A couple of weeks ago Michael Arrington got together with a number of startup CEOs and executives to video a discussion about Web 2.0. Participating in the discussion were Aaron Cohen (Bolt), Scott...
A couple of weeks ago Michael Arrington got together with a number of startup CEOs and executives to video a discussion about Web 2.0. Participating in the discussion were Aaron Cohen (Bolt), Scott Milener and Steven Lurie (Browster), Keith Teare (edgeio), Steven Marder (Eurekster), Joe Kraus (JotSpot), Jeremy Verba (Piczo), Auren Hoffman (Rapleaf), Chris Alden (Rojo), Gautam Godhwani (Simply Hired), Jonathan Abrams (Socializr), David Sifry (Technorati), Matt Sanchez (Video Egg) and Michael Tanne (Wink).
The topics discussed included:
What is Web 2.0? Are we in a bubble? What are the business models that will work on the web today? What is the role of publishers in a user generated world? How important and how big is the early adopter crowd?
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Because a lot of these websites get millions of visitors but have no way of making money. The websites are still online because venture capitalists invest millions of dollars in them but many people think that once they run out of VC money, they will all shut down. Google is the only company so far that was extremely successful at making money from free services.
nothing wrong with the current web. the web bubble burst was cause of moron investers treating the online world like the real one with solid stocks, and it didnt work. the web is communication, and thats pricless
ebay did fine, so did many other online companies that used the net properly.
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Autoshare makes certain YouTube activities public on the services you choose. Select only the services you are comfortable with - like Facebook, Twitter, or Google Reader - to let your friends know what you like on YouTube. You can turn Autoshare off at any time.
the web bubble burst was cause of moron investers treating the online world like the real one with solid stocks, and it didnt work.
the web is communication, and thats pricless
ebay did fine, so did many other online companies that used the net properly.