Nokia Phones Get Web 2.0

Read about ‘wild sets’ at PCWorld

“WidSets, introduced on Tuesday, is a free offering that users can set up on the WidSets Beta site. On the site, customers can choose from many different widgets that will be displayed on their phones.”

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Web2.0 Directory

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This directory is cataloguing all the new web2.0 companies -great resource.

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Web2.0 drinking game

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We like Web2.0 and dont link drinking (as much as we used to) however we know the whole Web2.0 thing can be very annoying so here’s a game to play when you feel overloaded by the whole subject. LINK

 

Innocent Blog?

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One of our favourite smoothie makers are now blogging - offering an insight into their world through posts on how there will be ‘no massages today‘ because the visiting therapist has put her back out, to the ‘free lunch thursdays‘ they host!
via PSFK

Digg founder dismisses Web 2.0 ‘me tooism’

Digg - yes, tag - no
By Gavin Clarke in San Francisco

Digg founder Kevin Rose urged Web 2.0 wannabes to avoid the temptation of adding “me too” features to their sites.
Rose, whose news-ranking service is home to more than half a million registered users, told delegates at The Future of Web Apps Summit in San Francisco, that they should think before adding the increasingly ubiquitous tags to content, while reiterating his opposition to paying readers to rank stories.

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social networking economist

Social networking Hanging with the in-crowd From The Economist print edition

Big media firms and investors are cosying up to social-networking websites
WEBSITES for social networking have never had so many friends. The best known, MySpace, recently became the most visited website in America. Its acquisition last year by News Corporation, a media giant headed by Rupert Murdoch, for $580m now looks like a masterstroke. Other media groups and investors are crowding around other such websites, which allow people to create their own pages with photos and blogs and make connections with other people. Takeover rumours have been swirling around two smaller sites, Facebook and Bebo. And a group of investors recently put $10m into Friendster, an early example of the genre that is trying to make a comeback. Even Wal-Mart, an American retailing giant, has started a social-networking site, called The Hub—to widespread derision, because it forbids the racy content that users enjoy.

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