Web 2.0: From the Primordial Ooze, Who gets to define the data rules!
Here I am with some legendary bloggers who know each other very well, Steve Gillmor (check out Steve Gilmor's interview with Dan Farber and post here - a piece of blogging artistry contextulizing some of the key threads of Web 2.0 Summit), Dan Farber, Gabe Rivera, and Michael Arrington.
OMG! I am not sure if I can blog the inside story of the Web 2.0 Summit Media Center entirely. But suffice to say I learned a lot about Web 2.0 in a few hours there.
I'll say it again! From the primordial ooze, who gets to define the data rules!
Of course, part of the magic of Web 2.0 is that Wikipedia's collectively generated content ranks top in Google. But I got a first hand look at how super star bloggers conjure up page rank and influence when they hit post. Oh, just in case you were wondering, we are checking out whose post on John Battelle's interview with Jerry Yang, CEO, Yahoo came out top in Google.
Not mine, of course! I am still working on my Web 2.0 Summit posts - oh well that is one problem with writing 5000 word articles. But, I take heart, Steve Gilmor said to me 1000 word posts, at least, are the way things are going in blogging these days. Was he pulling my leg?
And, the picture was snapped with exquisite timing by the artist/super star blogger Brian Solis' Flickr, www.briansolis.com, bub.blicio.us


