12 month ago
plasticbag : 'The Web 2.0 Grail' is a water bottle that Tim O'Reilly drank from at Web 2.0 Berlin, as put on ebay by 'Mister Wong' for for some reason (I'm guessing clumsy PR)... - It's actually ridiculous enough to be funny, particularly because you just know that Tim would be completely mortified by the idea. Only useful if you want to build up your O'Reilly DNA repository, I would guess.
# copy
15 month ago
plasticbag : A relatively old interview with Tim O'Reilly from Wired News declares Web 2.0 is about ownership of data.. - The only slight proviso I'd make is that it's about access to or ownership of data. One of the main interesting territories in social media is how to work with your audience to create a repository of value to everyone. Good piece though.
# copy
22 month ago
plasticbag : Nicholas Carr's written another one of those posts in which you sort of sit there and look at the world and its changes and you sort of heave your shoulders and sigh - I feel guilty for getting stroppy with the chap, but's I can't help thinking that being British, watching the culture calmly and dropping the odd comment that indicates your resistant to change is a very good way to look intelligent without the hard work
# copy29 month ago
merlinmann : O'Reilly Radar > Email to Blog Etiquette ["Why do you tolerate the Dingle spin and not fight back with facts?"] - Always kills me when people just start posting comments on sites that _sound_ like what they want. What must the world look like to folks like poor Don?
# copy
38 month ago
jkottke : On the future - Time magazine asks Moby, Malcolm Gladwell, Tim O'Reilly, Clay Shirky, David Brooks, Mark Dery, and Esther Dyson about their views on the future: religion, culture, politics, etc. Gladwell: "If I had to name a single thing that has transformed our life, I
philgyford : TIME.com Print Page: TIME Magazine -- The Road Ahead - A handful of celebs-in-the-weblog-world talk about the future. (via Kottke)
# copy