The good news? The Web has become mainstream. The bad news? The Web has become mainstream! As the Web moves closer to the center of our businesses and our lives, it's important to step back and consider what isn't yet anywhere near the center. What areas haven't yet been discovered by the masses? What's happening at the Web's edge-and how might it redefine the mainstream?
In this special issue of Release 2.0, we look at the state of web operations, examine early signals of where it's going, and present the industry's best practices and most interesting players. Also available as a stand-alone O'Reilly Radar research report, this issue is a complement to O'Reilly's inaugural Velocity conference for web performance and operations.
The mobile phone is fast becoming the 'PC of the developing world.' For the vast majority of the world's poor the mobile phone has made it convenient to send and receive money, pay bills, and enjoy other services once limited to people with bank and debit card accounts.
The Geospatial Web (aka the GeoWeb) is a rapidly evolving Web 2.0 market of innovative data and software applications--including location-based services, social software, and even augmented reality--for both the web and mobile devices. Propelled by the new location-aware iPhone, the GeoWeb is hurtling into the mainstream. This special issue lays out the new generation of geo products and services, identify the major players, and show how your business can leverage the power of Where 2.0.
Customer Relationship Management systems are changing in response to the possibilities (and competition) offered by Web 2.0 technologies and even that old standby, email. The quest to harness--and make truly useful--the firehose of information about people, relationships, and activity is entering a new era.
Big Data: when the size and performance requirements for data management become significant design and decision factors for implementing a data management and analysis system. For some organizations, facing hundreds of gigabytes of data for the first time may trigger a need to reconsider data management options. For others, it may take tens or hundreds of terabytes before data size becomes a significant consideration,
A year after Release 2.0 first looked at what financial markets and web markets have to teach one another, it can seem like the two groups are still talking past each other. But we're seeing early signs of how Wall Street and Web 2.0 can work together-and deepening evidence that the two may become inextricable.
An astute observer can note the faint signals of the coming future, extrapolate from them, and begin to divine the business implications." Tim O'Reilly In this inagural issue of Release 2.0, we hope to begin to give you insight into what the alpha geeks are doing today that will be crucial to your business two or more years from now. Who has begun to understand the new rules of business, the unexpected transformations of leverage that will create new winners and losers? What are those rules? And whether you're an entrepreneur, an investor, or a corporate technology strategist, how can you apply them to create value for your business? Topics in this issue include: A Simple Story - What if Web 2.0 stopped being a buzzterm and started making sense? People or Computers - Data is at the core of Web 2.0. Now let's argue about the best way to capture it. More. better. Now! - Continuous iterative development is one of the mantras of Web 2.0, but its influence goes way beyond. One Person Per Blog - It's a joke, it's not quite true, and those who believe it are missing an opportunity. The Canon: A Look at Designing Interactions, by Bill Moggridge, MIT Press
What makes the net great us also precisely what makes it so dangerous. The virtual world is becoming so similar to the real one that some think the overt laws, or at least agreed-upon rules, may be necessary for the Net to survive in its current open form. If the internet can be ruined by everything from criminals to overzealous politicians responding to those criminals, then how can it be saved? We explore this issue in Release 2.0: Issue 3. Other topics in this issue: Listening to Lawrence Lessig - The man who started it all considers hard, thinks hard, and worries hard - about what code and the law can do. Open APIs Aren't Open Source - Six lessons for developers From Audience to Producer - It may not be news to you, but it's news to someone. Ambiguity is a Feature, Not a Bug - A new way to think about code
Web 2.0 and financial markets have a lot in common. Both are highly networked information markets driven by collective intelligence. Both have a lot of money at stake. But financial markets have been around a lot longer and are much bigger and more mature, so they might give us insight into possible futures for the Web 2.0 economy. And when you look closer, you can see that Wall Street is learning from Web 2.0, too. We've barely begun studying the implications of this analogy and the crosstalk between these two marketplaces, but we've already uncovered so much of value that we decided to share what we've learned so far in order to start a broader conversation. Other topics in the 2nd issue of Release 2.0: Channeling Crowds: Why the merger of social networking and prediction markets will launch a new category of tech startups. Open Data: From the Webcam to the Brokerage - Exhibitionism and Wall Street, it turns out, have a lot in common. Counting on Second Life - Behind the hype and argument there are real numbers to tell us who's in the virtual world and what they're doing. The Canon: We take a look at Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art, by Scott McCloud, HarperPerennial Publishers.
In this special issue of Release 2.0, we look at the state of web operations, examine early signals of where it's going, and present the industry's best practices and most interesting players. Also available as a stand-alone O'Reilly Radar research report, this issue is a complement to O'Reilly's inaugural Velocity conference for web performance and operations.
A year after Release 2.0 first looked at what financial markets and web markets have to teach one another, it can seem like the two groups are still talking past each other. But we're seeing early signs of how Wall Street and Web 2.0 can work together-and deepening evidence that the two may become inextricable.
What makes the net great us also precisely what makes it so dangerous. The virtual world is becoming so similar to the real one that some think the overt laws, or at least agreed-upon rules, may be necessary for the Net to survive in its current open form. If the internet can be ruined by everything from criminals to overzealous politicians responding to those criminals, then how can it be saved? We explore this issue in Release 2.0: Issue 3. Other topics in this issue: Listening to Lawrence Lessig - The man who started it all considers hard, thinks hard, and worries hard - about what code and the law can do. Open APIs Aren't Open Source - Six lessons for developers From Audience to Producer - It may not be news to you, but it's news to someone. Ambiguity is a Feature, Not a Bug - A new way to think about code
Web 2.0 and financial markets have a lot in common. Both are highly networked information markets driven by collective intelligence. Both have a lot of money at stake. But financial markets have been around a lot longer and are much bigger and more mature, so they might give us insight into possible futures for the Web 2.0 economy. And when you look closer, you can see that Wall Street is learning from Web 2.0, too. We've barely begun studying the implications of this analogy and the crosstalk between these two marketplaces, but we've already uncovered so much of value that we decided to share what we've learned so far in order to start a broader conversation. Other topics in the 2nd issue of Release 2.0: Channeling Crowds: Why the merger of social networking and prediction markets will launch a new category of tech startups. Open Data: From the Webcam to the Brokerage - Exhibitionism and Wall Street, it turns out, have a lot in common. Counting on Second Life - Behind the hype and argument there are real numbers to tell us who's in the virtual world and what they're doing. The Canon: We take a look at Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art, by Scott McCloud, HarperPerennial Publishers.
An astute observer can note the faint signals of the coming future, extrapolate from them, and begin to divine the business implications." Tim O'Reilly In this inagural issue of Release 2.0, we hope to begin to give you insight into what the alpha geeks are doing today that will be crucial to your business two or more years from now. Who has begun to understand the new rules of business, the unexpected transformations of leverage that will create new winners and losers? What are those rules? And whether you're an entrepreneur, an investor, or a corporate technology strategist, how can you apply them to create value for your business? Topics in this issue include: A Simple Story - What if Web 2.0 stopped being a buzzterm and started making sense? People or Computers - Data is at the core of Web 2.0. Now let's argue about the best way to capture it. More. better. Now! - Continuous iterative development is one of the mantras of Web 2.0, but its influence goes way beyond. One Person Per Blog - It's a joke, it's not quite true, and those who believe it are missing an opportunity. The Canon: A Look at Designing Interactions, by Bill Moggridge, MIT Press
The good news? The Web has become mainstream. The bad news? The Web has become mainstream! As the Web moves closer to the center of our businesses and our lives, it's important to step back and consider what isn't yet anywhere near the center. What areas haven't yet been discovered by the masses? What's happening at the Web's edge-and how might it redefine the mainstream?
Customer Relationship Management systems are changing in response to the possibilities (and competition) offered by Web 2.0 technologies and even that old standby, email. The quest to harness--and make truly useful--the firehose of information about people, relationships, and activity is entering a new era.
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