Sunday, March 25, 2007

Web 2.0 Networking

Web 2.0 is about Networking and making connections between people, websites, blogs, videos and the like.

It also involves social networking, it creates virtual communities and puts people first. Web 2.0 Networking is the new generation.

Where affiliates are concerned, it is an almost costless way of marketing and promotion. You can promote to communities and network like never before. At this time, there are thousands of affiliates struggling to make their first sale. You may be one of them. Or maybe your earnings fluctuate so much it's hard for you to depend on them to pay the bills. Welcome Web 2.0 Networking.

You are finally about to find out why people claim to make heaps of cash using new free methods like Squidoo, YouTube, and other social networks with millions of prospective customers. It's all about Web 2.0 Networking and takeover... And you can now be an affiliate undercover, raking in unlimited cash day in and day out with Web 2.0 and Networking whilst everyone else is wondering what you are up to...

There is a major difference between an affiliate that just gets by and an affiliate that turns a sale into a lifetime of sales.

Web 2.0 networking is for everyone, and caters to their needs, individuals and businesses to buyers and sellers, and anyone wishing to get themselves noticed.

Let Web 2.0 Networking take you to the next level!


Thanks to Jodi Bennett is an affiliate marketer and online writer. To Find out How To Become an Affiliate Undercover with Web 2.0 Networking: http://www.jodinet.com/clickbank

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Thursday, March 15, 2007

Web 2.0

The bursting of the dot com bubble in the year 2001 was a defining moment in the global web industry. People believed that the web had been given far too much significance than it merited, not withstanding that initial glitches are a common feature of all technological revolutions. The shakeouts in fact mark the beginning of new and innovative technology ready to replace the old and the redundant.

The concept of "Web 2.0" thus began with a conference brainstorming session between O'Reilly and MediaLive International. Dale Dougherty, web pioneer and O'Reilly VP, believed that the web has no lost any importance; in fact with new and exciting applications coming up daily, it was assuming far more significance than it had in the past. The companies that had survived the collapse seemed to have several things in common and the collapse was actually a turning point for the web. In consonance with this theory, they agreed to coin a phrase known as Web 2.0 referring to proposed second generation web based services. They used this term as a title for a series of conferences resulting in the birth of the Web 2.0 Conference. It is hinted to be an upgrade over the World Wide Web and emphasizes online collaboration and sharing among users.

Although, its exact meaning is open to debate, the last and most accepted definition of Web 2.0, according to Tim O'Reilly is: "Web 2.0 is the business revolution in the computer industry caused by the move to the internet as platform, and an attempt to understand the rules for success on that new platform. Chief among those rules is this: Build applications that harness network effects to get better the more people use them.

In their first Web 2.0 Conference, Tim O'Reilly and John Battelle summarized key principles of Web 2.0 applications as follows

The web as a platform for web based services allowing users to use applications through a browser Data as the driving force - users owning and controlling data Network effects created through an architecture of participation and democracy Innovation in assembly of systems and sites is "open source" development Lightweight business models enabled by content and service syndication End of the software adoption cycle Rich, interactive, user friendly interface based on Ajax and other similar frameworks Easy to pick up by early adopters

The complex and evolving technology infrastructure of Web 2.0 and the web based services includes server-software, content-syndication, messaging-protocols, standards-based browsers with plug-ins and extensions, and various client-applications. These differing but complementary approaches provide Web 2.0 with information-storage, creation, and dissemination capabilities that go beyond what the public formerly expected of web-sites.

There still exists huge controversy on the Web 2.0 and the web based services it can offer- where some believe it to be a marketing buzzword others swear by its wisdom. Whatever it might be, the Web 2.0 like several other critical concepts is flexible without a rigid boundary line.


Thanks to William Brister - http://www.businessproguide.com - Web based Services.

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