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Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud. We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
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Web 2.0 Needs a "Confusion Solution"
"Web 2.0 has the capacity to astonish and engage. It also has the capacity to confuse."

Web 2.0 has the capacity to astonish and engage. It also has the capacity to confuse. So those of us who feel they have a duty of care toward Web 2.0 had better move fast. We need a "Confusion Solution."

The latest person to highlight the precariousness of public understanding of Web 2.0 is one of the absolute pioneers of a richer web, Nexaweb's founder and CTO, Coach Wei. Wei's concern centers on the common misapprehension that Web 2.0 is solely a consumer phenomenon - MySpace, Flickr, Flock, YouTube, etc - instead of realizing that, as Wei puts it, "Web 2.0 can fundamentally impact core enterprise IT operations in a way that can only be matched by the shift from mainframe computing to client/server computing" [my emphasis].

Andrew McAfee, a Harvard Business school professor, in fact takes it a whole stage further. So adamant is he that there is something very significant going on here that he coined the now-widespread term "Enterprise 2.0," which he defined as "the use of emergent social software platforms within companies, or between companies and their partners or customers."

McAfee contradistinguishes Enterprise 2.0 applications and sites from Wikipedia, YouTube, Flickr, MySpace, etc., which are for individuals on the Web, not companies, and he excludes most corporate Intranets today on the basis that they're not emergent. He then adduces examples of what he *does* consider to be Enterprise Web 2.0:

  • DrKW's internal blogs and wikis
  • Rite Solutions' prediction markets
  • Enterprise tagging
  • R&D departments' use of Innocentive to find solutions to problems that have been stumping them.
  • MK Taxi's ability to connect mobile phone users in Tokyo directly to the driver of the cab closest to them, bypassing the dispatch center altogether.
  • Employee blogs like this one [http://blog.hbs.edu/faculty/amcafee/index.php/faculty_amcafee_v3/]
  • The existence of well-defined sub-areas however doesn't necessarily make it any easier for people to understand the uber-category of Web 2.0 itself. Accordingly Coach Wei says he will try illuminate the topic--and when one of the brightest minds anywhere in the blogosphere commits to luminosity, be sure to bookmark his blog. Wei started his Next-Generation Web company (named Nexaweb for exactly that reason) as long ago as six years ago, providing software for building enterprise web 2.0 solutions because he was convinced that Web 1.0 had a lot of limitations and that the world would need the next-generation version.

    "Despite that Nexaweb has been quietly deployed at over 5,000 enterprises," Wei notes, "I did not hear a single customer inquiry about 'Web 2.0'  between 2000 and 2004."

    Which is hardly, if you think about it, surprising. Only when a word or phrase has, so to speak "nailed down" an idea can a customer inquire about it. "Web 2.0" turns out to be that phrase.

    Col. Tom Parker - he of Elvis fame - declared "Don't explain it -- just sell it" but the enterprise IT world works differently. If we can't explain it, how can we possbly justify being so enthusiastic about it and energized by it?

    Einstein, as usual, said it best: "If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough."

    About Jeremy Geelan
    Jeremy Geelan is President & COO of Cloud Expo, Inc. and Conference Chair of the worldwide Cloud Expo series. He appears regularly at conferences and trade shows, speaking to technology audiences both in North America and overseas. He is executive producer and presenter of Cloud Expo's "Power Panels" on SYS-CON.TV.

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    Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1

    I've had a number of conversations with technologists, analysts and product managers over the last few months to really understand what Web 2.0 for the Enterprise means to them.

    To sum up what I think Web 2.0 means for the Enterprise: it's all about turning users into participants allowing them to easily create, share and connect with information, applications and people. That's it.

    As we know by now, Web 2.0 web application's interfaces have their peculiar style defined by reflections, fades, drop-shadows, strong colors, rounded corners and star badges, these standing out in the header of every homepage.

    Badges are the key element of this kind of design, being the first to flash user eyes, and so extremely important for the right communication of a message with fundamental importance.

    Onlywire is a web-based social bookmarking tool. It allows you to format your bookmark once and submit it to the 15 most popular social bookmarking websites in one shot! Talk about a timesaver!


    Your Feedback
    Arpan Shah wrote: I've had a number of conversations with technologists, analysts and product managers over the last few months to really understand what Web 2.0 for the Enterprise means to them. To sum up what I think Web 2.0 means for the Enterprise: it's all about turning users into participants allowing them to easily create, share and connect with information, applications and people. That's it.
    meier wrote: As we know by now, Web 2.0 web application's interfaces have their peculiar style defined by reflections, fades, drop-shadows, strong colors, rounded corners and star badges, these standing out in the header of every homepage. Badges are the key element of this kind of design, being the first to flash user eyes, and so extremely important for the right communication of a message with fundamental importance.
    Onlywire wrote: Onlywire is a web-based social bookmarking tool. It allows you to format your bookmark once and submit it to the 15 most popular social bookmarking websites in one shot! Talk about a timesaver!
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