheer effervescence.

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Constance Loizos and Elise Ackerman write:For the 1,000 attendees at the third Web 2.0 conference in San Francisco, there was ample opportunity to network, nosh, check out new startups and mingle with some of the biggest names in the technology industry.

Yet this year’s conference was perhaps most notable for its high-profile speakers, which included Ross Levinsohn, CEO of Fox Interactive; Ram Shriram, one of Silicon Valley’s most prominent angels — he was Google’s first investor; and Roger McNamee, a prominent investor and cofounder of Elevation Partners.

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Dan Fost channels Herb Caen at Web 2.0: I have been to the mountaintop. I have learned the secrets of the Palace.

OK, I have been to the Web 2.0 Summit, a highly hyped Internet conference. I have overheard a few things at the Sheraton Palace Hotel. I will share them with you, three-dot style.

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Alan Sipress writesIf you’re the man who replaced Bill Gates, you’re sure to inherit a certain mystique and engender intense interest both inside Microsoft and out. But since Ray Ozzie took over as the company’s chief software architect this year, he has studiously maintained a low public profile that has fueled curiosity even further.

Ozzie broke his silence this week at the “Web 2.0 Summit” in San Francisco, where he appeared on stage to be interviewed by conference chairman John Battelle of Federated Media.

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Forbes’ Rachel Rosmarinhas posted several entries on the Forbes blog during the Web 2.0 Summit…The Palace Hotel is crammed full of ambitious tech geeks, all jockeying for a bit of WiFi bandwidth, a rare power outlet or the chance to pitch their startup to a captive listener. Space, laptop juice and attention spans, are oversold. Tim O’Reilly, one of the founder’s of this conference, says he had to turn away 5,000 eager attendees. He invited them all to a new conference in April, and renamed this one the Web 2.0 summit, today.

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Martin LaMonica writes: With Microsoft’s Vista and Office 2007 released to manufacturing, the software giant is preparing to adapt the products for the Web-dominated era, Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie said Wednesday.

Ozzie spoke at the Web 2.0 Summit here, where he said the company overall is making a transition to designing software that takes advantage of the PC–as it has historically done–as well as online services.

“Now we are at an interesting juncture with Vista and Office (2007) done,” Ozzie said during an on-stage interview with conference organizer John Battelle.

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Dan Farber writes:Yahoo co-founder David Filo, who rarely gets in front of a conference crowd, chatted with John Battelle at the Web 2.0 Summit, aided by Bradley Horowitz, Yahoo vice president of product strategy. Filo is the product focused half of the founding duo. The other founder, Jerry Yang, focuses on the business issues.

You would think after 12 years in the saddle and with billions of dollars in their accounts, the motivation to keep at it would diminish for the founders, but Filo said that the opportunity that lies ahead keeps him motivated, as well as being part of the “revolution.”

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Evan Prodromou writes: The Web’s business and technology elite convened for O’Reilly and Associates’ third annual Web 2.0 Conference in San Francisco’s Palace Hotel last week. Started in 2004, the meeting lends its name to what some call a movement and others an ignorable wave of marketing hype…Is Web 2.0 relevant for open source developers, users, and IT managers? Although it may seem like just so much marketing fluff, Web 2.0 does have meaning for open source creators and users as well as IT decision-makers.

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Posts Michael Arrington:

Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos has been talking about their web services business unit a lot lately. Moments after he left the stage at the Web 2.0 Summit last week I was able to speak to him about three of their most recent web service offerings: Mechanical Turk, Simple Storage Service (S3) and Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). This is a short podcast but you get a glimpse of how important this new business line is to Amazon’s future.

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“Social news aggregator Digg.com was able to spotlight Donald Rumsfeld’s resignation faster than machine-operated Google News,” writes Kate Greene

Less than 10 minutes after the news of Donald Rumsfeld’s resignation hit the wires last week, the information was visible to hundreds of thousands of people via the homepage of Digg.com, a social news aggregation site that relies on readers to submit and promote interesting news stories.

According to Digg founder Kevin Rose, the Rumsfeld news was submitted to Digg three minutes after the Associated Press released it; four minutes later, the story had acquired enough “diggs” to jump to the front page of the site. The speed at which the Rumsfeld news–a quick read at only two sentences–was promoted to the front page of Digg “broke a record,” said Rose last week at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco.

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Michael Calore took a lot of Monkey Bites out of the Web 2.0 Summit:

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The Radar Team picked up on a few more signals at the Web 2.0 Summit:

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Richard McManus has written a thoughtful summary of this year’s Summit:

It’s the end of a hectic week of conference-going for your R/WW correspondent - and so time for a wrap-up of my thoughts on the Web 2.0 Summit. Firstly, my overriding feeling is that this year’s conference was a lot different from last year’s. It was still a great conference, but in a different way - perhaps reflected in the name change to Summit (a more business-sounding title).

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Lynne Johnson, with some help from Scott Kirsner, has posted a number of pieces from the Summit, covering social networking, Google, collaboration, video, Lou Reed’s appearance, and more.

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Falguni Buhta filed a trio of pieces from the event:

Red Herring editors also posted a Week in Review piece that summarized some thoughts on the Summit, including the comment: “…John Batelle, publisher of the late, lamented, Industry Standard was most impressive, presiding, once again, over a week of sheer effervescence.”

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Thomas Claburn wrote an article on how “Vendors look for ways to achieve user lock-in in a world of open networks, open source software, and open APIs.”

Among the many buzzwords associated with the Web 2.0 hype, none has quite the cachet as “open.” Yet no idea is more profoundly troubling to the companies trying to build profitable Internet businesses.

“The challenge we have in the Web 2.0 world is to invent new kinds of lock-in,” said Marc Canter, CEO of Broadband Mechanics, speaking at a session of the Web 2.0 Summit on Tuesday.

In an interview with InformationWeek’s Thomas Claburn, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos “dishes the dirt on IT ‘muck,’ talks about selling IT services by the sip, e-commerce, the advantages of VoIP, and why he’s interested in space travel.”

Peter Spande has also blogged some quick thoughts on the Web 2.0 Summit.

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An article from Jefferson Graham:

Yahoo (YHOO) on Thursday previewed a new tool that wraps instant messaging into its hugely popular e-mail program. Launching in early 2007, the feature will enable Yahoo members to see their mail contacts online and instant-message them directly from Yahoo Mail. It “makes e-mail a more social experience,” says Yahoo Senior Vice President Brad Garlinghouse. Yahoo unveiled the tool at the Web 2.0 conference here.

And a blog from Kevin Maney, “What I learned at Web 2.0, Day One.”

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The Summit was “a chance to mingle with giants in tech,” write Elise Ackerman, Constance Loizos and Michelle Quinn:

For the 1,000 people gathered at the third Web 2.0 conference in San Francisco, there was ample opportunity to network, nosh, check out new start-ups and mingle with some of the biggest names in the technology industry.

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Michael Calore has posted this article on one of the Launch Pad sponsors, In the Chair:

In the cacophony of mashups, widgets and collaboration tools demoed at the third annual Web 2.0 Summit here, one rang out as the biggest crowd pleaser: a musical instrument instruction web app with a golden ear and infinite patience.

Michael also blogged some highlights from Kevin Rose’s talk over on Monkey Bites.

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From the Marketplace entry: “A weeklong conference looking at the future of the Internet wraps up today. It’s all about monetizing the Web, Rachel Dornhelm reports.”

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Justin Ewers writes:

Call it the Grand Summit of the Internet Digiterati. Or a geekfest worthy of Star Trek. The Web2.0 conference in San Francisco is an annual gathering of those hardy souls in Silicon Valley-and beyond-who are still hanging on to the notion that the dot-com era wasn’t just a flash in the pan.

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A post from The Post’s Alan Sipress:

Jeffrey P. Bezos, chief executive of Amazon.com Inc., outlined his ambitious strategy for selling online storage and computing power before a crowd of entrepreneurs gathered here Wednesday for the Internet industry’s marquee conference and annual pep rally.

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Editor in chief Harry McCracken has posted several entries:

  • At Web 2.0 Conference
  • I’m sitting in a ballroom at San Francisco’s Palace Hotel, where the Web 2.0 Summit began today. If interesting stuff going on on the Internet has an epicenter, it’s this event.

  • Ray Ozzie at Web 2.0: Vista, Office, Etc.
  • Eventful week for Microsoft–on Monday, it announced that it had released Office 2007 to manufacturing, and today’s it’s saying the same for Windows Vista.

  • Yahoo Mail’s New Built-In Instant Messaging
  • I’m back for the last day of the Web 2.0 Summit, and one of the first sessions this morning spotlights Yahoo.

  • More Web 2.0: Microsoft’s Amazing Photosynth
  • Gary Flake of Microsoft’s Live Labs is onstage demonstrating what is without question the coolest thing I’ve seen so far at Web 2.0: a photo viewer called Photosynth.

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Master podcaster Daniel Steinberg has started to post audio from the Summit, brought to you by the Intel Software Network and Intel Software Partner Program:

  • Lou Reed at Web 2.0
  • Day two of the Web 2.0 Summit 2006 began with conversations with Jeff Bezos and Bruce Chizen followed by a debate on Net Neutrality between Vint Cerf and Robert Pepper. GoDaddy’s Bob Parsons gave the audience advice on running a company. Performer Lou Reed capped off the day with an after dinner set.

  • Launch Pad at Web 2.0
  • Before the start of Web 2.0 Summit 2006, 13 companies announced new products at the Launch Pad. We take a quick look at some of them in this report from the show.

More podcasts of the Summit will be available starting November 15.

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Martin LaMonica writes: Marc Andreessen and Gina Bianchini took the stage at the Web 2.0 Summit here Wednesday to publicly launch Ning.com, which lets people build Web sites for online socializing.

The company has been operating for more than a year, but waited until the conference to reveal details on its product. Bianchini, who is CEO, gave a demonstration in the afternoon after technical glitches marred the first attempt.

She showed that Ning allows people to create socially oriented Web sites without having to write code. People are presented with choices, such as who to share the site with and what kind of look it will have.

Ning has built templates for hosting discussions and sharing music, photos and videos. The site is set up so people can retain their own branding–a logo can appear in a video player, for example.

“What’s different about Ning from other services is that we give you your own video site like YouTube, or social-networking site like MySpace,” she said. “But unlike being a page in somebody else’s service, it’s yours. You get to choose what it’s about.”

In December, Ning plans to launch an upgrade that will let people more easily customize their social-networking sites, she said.

Andreessen, best known as a Netscape co-founder, said Ning is betting that more and more people will want to create social-networking sites of their own. He added that the site is fully programmable by developers.

“Our basic theory is that as people get more sophisticated and used to social networks, they are going to want a lot more flexibility and a lot more customization,” Andreessen said. “We’re making a big bet that there will be a lot more social networks over the next couple of years.”

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Web 2.0 Conference/Summit regular Mike Liedtke writes: Although conditions haven’t returned to the feverish levels of the dot-com boom, the Internet’s business atmosphere is clearly heating up.

The latest symptoms of the escalating exuberance bubbled up this week at an elite gathering called the Web 2.0 Summit — a 3-year-old event billed as a mere conference until the organizers renamed it this year to underscore its exclusive status.

The San Francisco shindig attracted so many movers and shakers that more than 250 Internet entrepreneurs jostled for a chance to show off their Web sites at a 90-minute session devoted to startups. The demand for on-stage presentations more than quadrupled from last year.

An advisory board winnowed this year’s field of applicants to 13 lucky startups who paid $10,000 apiece to take center stage before a packed room of venture capitalists, reporters, bloggers and Internet cognoscenti.

Each demonstration was limited to five minutes, a constraint that required some presenters to wrap things up before they had a chance to show off all their whiz-bang technology.

“It’s a little nerve-racking, but it’s very exciting,” said Nicole Morris, who highlighted 3B.net, a London-based startup that provides tools to construct three-dimensional settings around Web pages.

The audience could have been even bigger. More than 5,000 people wanted to attend this year’s three-day event, but the organizers — O’Reilly Media and CMP Technology — capped the attendance at 1,000.

Seeking to make the most of her opportunity, Morris ended her five-minute pitch by reaching out to venture capitalists — a group of financiers that is becoming more aggressive about pursuing investment opportunities.

Through the first nine months of this year, venture capitalists had invested $455 million in Web startups, more than doubling the amount from the same time last year, according to research firm Dow Jones VentureOne.

Other summit presenters like Palo Alto-based Sharpcast.com, which already has raised more than $13.5 million in venture capital, seemed more interested in creating a buzz that would lure more users to their Web sites.

Still other entrepreneurs on the summit’s stage might have been trying to follow the example of JotSpot and Upstartle, two Silicon Valley startups that presented at Web 2.0’s two previous gatherings. Google Inc., already home to hundreds of millionaire employees, bought both of those companies for undisclosed sums this year.

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David Needle writes: The second day of the Web 2.0 Summit featured some of the Internet’s heaviest hitters talking strategy, new products and how to compete with search king Google, one of several sponsors of the event.

“There is immense opportunity in the core space that they are in that I’m surprised we haven’t branched into,” said Microsoft’s Chief Technical Officer Ray Ozzie.

Ozzie mentioned advances in the refinement of search and making it more contextual as areas ripe for innovation.

But he also ticked off many of Microsoft’s advantages, particularly it’s enormous user base that includes close to a half a billion Office users. “I don’t have to acquire companies, all I have to show is we get it and deliver the value they want to use it.”

He also disputed Google’s belief espoused yesterday by CEO Eric Schmidt, that most software is moving to an online or hosted model.

“I don’t see that it’s the right thing to do, to take the PC functionality and put it up on the Web. I think you have to look at what the Web is really good at like sharing scenarios and getting quickly in and out,” said Ozzie.

“The PC is really, really flexible, with a fast UI regardless of connection speed.” He also said that the PC is a better tool for users to embed emerging data types, including multimedia, that would be limited by bandwidth constraints online.

In an earlier panel, Steve Berkowitz, the Microsoft executive in charge of business development for its online services, said there is plenty of opportunity to compete with Google. That view was echoed by fellow panelist Jim Lanzone, the CEO of Ask.com. (Ironically, Berkowitz is a former CEO of Ask.com).

“So much in search needs to be improved,” said Lanzone. He said Ask.com was broadening its appeal by focusing on improvements to specific search areas, such as images, video and maps.

He also claimed Ask.com’s singular focus on search and easily understood brand helps it compete against portal sites like Yahoo. “If you’re a portal with a 3D this and checkout that, it’s a very jumbled thing to say what the brand stands for.”

Berkowitz said he expects more graphical user interfaces and personalization will make the search experience better.

“A lot will come down to how you enter the Internet,” said Berkowitz. By better understanding its community of users and adding relevant features and links, Berkowitz said Microsoft will be able to keep more of its users from leaving to Google and other sites.

He also conceded Microsoft’s new Live online effort “isn’t where I want it to be.”

He said Microsoft’s goal is to make Live a complete online service that can be readily accessed by a wide range of devices from desktop to mobile and provide more than search, but a range of services. “In the future, search will always be central to the property.”

That Ning Thing

Social networks like MySpace are a huge trend that got plenty of attention at the Web 2.0 Summit. Marc Andreessen, the founder of Netscape, is also co-founder of a new service called Ning, that adds a lot more customization to the social networks.

Gina Bianchini, the other co-founder of Ning, shared the stage with Andreesen and ran through a quick demo, setting up a social Web application in a few minutes.

“We give you the ability to set up your own video site like YouTube, or a site like Facebook, but unlike a page in someone else’s service, it’s yours - you decide the appearance and how to customize it,” said Bianchini. Video, audio and photos can be imported from your computer or other sites.

You can also decide on whether the sites you create will be public or private.

In December, Ning plans to bring an upgrade online that will integrate access to multimedia types from within Ning rather than having to retrieve them from other sites.

“We think Facebook and YouTube are fantastic, but they are one size fits all,” said Andreessen. “It reminds me of AOL and Prodigy in the ’90s. It wasn’t until we had fragmentation, specialization and customization when the Web gained traction.

Andreessen said Ning is making a big bet that “as people get more used to social networking they want more flexibility. It’s a really important step to unlock the creativity people have.”

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Verne at the Chronicle writes: All things Internet were the topic at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco this week, where technology luminaries including Amazon.com CEO Jeff Bezos and Netscape founder Marc Andreessen spoke Wednesday.

And while big names draw crowds, for most attendees this annual meeting of digital media entrepreneurs is an opportunity to keep up to date with the latest in the technology industry, schmooze and strike business deals.

What’s hot is easy to find out. Just listen in on a few conversations and you’re bound to hear ample discussion of Google and its pending acquisition of video-sharing Web site YouTube. MySpace, the popular social networking site, was also a big talker. Startups at the conference are focusing on a wide range of business models, including search, online video and social networking

Bezos’ talk focused not on book-selling, Amazon’s primary business, but the more technical and less known side of the company: offering its data and services to software developers.

Bruce Chizen, chief executive officer of Adobe Systems, the San Jose softwaremaker, talked about the encroaching ambitions of Microsoft in various fields of software, a development that he called flattering. He then thanked Google for releasing products that compete with Microsoft’s software business, such as calendars and a word processor, because, he said, Microsoft is distracted by it.

“I’m thrilled that Google is there, because they are the heat shield,” Chizen said.

Many of the same characters who populated the original dot-com boom are also in evidence at Web 2.0, some in prominent roles.

John Battelle, the program chair, engaged in some playful give-and-take with Morgan Stanley Internet analyst Mary Meeker before her presentation, recalling how he and Meeker had run “Internet Summit” conferences from 1998 to 2001, when Battelle ran the Industry Standard magazine and Meeker was “queen of the Net.”

Tony Perkins, who wrote a book, “The Internet Bubble,” in 1999, moderated a panel. Andreessen, the wunderkind behind the Netscape browser, flogged his new startup, Ning. Kim Polese, who adorned business magazine covers in what’s now called Web 1.0, promoted her new company, SpikeSource, which packages a Web 2.0 software suite for businesses.

Author Kevin Kelly, a former Wired magazine editor, assessed the crowd. “It’s young but not that young,” he said. “All of these people have been through this once or twice. These are people who have been through Web 1.0 and succeeded, failed or something in between. They’re lifers.”

For that crowd, Kelly said, the dot-com crash was better than a master’s degree in business. And now they’re back. “Web 2.0 is the next season,” he said. “They’re entrepreneurial to the bone.”

For all the “Bubble 2.0″ cracks, however, Scott Meyer, CEO of About.com (a division of the New York Times Co.), said, “It’s not Bubble 2.0 because you don’t have companies going public on no revenue. It is all the same people, 10 years older and hopefully a little smarter.”

He said that in Web 1.0, people bragged about how much money they raised and how many people they hired. “In Web 2.0, it’s how little money you raise, how few employees you have and how virtual you can be,” he said.

Mena Trott, president and co-founder of the San Francisco blogging software company Six Apart and a Web 2.0 stalwart, said she noticed a shift in the attendees this year.

“There are more suits here,” she said.

The Web 2.0 Summit, organized by O’Reilly Media of Sebastopol and CMP Technology, ends today after a three-day run at the Sheraton Palace Hotel. The list of speakers also included Eric Schmidt, Google’s chief executive, and Barry Diller, chief executive of IAC/InterActiveCorp. The conference ends with a rare public interview with David Filo, co-founder of Yahoo.

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Eric Auchard has filed another story:

Web telephone-calling company Skype on Wednesday unveiled new software with automatic click-to-call features designed to make shopping easier and that also encourages users to join group conversations…Speaking to an audience of Internet industry insiders at the annual Web 2.0 conference in San Francisco, Zennstrom reiterated that Skype must move to replace communication revenue as phone calls eventually become free.

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The folks at Red Herring have been busy at the Web 2.0 Summit, with six articles so far, including stories on the Barry Diller/Arthur Sulzberger session on old vs. new media, Intel’s announcement of their Web 2.0 Suite, Google’s Eric Schmidt on the YouTube acquisition, the “next” YouTube, the launch of TimeBridge, and how News Corp. got beat by Google in the race to buy YouTube.

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Complete CNET coverage of the Web 2.0 Summit can be found at Spinning the Web 2.0 at conference and their new blog, Webware.com.

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“Levinsohn takes up inside Fox Interactive,” writes Constance Loizos:

Fox Interactive Media — the digital division of News Corp. formed last summer when it acquired the popular Web site MySpace — has mushroomed under President Ross Levinsohn, 43, formerly president of Fox Sports Interactive Media. Today, the unit employs 1,400 people, 60 percent of whom have come to Fox through the seven start-ups acquired since its launch.

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Writes Richard McManus, “The Launchpad at the Web 2.0 Summit is a popular event, the venue is packed. 13 companies have 5 minutes each. Here are some quick impressionistic views of how it went….”

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“The Spirit of Robin Hood Lives On With Opportunity to Make and Grant Wishes At RobinhoodFund.com And On Second Life,” is the headline of the press release issued by sponsor Cambrian House:

Based on tales of the legendary Robin Hood, the fund is the first crowdsourced charity that invites everyday people to make wishes come true. The crowd can submit a wish at RobinhoodFund.com and vote on the wishes that they would like to see come true. The most popular wishes are then granted and receive a collection of funds.

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Two of the Radar team members have posted about Launch Pad Sponsors, Stikkit and oDesk:

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Sponsor Cambrian House Inc. (thanks!) announced the winner of its first IdeaWarz tournament, FundableFilms (known as FilmFunder in the tournament) at the Summit. The press release notes that FundableFilms will connect aspiring film makers with other members of the industry to acquire funding and support. It will now enter the Cambrian House test marketing phase to determine both its overall viability and profit potential.

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Michael Arrington has posted a good overview of yesterday’s Launch Pad:

The annual Web 2.0 Summit kicked off today at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco. The Summit, which has been sold out for months, is noticeably larger than last year and hundreds of people are milling about, seeing and being seen.

The highlight of last year’s conference for me was LaunchPad, where thirteen young startups showed their stuff to the audience. See our coverage from last year here and here. Many of those companies are doing very well. Only one, Pubsub, has entered the TechCrunch DeadPool.

LaunchPad this year was perhaps even more competitive than last year. Over 200 companies applied to present at the conference. Only thirteen were accepted, and each had five minutes to demo their product to the crowd.

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Writes Matt Marshall, “Our favorite event at the Web 2.0 Summit is the Launch Pad, where 13 new start-ups launch and give a five-minute presentation.”

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Dan Farber’s been busy…

Yesterday’s Web 2.0 Summit included a few highlights worth mentioning. Elinor Mills covered Skype co-founder Niklas Zennstrom’s chat with John Heileman, Skype plans to offer bloggers and others the ability to hold audio chats in the next version of it service.

The next version of Skype will enable people to post a link on a blog or Web site that will take people to a public chat room when clicked on, he said during a question-and-answer session during dinner.The live chats would be “Skypecasts,” which Zennstrom described as public conversations or audio conferences that people can moderate. He would not provide a timeline for the features except to say it would be “soon.” Meanwhile, Skype has had conversations with many social-networking sites about offering services that would allow users to “share content with each other in a conversation,” he said.

Zennstrom also briefly touched on two Skype-backed projects, FON and the The Venice Project. “FON could become the largest public Wi-Fi network,” he said, and the Venice Project will take the best of TV and puts it on the Net, not just the short, low-quality video clips. He also said that Skype revenues will be close to $200 million for this year, up from $60 million the previous year.

Martin Lamonica posted about John Battelle’s conversation with Barry Diller of IAC and Arthur Sulzberger, chairman of the New York Times Co. On the subject of user-generated or amateur content, Sulzberger said that the NYT plans to embrace content produced by the masses, but with caution. “We are looking at information gathering by amateurs, if you will, that we trust. Because at the end of the day, we’re putting our name on that work, and finding the right balance is hard work.”

“It doesn’t matter how you present the journalism-paper or electronic. It is the quality of editing and reporting that is important,” Sulzberger said.

Diller came up with his usual memorable comments. He agreed with Sulzberger that “editorship” is not going aways and that “everyone would like to believe that their entrails are of great interest to everybody, but it’s just probably not so.”

Martin also covered a panel that discussed the hurdles standing in the way social networking applications. For businesses, many of the social networking tools are not industrial grade, and for consumers Web users are stuck in silos.

Despite ongoing attempts to establish single sign-on standards, Web surfers typically are not able to log on to several sites at once, such as booking an airline ticket from United Airlines and then renting a car from Hertz.

Marc Canter, the CEO of Broadband Mechanics, wants e