For those who think that one weakness of the Newsweek piece is its title, MSNBC has come to the rescue by repurposing it under the - in my view, far sharper- title 'The New Wisdom of the Web.' This is a much more powerful rallying cry and I, for one, should have much preferred to see it used as Newsweek's front-cover headline, but such is the way of the world. Maybe the editors at MSNBC 'get it' better than those at Newsweek.
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#3
news desk commented on 29 Jul 2006
For those who think that one weakness of the Newsweek piece is its title, MSNBC has come to the rescue by repurposing it under the - in my view, far sharper- title 'The New Wisdom of the Web.' This is a much more powerful rallying cry and I, for one, should have much preferred to see it used as Newsweek's front-cover headline, but such is the way of the world. Maybe the editors at MSNBC 'get it' better than those at Newsweek.
It appears that Web + Video, which is now the hottest development, it is no more Web2.0. It is more similar to a merge of Internet and TV, the Web3.0, than to some stage in development of the Web itself.
#1
AJAX News Desk commented on 3 May 2006
When newsstands throughout America on Monday, March 27, started displaying the April 3 issue of Newsweek with its cover story about 'Web 2.0' - 'Putting the 'We' in Web' - it seems to me that we have reached one of Malcolm Gladwell's now-famous Tipping Points.
John Portnov wrote: This code does not work for me. I created a new website and a C# console application in VS.NET 2005. HttpWebResponse res = (HttpWebResponse)req.GetResponse(); throws a 500 error. Also, viewstate = HttpUtility.UrlEncod...