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    12 promising new Web sites and services 18/09/2008 12:20:00

    At two conferences this month -- Demo Fall 2008 and TechCrunch50 -- developers unveiled more than a 100 new Web sites and services. Here are a dozen of our favourites.
    This week saw the battle of the Web 2.0 conferences, with 70 entrepreneurs presenting their ideas at Demo Fall 2008 in San Diego and 50 more making their pitch at TechCrunch50 in San Francisco. Some of the ideas are little more than a glimmer in a coder's eye, but others are already doing business, are in private beta, or are soon to launch. Here's a selection of our favourites.
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    12 photos that should never have been posted online 18/09/2008 05:01:00

    What were they thinking? These 12 folks lost jobs, reputations, or their freedom after dumb photos they put up on the Web came to light.
    You know the old cliche, a picture is worth a thousand words? Turns out that pictures have been deeply undervalued: A single photo can cost you your reputation, your job, even your freedom -- if you post it online.
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    'Distributed Web' takes center stage at DEMO 09/09/2008 11:01:00

    Software to allow for more collaboration, group decision making
    DEMO executive producer Chris Shipley isn't sure what to call the evolution of Web 2.0 software and applications, but she is sure of one thing: It shouldn't be called Web 3.0.
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    Google Chrome: the first true Web 2.0 browser 04/09/2008 07:50:00

    Computerworld takes an in-depth look at Google's new browser.
    Google's just-released Chrome takes the same approach to browser design that Google takes to its home page -- stripped-down, fast and functional, with very few bells and whistles.
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    US Air Force lets Web 2.0 flourish behind walls 18/07/2008 09:26:21

    Web 2.0 is helping service members and civilian employees find the information they need more quickly
    The US Air Force is using Web 2.0 technologies to better support its missions despite wariness about security, a civilian technology official of the service said last week.
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    Five Web 2.0 dev lessons for enterprise IT 17/07/2008 09:31:38

    Keeping users fully in the loop can cut IT costs while boosting software quality
    Yahoo's Flickr unit reported yesterday that the latest update to the photo sharing Web site went live with 9 changes made by three of its developers. The "deployment" was the 36th new release in a week where 627 changes were made by 21 developers.
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    Online office apps get real 17/07/2008 08:09:55

    Web-based suites have become real challengers to desktop applications
    Web-based office suites are coming into their own at last. For quite a while, Web-based suites -- which offered word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, and other tools associated with desktop office suites -- were extolled not because they did these things well, but because they could do them at all. But the three major competitors, Google Docs, ThinkFree, and Zoho, have all made major improvements in recent months. They're becoming both broader, with more applications, and deeper, with more features and functionality in existing apps.
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    How to mashup without a screwup 09/07/2008 10:35:51

    Mashup software can only succeed if they are designed with the user in mind. How IT staff can help
    Given the short history of mashups in the enterprise, IT departments likely don't entirely understand the technology's role in the business. Organizations can fall victim to mashup mistakes given the markedly different approach necessary to deploy and maintain them across the organization.
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    Hands on: 12 quick hacks for Firefox 3 02/07/2008 08:29:40

    Think you've seen all there is to see of Firefox 3's new features? Wait, there's more -- check out these cool and useful hacks.
    Firefox 3 has been out for two weeks now, so get with the program: It's time to hack it. The newest version of Mozilla's browser has plenty of new features, including the site identification button, the Bookmarks Library and what has become known as the "Awesome Bar" -- and I'll show you how to hack them all.
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    Gates' historical legacy may focus more on philanthropy than on Microsoft 25/06/2008 11:39:12

    Charitable work seen as breaking new ground, both in its scale and his methods
    With the impending retirement of Bill Gates from Microsoft comes an obvious question: How will history view him? As a founder of the world's most influential software vendor and one of the biggest creators of wealth ever? Or as a monopolist and digital robber baron?
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    E-giving explosion - charity takes off on the Web 24/06/2008 15:06:34

    Donating, mobilizing, organizing, awareness-raising - the Internet has become one of the most effective channels for connecting people to causes
    Canada may have been the first industrialized country to reject funding a drug that treats the severest form of the most common type of vision loss in the developed world, were it not for a quickly-assembled Web campaign from the Canadian Institute for the Blind (CNIB).
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