23
Jun 05

Web 2.0

According to the futurists at Supernova 2005, the web is just beginning to tap its potential as a tool for advancing “enterprise knowledge” (biz speak for sharing information). Next-gen social networking tools like blogs, wikis, and Friendster-like communities are drawing more and more users together around common interests.

What are the implications? Ask Chris Anderson, former Wired editor and Long Tail fountainhead. There aren’t many other business ideas getting as much traction as the Long Tail these days and for good reason. When Anderson asked web retailers like Amazon and Rhapsody what percentage of their catalog they were moving, their answers came back in the nineties. With the number of entertainment offerings in retail outlets dropping, more and more people are turning to e-tailers to get their fix. (Unlike their bricks & mortar counterparts, e-tailers never run out of shelf space.) In the era of the Long Tail, opportunities for filtering technologies and social networking abound. Why rely on a faceless editor for your playlist when you can sneak a peek at what critics/friends are watching and raving about?

Other Supernova posterchildren include Flickr.com (Yahoo’s recent photo acquisition), Technorati.com (blog tagging), and Odeo.com (podcast tagging). Is this really the new web? Stay tuned.

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21
Jun 05

Airtime

Morgan Spurlock

The flotsam otherwise known as the summer television schedule is upon us. Fortunately, a few seaworthy programs have surfaced, and while reality TV on the networks jumped the shark about the time Fear Factor showed up, cable’s new breed may hopefully find legs.

30 Days comes from the mind of Morgan Spurlock (creator/producer of the Oscar-nominated Super Size Me). The format draws from Fakin’ It, a BBC transplant that briefly aired on Discovery’s TLC, and the ubiquitous Michael Moore mockumentaries. In the inaugural episode, the minimum wage goes primetime as Spurlock and his wife, unemployed and homeless, arrive in Ohio where the minimum wage is actually less than the federal minimum wage, if that’s even possible. For 30 days, they rake rock bottom for the money to pay rent and bills, and maybe even celebrate a birthday. Poverty sucks — that’s no surprise; what’s revealing is how high the chips are stacked against folks on the fringe. (Where were they on Election Day, I’d like to know?) Future installments feature an ex-jock on growth hormones, Christians as Muslims, and more fish-out-of-water stories.

Spy, from the BBC, airs on PBS (Mondays). Production values (film-res footage, aerial shots, motion graphics) run high on this Survivor-style spies-in-training show. Decent editing spares us the mundane, while former vets from MI6 and the CIA give you the lowdown on how to stalk your ex and rummage your neighbor’s dustbin. The subjects aren’t entirely interesting, but the skills and the training are.

Other shows I’m watching: Frontline (no holds barred investigative journalism — how long before CPB cuts off their funding?) and Robot Chicken (stop-motion animation on Cartoon Network‘s Adult Swim).

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