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[IP] more on Six Things you need to know about Bubble 2.0





Begin forwarded message:

From: Tim O'Reilly <tim@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: October 14, 2005 5:34:56 PM EDT
To: dave@xxxxxxxxxx
Cc: Dewayne Hendricks <dewayne@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [IP] Six Things you need to know about Bubble 2.0



On Oct 13, 2005, at 6:27 AM, David Farber wrote:

Dave, while I agree that the chatter in and around our Web 2.0 conference definitely has had some frothiness in it, and some of the folks that Orlowski skewers in the piece below may be waxing too lyrical, this is yellow journalismi: find the outliers, and attack them to make a point. Even though the points that he makes about closed networks are good, he unnecessarily trashes the idea of "Web 2.0" without ever giving an accurate rendition of how those of us who find it a useful concept are thinking about it.

I wrote a long essay just before the Web 2.0 conference, entitled "What is Web 2.0?" It's available at:

http://www.oreilly.com/go/web2

I'm happy to engage in a debate about the ideas in the piece, but I hate to see it dismissed by innuendo.



Begin forwarded message:

From: Dewayne Hendricks <dewayne@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: October 12, 2005 9:40:21 PM EDT
Subject: [Dewayne-Net] Six Things you need to know about Bubble 2.0


Original URL: <http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/10/07/ six_things_about_the_bubble/>

Six Things you need to know about Bubble 2.0

By Andrew Orlowski in San Francisco (andrew.orlowski at theregister.co.uk)
Published Friday 7th October 2005 02:38 GMT
Web 2.0 Techno utopian types love their earthy metaphors. The web is a new planet that's being "terraformed (http://www.google.com/ search?q=terraforming+site%3Adoc.weblogs.com&btnG=Search)" before our eyes, one advertising consultant (http://www.searls.com/ srlzgrp.html) likes to say. Or the "web is a garden (http:// www.theregister.co.uk/2005/05/07/glenn_edens_profile/)", if you believe Sun Microsystem's director of research.

Even my overgrown garden doesn't have something like this (http:// www.theregister.co.uk/2005/09/26/baghdad_smut_and_pain/) lurking in the corner, and I hope there isn't such a horror in yours.

But enough with the hot-tub psycho babble. The future of computer networks is both a lot more promising and a lot more ominous than anything you'll hear at the "Web 2.0" conference in San Francisco this week, where some of the web's horticulturists will be gathering for an evangelical uplift.



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Tim O'Reilly, Founder & CEO, O'Reilly Media,
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