Web 2.0 may be an elusive concept, but one thing is certain: using
the Web as merely a means of retrieving and displaying information
is history. Today?s Web is immediate, interactive, innovative. It
is user-controlled and community-driven. Organizations, marketers,
application developers, and communicators must be ready to respond
and to innovate or be left behind, and the experts featured on
these pages are leading the charge. Their ideas are fresh,
sometimes experimental, necessarily flexible, and always on the
leading edge to prepare you for a Web where users rule.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Acknowledgments.
Introduction.
1 Max Mancini:e Bay.
2 Alan Meckler: Internet.com.
3 Eric Engleman: Bloglines.
4 Gina Bianchini: Ning.
5 Dorion Carroll: Technorati.
6 Raju Vegesna:Zoho.
7 Richard Mac Manus: Read/Write Web & Web 2.0 Workgroup.
8 TJ Kang:Think Free.
9 Patrick Crane: Linked In.
10 Shaun Walker: Dot Net Nuke.
11 Biz Stone:Twitter.
12 Seth Sternberg: Meebo.
13 Joshua Schachter: del.icio.us.
14 Ranjith Kumaran: You Send It.
15 Garrett Camp: Stumble Upon.
16 Rodrigo Madanes:Skype.
17 Rod Smith: IBM Corporation.
18 Tim Harris: Microsoft Corporation.
19 Bob Brewin & Tim Bray: Sun Microsystems.
20 Michele Turner:Adobe Systems Incorporated.
Index.
Sobre o autor
Bradley L. Jones manages various high-profile sites for Jupitermedia (internet.com) that focus on making technical information easy to understand and easy to learn. He oversees a dozen sites including Developer.com, Dev X, Gamelan.com, VBForums, j Guru, and Java Boutique. In addition, he writes a weekly e-newsletter and numerous articles devoted to helping readers understand complex topics. He is an internationally bestselling author with a number of books to his credit, and has been recognized as an influencer in the technical community.