WEB 2.0 EXPO LOCATIONS:   SAN FRANCISCO  •   NEW YORK      |     WEB 2.0 SUMMIT

Archive for the 'News' Category

Kaitlin Pike

Attention Web 2.0 Expo and Web 2.0 Summit veterans: We’re adding some benefits this year, just for you, including an alum-only lounge with power outlets and a special lunch with Tim O’Reilly and other Web 2.0 VIPs.

We’ve been around for four years now and know that we wouldn’t have made it without you supporting us.

So if you’re a paid conference attendee in 2010, and you’ve been an attendee at any previous Web 2.0 Expo or Web 2.0 Summit event, you’ll automatically receive the following benefits:

  • Invitation to a special lunch on Thursday, May 6 with Tim O’Reilly and other key Web 2.0 figures
  • Access to our Alumni Lounge, featuring power, Internet, all-day coffee, and light am/pm snacks. The Alumni Lounge will be open Tuesday - Thursday.
  • Free O’Reilly book (you will be able to choose one of the following titles: The Social Media Marketing Book, The New Community Rules or Facebook: The Missing Manual, 2E)
  • 40% off on all O’Reilly print and ebooks on oreilly.com (offer valid 4/26/10 - 5/14/10)
  • Special designation on your conference badge

There is no need to formally sign up for the Alumni program; we’ll automatically flag you in our system and send you more details about how to take advantage of these benefits as the event gets closer. This is just our way of saying thanks for your continued support of Web 2.0 Expo and the Web 2.0 community.

See you in May!

~~

Kaitlin Pike is the Community Manager of Web 2.0 Expo. She can be reached @w2e or @kcpike.

Janetti Chon

Hi Web 2.0-ers. I hope you’ve had a nice summer. Today marks the start of September, which to me signifies the start of the fall conference season, and what a season it’ll be.

The teams at O’Reilly Media and TechWeb have been diligently programming and producing these past two months – preparing for the second Web 2.0 Expo New York this November – and launching Gov 2 Summit & Showcase in a few short weeks, held in Washington D.C.

Gov 2.0 Summit: The Platform for Change. Over the past fifteen years, the rise of the World Wide Web has resulted in remarkable new possibilities and business models reshaping our culture and our economy. Now the time has come to reshape government. Gov 2 is chaired by Tim O’Reilly and Richard O’Neil (The Highlands Group), alongside an intelligent program committee – read on to see the speaker lineup or schedule.

Web 2.0 Expo New York. The Power of Less. Constraints drive creativity, whether in business models, design paradigms, or platforms. The power of the small screen, the thin client, the streamlined interface. The power of small teams, or even going solo. The paradox of power: sometimes the best way to gain power is to give it away, which is why during these challenging times, we are learning that nothing builds brands like a nurtured community. The power of data: of data-centric business models, and the power of data to inform our decisions and to focus us on what matters. The power of less is the power of creative destruction. It’s the power to change the world. See how to participate here!

And in between the two we’ll manage to host our fifth Web 2 Summit this Oct 20-22, an event I’m particularly proud to announce as this year I have the pleasure of working with program chair John Battelle to help it come to life. He just published the speaker line up and festivities. Exciting stuff!

Headliners I’m particularly interested in hearing is U.S. Chief Technology Officer Aneesh Chopra - the man in charge of our $150 billion R&D budget; Steve Schneider - Program Director at WestEd who is establishing the first-ever standard for technology literacy across the U.S. (by 2012); Cynthia Warner – president of a biofuel company that just might have the answer to… well, energy – and Austan Goolsbee - Chief Economist for President Obama. He bantered well with Jon Stewart on the Daily Show, keen to see hear his opinions live on stage in front of a roomful of peers. Oh, and last but not least, eager to feed the little hungry geek that lives inside me with the info from Brady Forrest’s ‘Human Sensors Discussion’ – oh, that’ll be good.

In general, there are lots of things that impress me about a conference –

  • its intelligence
  • its ability to connect peoples, ideas, communities
  • its momentary existence (because no two conferences are ever alike)
  • its seamless execution (at least when event director Meghan Reilly is at the helm)
  • its energy

And I’m really looking forward to experiencing all of that at Summit this fall. Earlier in the year Tim [O’Reilly] and John established the theme #WebSquared – an extension of 2008’s Web Meets World philosophy – and the schedule we’ll be announcing this week is comprehensive and relevant to the issues we are facing as a society today.

From Tim & John -

In our first program, we asked why some companies survived the dotcom bust, while others had failed so miserably. We also studied a burgeoning group of startups and asked why they were growing so quickly. The answers helped us understand the rules of business on this new platform.

Chief among our insights was that “the network as platform” means far more than just offering old applications via the network (”software as a service”); it means building applications that literally get better the more people use them, harnessing network effects not only to acquire users, but also to learn from them and build on their contributions.

Today, we realize that these insights were not only directionally right, but are being applied in areas we only imagined in 2004. The smartphone revolution has moved the Web from our desks to our pockets. Collective intelligence applications are no longer being driven solely by humans typing on keyboards but, increasingly, by sensors. Our phones and cameras are being turned into eyes and ears for applications; motion and location sensors tell where we are, what we’re looking at, and how fast we’re moving. Data is being collected, presented, and acted upon in real time. The scale of participation has increased by orders of magnitude.

Today, the exponential growth of Web has made its technologies service as the backbone of our everyday lives. If you want to discover more on the topic – download the whitepaper, and share your opinion on the Web Squared.

So there you go. That’s the reason we’ve all been so quiet here… there is a lot going on and we want you to explore and enjoy these live events. But if you can’t be with us in person, as always, you can catch the keynotes and recorded content on the various Blip.tv channels. There is currently only archived content, 2009 videos will get posted to these channels within a week of the event.

Stay tuned for more conference information and community announcements. Once again, let the games begin!

~ ~ ~

Note: Janetti Chon is now Web 2 Summit’s Producer at Battellemedia, a partner of O’Reilly Media & TechWeb.

Janetti Chon

Max Gladwell of the Huffington Post wrote an interesting article today titled: 10 Ways to Change the World Through Social Media

For most of us, social media has changed our lives in some meaningful way. Collectively it is changing the world for good.

He showcases a list of 10 non-profits including SalaamGarage, an organization that leads trips that combine cultural immersion travel with citizen journalism collaborating with NGOs around the world.

The idea is that social media has enabled each of us to have an audience. Whether through Twitter, Flickr, YouTube, or a personal blog, each of us can have influence and reach. What’s more, it can be used for good. SalaamGarage coordinates trips for citizen journalists (that means you) to places like India and Vietnam in conjunction with non-government organizations like Seattle-based Peace Trees. The destination is the story, as these humanitarian journalists report on the people they meet and discoveries they make. Their words, images, and video are posted to the social web to gain exposure and because these stories just need to be told.

Gladwell notes that “this is not a top-10 list, nor are these listed in any particular order. It’s also incomplete.” Please contribute to the conversation by posting a comment to his article and use #10ways in your tweets.

I highlight SalaamGarage because founder Amanda Kostner presented a keynote in our most recent Web 2.0 Expo San Francisco, which you can view here.

Janetti Chon

ReadWriteWeb just released premium reports for businesses.

I was asked to be an early reviewer and got quoted in the report and in their announcement. Aw shucks… Very cool!

guideimage1

It’s hard not to get excited about this when I know how excited editor Marshall Kirkpatrick is about the launch!

And the reality is that there is so much interest in community-building for businesses that it’s the right time for this type of report to surface.

The first 75 pages are a collection of case studies and testimonials – and as Sameer Patel (Pretzel Logic) wrote in his blog post, one can struggle “with the idea of buying a premium report that was largely peppered with quotes from articles that I’ve read before…” but what Marshall has provided is an in-depth and intelligent collection of the most salient, relevant and helpful quotes – scoured from across the interwebs, and from those at the forefront of community management.

Sameer proceeds to present an in-depth review of why the report is valuable to Enterprise businesses so do read on

You can download a free sample section of the report here.

Janetti Chon

iPhone or Blackberry?

Google or Yahoo?

X-Files or X-Prize?

Little green men, or microorganisms?

Intelligent Design?

Crowdsourcing?

Global warming?

E = mc2

Web 2.0?

FORA.tv?

Janetti Chon

Reposted from O’Reilly Radar. Author: Brady Forrest

ignite-main-logoIgnite is coming back to San Francisco. On April First, the second night of the Web 2.0 Expo, conference co-chair Brady Forrest will be hosting an Ignite at the Mezzanine (just four short blocks away from Moscone). As with all Ignites each speaker will only get 20 slides that each auto-advance every 15 seconds for a total of five minutes. Folks with a Web 2.0 Expo Badge will get priority entrance, but we’ll open the doors to everyone before the talks start. Ignite is free.

The schedule for the evening will be:

7:30 - Doors Open; Entry is for anyone with Conference or Expo Plus Pass holders
8:15 - Entry for Anyone
8:30 - First Set of Speakers

  • Danny O’Brien (EFF) Don’t Push Me Cos I’m Close To The Edge
  • Raven Hanna (MadeWithMolecules)- Science of Love
  • Thor Muller (GetSatisfaction) - We’re all Collapsitarians Now!
  • Veronica Belmont (Tekzilla) - Make Your Business a Meme
  • Michael Galpert (Aviary) - Images on the internets may appear realer than they are
  • Aaron Rowe (Wired Science) - SARS, Drugs, and Biosensors
  • Greg Elin (Sunlight Foundation) - Mr Hacker Goes to Washington

9:15 - Break

9:45 - Second Set of Speakers

I hope to see you there. You can RSVP on Facebook or Upcoming.

If you can’t make it to this Ignite perhaps one of these other ones will fit your schedule:

  • Ignite Salt Lake City #2 - Thursday, March 26th (more info)
  • Ignite Web in Sydney Australia - Tuesday, April 1st (more info)
  • Ignite Cardiff #2 - Wednesday, April 8th (more info)
  • Ignite Bloomington - Thursday, April 16th (more info)
  • Ignite Santa Fe - Wednesday, April 29th (more info)
  • Ignite Seattle #6 (tentative) - Wednesday, April 29th (more info will be forthcoming after we inspect the venue)
  • Ignite Baltimore #3 - June 25th (more info)

If you don’t live in a place with an Ignite start your own! Check out our community site for more information.

Janetti Chon
Our conference theme is getting a lot of good attention lately.

For the original video and interview transcription, click here.

Janetti Chon

Focus on the people and the connections, not just the technology.

Work smarter, not harder.

Who ever thinks they’ll grow up and be a conference organizer?

These are some of the statements that Web 2.0 Expo conference co-chair Jennifer Pahlka shares during her Women 2.0 In Conversation interview.

Jen Pahlka is also:

- TechWeb’s General Manager of  the Web 2.0 conferences and Gov 2.0 events

- One of the first true Community Managers (before it became a buzz word)

- A strategist, curator, thinker, technologist and industry veteran

- A mentor, colleague, friend and the person who hired me into this job

(Thank you Jen, for without you there would be no @Janerri.  And for sure I never thought I’d grow up to be a conference organizer.)

Janetti Chon

Janetti Chon

I was debating on what personal laptop to get and since I was traveling so much my requirements were small, portable and light. The Netbooks were the perfect answer but I thought they all ran on Linux and I had not yet gone that geek (yet).

During Web 2.0 Expo Europe I was sitting in the greenroom with ex-Netvibes CEO Tariq Krim before his keynote. I complimented his perfectly small, lightweight, inexpensive laptop is laptop which had this great-looking desktop. It was a version of his new project, Jolicloud, a new linux-based OS that was clean, simple and made for Netbooks.

Fab-u-lous.

Here’s a sneak peak at what the interface looks like. More to come and larger images can be seen on the Jolicloud Flickr page.

For those of you who are interested in hearing Tariq speak about entrepreneurship, watch this 10-min video clip of his Web 2.0 Expo Europe keynote.