Given the speed with which new blogs are appearing it is imperative to make sure your’s stands out from the crowd, argues Folksonomy.org, which has published it’s own list of seven tips that it says will do the job.
Monthly Archives: October 2006
WetPaint – wiki made easy
WetPaint is a site which offers easy-to-create wikis with a web 2.0 feel about them. Lots of nice community tools built in.
Scrybe – online/offline organiser
Scrybe is an Ajax organiser which, if the YouTube video they posted on their site is to be believe, will be a really useful combination of calendar, todo list, clipping tool and collaborator. You can email to be added to the public beta. (By the way, using YouTube to host your product demo is a really clever idea!)
Reuters in Second Life
Reuters has opened a bureau in Second Life headed by Adam Reuters, real name Adam Pasick, a veteran technology and media journalist. He will be covering the alternative world for the news agency.
Paid by the second
An assisted search start up ChaCha Search has come up with a novel way of paying it’s “guides”.
From Wired: “Workers at ChaCha are experts in specific topics, and they help users of the search tool find information that, presumably, only somebody in the know would be able to uncover. The ChaCha guides earn between $5 and $10 an hour as a starting wage, and any money they earn can be dumped instantly onto a debit card and spent right away. The guides keep track of their earnings on the ChaCha site and can get their earnings by clicking a “Pay Me Now” button on their personalized page.”
Kite power
Wired reports on a new Italian technology which could generate as much electricty from kites as from a nuclear power plant.
HotSoup for debate
HotSoup is a new online community that claims to link up Opinion Drivers both famous (Bill Clinton, Lance Armstrong) and “the roughly 30 million rassroots influencers we know through our communities: friends, neighbors, PTA members, firefighters, homemakers, small business owners, and non-profit directors to name a few”. It’s basically a discussion forum but with (somewhat confusing) bells and whistles.
NY Times gets the video bug
The staid New York Times carried an embedded YouTube Video in a story about the way corporate announcements are made. The main motivation was probably to allow readers to see for themselves the self-congratulatory way founders Chad Hurley and Steve Chen announced to their audience that they had sold out to Google.
Funny Money
Jeff Jarvis quotes the New York Post speculation that in the wake of the YouTube deal Gawker Media is worth $400 million, CraigsList $250 million, and Digg.com $200 million. He dismisses the valuation of Gawker as over-optimistic compared to the others. And he takes a poke at the NYPost; he was going to link to the original page but the Flash made his browser crash. I had a go at finding the piece, but gave up in the wake of so much tabloid online…
MSN’s move into movies
MSN has launched a beta video sharing site called Soapbox on MSN. It is only available to invited beta participants, but you can request an invitation…