Imagine an internet as an operating system, made up of cooperating programs, not all owned by the same company, working on an open source platform that is assembled form the work of thousands of the best global programmers… and everything works seamlessly. Read more
Filed Under:
Semantic WebTagged:
cloud computing,
open source,
Semantic Web,
silos,
tim o'reilly,
Web 2.0 and Beyond
Internet Evolution 3.0
How People, Machines and the Internet will soon Create Content Instantly
The internet is evolving into a ubiquitous web that connects through semantic intelligence. As we have journeyed in the last decade from Web 1.0, the connection of base information into Web 2.0, the Social web that connects people and information, we are currently right in the middle of witnessing major technological and social evolution through the emergence of Web 3.0, where internet communities, people, computers and enterprise will be able to speak the same languages beyond programming silos and communicate through information, media and intelligent thought, and create NEW ideas from this information instantly. Essentially, the Web is becoming intelligence capable of learning as humans do.
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Filed Under:
Semantic WebTagged:
Semantic Web,
Web 2.0 and Beyond,
web 3.0

I just ran across this on Mashable and decided to share the post with you via Flock.
My thoughts are that it’s interesting how MySpace is declining in unique audience, although people are spending a lot MORE time on the site overall. Why? Well, as someone who has a MySpace network that has reached the up side of huge, and given that many of my “friends” are actually REAL friends on there that I physically friended, (as in met in person and know), and as such requiring things like occasional posting, chatting and updates or I start to get hoards of “Where are you???” email…… I can understand why people are spending more time on MySpace when they do get up the courage to go there and deal with the upkeep. Read more
Filed Under:
Social NetworkingTagged:
Facebook,
hot,
MySpace,
social mash,
Social Networking,
stats,
Web 2.0 and Beyond
With Web 2.0 blogging becoming the mainstream news network, once again we are facing questions about who is considered a “journalist” or “professional” writer, and given the same access to sporting and press conference venues.The news item below about bloggers being banned from the Mavericks locker room caught my eye because as bloggers I feel we are a
unique breed of reporter that is on the
edge of the web 2.0 revolution, and not yet fully credentialed by more traditional “press” corps… Or are we?
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Filed Under:
Social Networking,
TechnologyTagged:
blog,
bloggers,
Blogging,
journalism,
journalists,
MarkCuban,
reporting,
Social Networking,
Technology,
TGTV,
Web 2.0 and Beyond,
Wiki