Being everywhere
- mobile devices are one of the fastest growing segments of internet traffic
* provides many more opportunities to service customers and gain usage
- the best online products and services consist of complex constellations of hardware and software devices (iTunes, Sony CONNECT, Zune Marketplace)
Vertical or Horizontal
- the vertical model is a vendor controlled ecosystems above the level of a single device
- the horizontal model is an open, cooperating ecosystem that is under no central control
The model of the blogosphere
- 2-way platform
- user generated content
- software above the level of a single device
- the long tail content
- architecture of participation
- emergent structure
Rich User Experiences
- 1-upping the “page” metaphor
* the traditional web page model has great value but is limited in the experience it offers
* new models have emerged that provide a way to deliver apps as good as the desktop but entirely inside the browser via a URL
- delivered with techniques like Ajax or plug-ins such as flash or WPF/E
- looks and feels like desktop apps
* drag and drop, smooth morphing of the display, highly interactive. all without reloading
* and is better, can leverage the web platform
- significantly harder to develop and brings many challenges, but users respond very well to them
Challenges of Rich Internet Applications
- loss of page views
- content is non-crawlable, posing serious challenges with SEO
- few GUI conventions for RIAs
- the granular link structure of the web can be lost
- breaking the browser model
Harnessing Collective Intelligence
- software that gets smarter the more people use it
Collective intelligence = Google search engine
Common elements of success
- data-driven
- decentralized ecosystems
- leveraged the user to add value
- platforms, not applications
- focused on The Long Tail
- monetized successfully
- motive force: collective intelligence
The Long Tail
- the mass servicing of micromarkets
- only possible with automated customer self-service
- democratize of the tools of production
- democratize distribution
- connect supply and demand via automated customer self-service
- Examples (NetFlix = over 70,000 titles, Ebay = anyone can retail anything)
Next Generation Success
- Open source (sourceforge.org)
- user contributions wikipedia.org)
- peer production (digg.com)
- social interaction (myspace.com)
- two-way web in the large (blogs)
Blogs
- zero blogs in 2003, 57million today
Wikis
- web pages anyone can edit
- a version of every change made is saved
- very open, often the page can be edited by anyone

Jared,
Brian here from race.cx. I’m also at the web2.0 expo this week. Just dropping in to say hi. Hopefully we’ll bump into one another.
brianellin at gmail.com
brian, I’ll try to find ya