Yahoo opens Javascript Developer Center

Toni Schneider, who runs the Yahoo Developer Network, just announced the addition of JSON support for various Yahoo APIs and a new Javascript Developer Center. This is designed for people who “eat, sleep and breathe JavaScript” :-0. JSON stands for JavaScript Object Notation. According to the Wikipedia entry, JSON’s simplicity has “resulted in its widespread … Read more

Media plan of the future

Liked this quote from the recent Reuters Media and Advertising Summit in New York: “The media plan of the future will look like the tiles of your bathroom floor … a number of component pieces fitted together very precisely, but lots of pieces,” said David Verklin, chief executive of media buyer Carat Americas. Digging a … Read more

Structured blogging is here

Phil Pearson, Marc Canter and others have been burning the midnight candle getting Structured Blogging up and running. It’s live now and Phil has a round-up of all the action. Structured blogging basically means publishing different kinds of information – like events, reviews and classified ads – in a ‘structured’ format, so that aggregators can … Read more

FeedBurner makes RSS interactive, with FeedFlare

Feedburner has integrated Web services with feeds, in a new product released just now called FeedFlare. I got a sneak preview of FeedFlare and it’s currently activated in my RSS feed. You may have noticed some new active and contextual links at the bottom of each of my posts, in your RSS Aggregator. Things like … Read more

Web 2.0 definitions / Wikipedia idiots

Joshua Porter has written a nice balanced introduction to Web 2.0 on Squidoo. Meanwhile I’m having a running battle with some idiots on the Wikipedia Web 2.0 page. One or more of these clowns keeps deleting any and all references to my websites and articles. Now I know what Dave Winer feels like when he … Read more

Gettin’ techie wit it

I’ve noticed some excellent techie posts lately, so I feel duty-bound to point them out. Phil Pearson, XML expert Kimbro Staken and Movable Type consultant Chad Everett have been working on a Structured Blogging plugin for WordPress and MT. This is to enable ordinary folks (like me) to publish “new microcontent types, support microformats and … Read more

Tis the season for Best Of and Top Ten lists

It’s that time of year when everyone brings out their Best Of 2005 and Top Ten lists. I wrote a post this time last year entitled Best Web 2.0 Companies of 2004. It didn’t get much of a response, because it was well before the Web 2.0 hype kicked in. Over the past couple of … Read more

Yahoo buys del.icio.us – keep it free!

As TechCrunch reported, Joshua Schachter has announced the sale of Del.icio.us to (who else) Yahoo. Personally I’m thrilled Yahoo got del.icio.us, but I’m hoping they don’t make it into a walled garden like they did with the My Web 2.0 product. Currently a user can export their data from del.icio.us, but they can’t do that … Read more

Web 2.0 Weekly Wrap-up, 3 – 9 Dec 2005

Here’s the Top Ten Web 2.0 memes, issues or news stories of the past week, as judged by me. 1. Lightnet: open up your media, the Lightnet revolution is here. Lucas Gonze is leading the charge of the lightnet brigade: “The strength of lightnet is that everybody who’s not a media incumbent wants it, and … Read more

Defining Web as Platform

Fred Wilson has been thinking about the Web as a Platform concept. Like me, Fred sees this phrase as central to understanding the current era of the Web – known as Web 2.0. I liked how he put it: “I believe the web is a platform. And that everything we need for an open ad … Read more

The Great Arrington

The Wall St Journal has a great write-up of Gabe Rivera’s tech.memeorandum, although tragically the WSJ misspelled the link! I also enjoyed the comparison made between Mike Arrington of TechCrunch and The Great Gatsby: “Consider a blog like TechCrunch, which chronicles the new breed of Internet start-ups known as Web 2.0 companies. The blogger behind … Read more

What is lightnet?

Lucas Gonze has been evangelizing a concept called lightnet. He coined the term, based on a recent Alex Barnett post entitled Hypertext and the next 15 years. Check out Lucas’ del.icio.us page full of lightnet links. So what is lightnet? It took me a bit of clicking around to grok it, but basically it’s the … Read more

Page Views per user: RSS blows HTML away

Summary: For my blog, RSS is a much more important content format than HTML these days. In one of my posts, five and a half times more important! Darren Rowse writes that Page Views per user for blogs is on average relatively low – less than 2 pages per visit. After a bit of research … Read more