What do we know about Web 2.0?
I don’t know about you, but the more I talk about Web2 and the emergence of independent online teaching in places OUTSIDE online social networks, the more I feel like some kind of crazy Paul Revere (or maybe more like Lady Godiva) riding through the dark crying, “Web 2 is coming! Web 2 is coming!” And only a few people are waking up.In way too many face-to-face encounters, I keep having folks cock one eye at me, furrow their brows, and ask something like, “What IS Web 2.0, Meri?”
Well, for starters, it’s the end of business as usual for everyone. Across the globe! It’s the end of “authority” as we have known it and the start of a global rush into participation like we’ve never known before.
Despite George Bush’s best efforts to the contrary, it’s simply the end of command-and-control.
And it’s already happened. Only it’s not just the BRITISH who are coming… it’s the WHOLE GLOBE!
Web 2.0 is nothing less than a world-wide shift of power from the hands of a few to the hands of EVERYONE. And it’s already underway.
Web 2.0 is an all-encompassing revolution that is changing the very ground that business, government, teachers and learners walk on everyday.
So, if you’re someone who’s been too busy just coping with the avalanche of day-to-day and you want to better understand Web 2.0. I recommend you take 50 minutes to watch this video. It’s a conversation between a group of people at the 2007 World Economic Forum talking about the crucial issue: “What do we know about Web 2.0?” It’s a year old, but it’s still packed with great insights!
You’ll recognize the names of the participants:
Caterina Fake, Founder, Flickr, USA • William H. Gates III, Chairman, Microsoft Corporation, USA • Chad Hurley, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, YouTube, USA • Mark G. Parker, President and Chief Executive Officer, Nike, USA • Viviane Reding, Commissioner, Information Society and Media, European Commission, Brussels Challenger • Dennis Kneale, Managing Editor, Forbes Magazine, USA Moderated by • Peter Schwartz, Chairman, Global Business Network, USA .
Tags: participation, web 2.0 Explore posts in the same categories: Doing business, Digital culturing


