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	<title> &#187; Googleplex | TechStartups.com Keyword Feed</title>
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	<pubDate>Tue, 07 Sep 2010 18:48:56 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>The Demise of Web 2.0</title>
		<link>http://www.techstartups.com/2009/10/29/the-demise-of-web-2-0/</link>
		<comments>http://www.techstartups.com/2009/10/29/the-demise-of-web-2-0/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Oct 2009 13:09:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kristopher Smith</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opinion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Startup Lessons]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Startup Tips]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Drupal Developer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Google Summer of Code]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Googleplex]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GSOC]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Javascript]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[jQuery]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Matt Butcher]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mentor Summit]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[multi-touch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Panlantir]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PyMT]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[QueryPath]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web 2.0 demise]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.techstartups.com/?p=2531</guid>
                
		<description><![CDATA[<p><em>By Guest Author, Matt Butcher (<a href="http://twitter.com/technosophos" target="_blank">@technosophos</a>)</em></p>
<p><a rel="attachment wp-att-2533" href="http://www.techstartups.com/2009/10/29/the-demise-of-web-2-0/matt_b/"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-2533" style="margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 10px;" title="matt_b" src="http://www.techstartups.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/matt_b.jpg" alt="matt_b" width="94" height="133" /></a><em><strong>About the author:</strong> Matt is a software developer and author living in Chicago. He is the author of five programming books, most recently &#8220;<a href="http://www.packtpub.com/drupal-6-javascript-and-jquery/book/mid/270509jtdoa8" target="_blank">Drupal 6 Javascript and jQuery</a>&#8221; and an <a class="zem_slink" title="Open Source" rel="wikinvest" href="http://www.wikinvest.com/concept/Open_Source">Open Source</a> project called <a href="http://querypath.org" target="_blank">QueryPath</a> for PHP that allows developers to easily build applications from XML data with jQuery like functionality</em>.</p>
<p><em>Matt&#8217;s personal blog is at <a href="http://TechnoSophos.com" target="_blank">TechnoSophos.com</a><br />
</em></p>
<p><a rel="attachment wp-att-2534" href="http://www.techstartups.com/2009/10/29/the-demise-of-web-2-0/summer_of_code/"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-2534" style="margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 10px;" title="summer_of_code" src="http://www.techstartups.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/summer_of_code-300x200.png" alt="summer_of_code" width="300" height="200" /></a>I saw into the future. At 10:00 AM PDT on October 25th, in a conference room seating 16 people at the Googleplex in Santa Clara, I saw into the future of the web. And it was good.</p>
<p>What I saw was the demise of Web 2.0, a technology grown to capacity. And it is not Web 3.0 (whatever that is) that will take its place. No, tomorrow&#8217;s web is about user interfaces.</p>
<p>The weekend of October 24th was the annual <a href="http://gsoc-wiki.osuosl.org/index.php/Main_Page">Google Summer of Code (GSOC) Mentor Summit</a> at Google&#8217;s headquarters. Ostensibly, this is the opportunity for all of the Open Source organizations who participated in GSOC to get together and perform a collective postmortem on the summer&#8217;s successes and failures. But anytime such a menagerie of geeks is assembled under one roof, much more is bound to happen.</p>
<p>Unsurprisingly, many of the <a href="http://www.techstartups.com/2009/10/27/unconference-organizers-shouldnt-take-candy-from-strangers/">unconference</a>&#8217;s sessions were focused on the GSOC program itself. But a healthy dose of technology centered sessions made their way onto the schedule as well, and the hallway may very well have seen more code than the conference rooms.</p>
<p>Beyond the physical conference space, much was happening in the virtual sphere as well. As a gesture of thanks to the GSOC participants and mentors for a summer of work, Google gave everyone <a href="http://wave.google.com/">Wave</a> accounts.</p>
<p>Wave&#8217;s utility lies in numbers. Signing in without a friend is like throwing a party but inviting nobody. Bring a friend or two into the Wave, and it feels like hosting tea in a room with too much furniture. But once the numbers start to rise, Wave&#8217;s strengths surface. It is a cocktail party that comes complete with a birds-eye view of all of the chit-chat. Conversations swirl around, splintering into smaller threads of conversation only to merge back into the main discussion later. Images, maps, polls, and an API for building extensions make Wave a promising tool&#8230; except for one thing.</p>
<p>The user interface stinks.</p>
<p>Yes, Wave&#8217;s merits surface only when many people are in a discussion. Unfortunately, that&#8217;s also where the big shortcomings surface. As one conversation forks into many smaller discussions, the wave quickly becomes visually unmanageable. The Quickest Scrollwheel in the West will still have a hard time traversing the continuously growing vertical pane that wraps the conversation. The entire advantage gained by the &#8220;birds eye view&#8221; of the conversation is lost to clumsy scrolling.</p>
<p>But this failing is indicative of something greater. Once again, Google has achieved an engineering masterpiece. And for all technical purposes, Wave is a marvel. It certainly pushes AJAX and asynchronous web interaction to its very limits, and I have no doubt that the source code for the server component would make my head swim. But the user interface, for all its visual business, simply doesn&#8217;t work. Wave is an attempt to cram the internals of a Hummer into the body of a circa 1996 Honda Civic.</p>
<p>This is where the Mentor Summit offered a revelation.</p>
<p>On the second day of the summit, the <a href="http://pymt.txzone.net/">PyMT</a> team hosted an hour-long session on multi-touch input. PyMT is a set of Python application bindings for various multi-touch libraries. Linux, Windows, and OS X all support multi-touch input technologies. Last week, Apple&#8217;s new <a href="http://www.apple.com/magicmouse/">Magic Mouse</a> made its debut featuring a multi-touch surface atop a traditional laser-based mouse. Dell offers a <a href="http://www.dell.com/tablet?s=biz&amp;cs=555">laptop with a multi-touch screen</a>. Wacom offers a <a href="http://www.wacom.com/bamboo/bamboo_pen_touch.php">multi-touch tablet</a>. <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/surface/">Microsoft&#8217;s Surface technology</a> boasts table-sized multi-touch surfaces.</p>
<p>Multi-touch is arriving in a big way. But what&#8217;s the hubub about? What&#8217;s the big feature that suddenly makes these technologies attractive? It is the extension of &#8220;point and click&#8221; to &#8220;touch, tap, pinch, swipe, expand, drag, rotate, throw&#8230;&#8221;. The simple mouse model that has driven graphical interaction for decades is mid-way through an extreme makeover. And with deflection- and pressure-sensing surfaces rapidly advancing, mice and fingers are just the tip of the input iceberg.</p>
<p>The PyMT team took an hour-long trip to Google&#8217;s hands-on room and came back with an impressive demonstration. Beginning with some Lego pieces, a flat sheet of metal, and a PlayStation 3 camera, the pair of programmers from PyMT built a <a href="http://gsoc-wiki.osuosl.org/index.php/Sunday_Sessions_2009/Programming_with_novel_interfaces">gaming surface and a couple of paddles</a>. The camera tracked the motion of the paddles on the surface, transforming the physical paddles into virtual ones in a game of Pong projected onto the wall. In an hour!</p>
<p>When we can build new input devices with an Open Source library and $35 worth of corner-drug-store toys, a whole new universe of possibilities appears.</p>
<p>And that&#8217;s where Wave returns to mind. As I walked out of the room with UX Design guru <a href="http://stevefisher.ca/">Steve Fisher</a>, he turned to me an remarked, &#8220;When I watch a demo like this, it makes me wonder&#8230; What is the Web going to look like in a few years.&#8221; Yeah, it makes me wonder, too.</p>
<p>Wave is a fantastic architecture. But the architectural gems are obscured behind yesterday&#8217;s user interface limitations. In that way, Wave is a milestone that marks the death of Web 2.0. And it is more than that. It&#8217;s a fingerpost pointing not to the technologies touted as Web 3.0, but toward a new mode of human-computer interaction. What is going to make tomorrow&#8217;s web compelling? Not metadata. Not cleaner layout. Not even native support for videos. Better user interfaces. Interfaces tuned to convey information more effectively. Reactive interfaces. That&#8217;s where tomorrow&#8217;s success stories are waiting.</p>
<p>HTML 5 and RDFa are good and all, but the real sea-change is coming from your fingertips. All ten of them.</p>
<p>DISCLOSURE OF MATERIAL CONNECTION: <a href="http://cmp.ly/4">http://cmp.ly/4</a></p>
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<p><a href="http://www.techstartups.com/2009/10/29/the-demise-of-web-2-0/">The Demise of Web 2.0</a> is a post from: <a href="http://www.techstartups.com">TechStartups.com</a></p>
<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Tags: <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/drupal-developer/" rel="tag">Drupal Developer</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/drupal-developer/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/google-summer-of-code/" rel="tag">Google Summer of Code</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/google-summer-of-code/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/googleplex/" rel="tag">Googleplex</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/googleplex/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/gsoc/" rel="tag">GSOC</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/gsoc/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/javascript/" rel="tag">Javascript</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/javascript/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/jquery/" rel="tag">jQuery</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/jquery/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/matt-butcher/" rel="tag">Matt Butcher</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/matt-butcher/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/mentor-summit/" rel="tag">Mentor Summit</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/mentor-summit/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/multi-touch/" rel="tag">multi-touch</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/multi-touch/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/panlantir/" rel="tag">Panlantir</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/panlantir/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/pymt/" rel="tag">PyMT</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/pymt/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/querypath/" rel="tag">QueryPath</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/querypath/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/web-2-0-demise/" rel="tag">web 2.0 demise</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/web-2-0-demise/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a><br /><br />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>By Guest Author, Matt Butcher (<a href="http://twitter.com/technosophos" target="_blank">@technosophos</a>)</em></p>
<p><a rel="attachment wp-att-2533" href="http://www.techstartups.com/2009/10/29/the-demise-of-web-2-0/matt_b/"><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-2533" style="margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 10px;" title="matt_b" src="http://www.techstartups.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/matt_b.jpg" alt="matt_b" width="94" height="133" /></a><em><strong>About the author:</strong> Matt is a software developer and author living in Chicago. He is the author of five programming books, most recently &#8220;<a href="http://www.packtpub.com/drupal-6-javascript-and-jquery/book/mid/270509jtdoa8" target="_blank">Drupal 6 Javascript and jQuery</a>&#8221; and an <a class="zem_slink" title="Open Source" rel="wikinvest" href="http://www.wikinvest.com/concept/Open_Source">Open Source</a> project called <a href="http://querypath.org" target="_blank">QueryPath</a> for PHP that allows developers to easily build applications from XML data with jQuery like functionality</em>.</p>
<p><em>Matt&#8217;s personal blog is at <a href="http://TechnoSophos.com" target="_blank">TechnoSophos.com</a><br />
</em></p>
<p><a rel="attachment wp-att-2534" href="http://www.techstartups.com/2009/10/29/the-demise-of-web-2-0/summer_of_code/"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-2534" style="margin-left: 10px; margin-right: 10px;" title="summer_of_code" src="http://www.techstartups.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/summer_of_code-300x200.png" alt="summer_of_code" width="300" height="200" /></a>I saw into the future. At 10:00 AM PDT on October 25th, in a conference room seating 16 people at the Googleplex in Santa Clara, I saw into the future of the web. And it was good.</p>
<p>What I saw was the demise of Web 2.0, a technology grown to capacity. And it is not Web 3.0 (whatever that is) that will take its place. No, tomorrow&#8217;s web is about user interfaces.</p>
<p>The weekend of October 24th was the annual <a href="http://gsoc-wiki.osuosl.org/index.php/Main_Page">Google Summer of Code (GSOC) Mentor Summit</a> at Google&#8217;s headquarters. Ostensibly, this is the opportunity for all of the Open Source organizations who participated in GSOC to get together and perform a collective postmortem on the summer&#8217;s successes and failures. But anytime such a menagerie of geeks is assembled under one roof, much more is bound to happen.</p>
<p>Unsurprisingly, many of the <a href="http://www.techstartups.com/2009/10/27/unconference-organizers-shouldnt-take-candy-from-strangers/">unconference</a>&#8217;s sessions were focused on the GSOC program itself. But a healthy dose of technology centered sessions made their way onto the schedule as well, and the hallway may very well have seen more code than the conference rooms.</p>
<p>Beyond the physical conference space, much was happening in the virtual sphere as well. As a gesture of thanks to the GSOC participants and mentors for a summer of work, Google gave everyone <a href="http://wave.google.com/">Wave</a> accounts.</p>
<p>Wave&#8217;s utility lies in numbers. Signing in without a friend is like throwing a party but inviting nobody. Bring a friend or two into the Wave, and it feels like hosting tea in a room with too much furniture. But once the numbers start to rise, Wave&#8217;s strengths surface. It is a cocktail party that comes complete with a birds-eye view of all of the chit-chat. Conversations swirl around, splintering into smaller threads of conversation only to merge back into the main discussion later. Images, maps, polls, and an API for building extensions make Wave a promising tool&#8230; except for one thing.</p>
<p>The user interface stinks.</p>
<p>Yes, Wave&#8217;s merits surface only when many people are in a discussion. Unfortunately, that&#8217;s also where the big shortcomings surface. As one conversation forks into many smaller discussions, the wave quickly becomes visually unmanageable. The Quickest Scrollwheel in the West will still have a hard time traversing the continuously growing vertical pane that wraps the conversation. The entire advantage gained by the &#8220;birds eye view&#8221; of the conversation is lost to clumsy scrolling.</p>
<p>But this failing is indicative of something greater. Once again, Google has achieved an engineering masterpiece. And for all technical purposes, Wave is a marvel. It certainly pushes AJAX and asynchronous web interaction to its very limits, and I have no doubt that the source code for the server component would make my head swim. But the user interface, for all its visual business, simply doesn&#8217;t work. Wave is an attempt to cram the internals of a Hummer into the body of a circa 1996 Honda Civic.</p>
<p>This is where the Mentor Summit offered a revelation.</p>
<p>On the second day of the summit, the <a href="http://pymt.txzone.net/">PyMT</a> team hosted an hour-long session on multi-touch input. PyMT is a set of Python application bindings for various multi-touch libraries. Linux, Windows, and OS X all support multi-touch input technologies. Last week, Apple&#8217;s new <a href="http://www.apple.com/magicmouse/">Magic Mouse</a> made its debut featuring a multi-touch surface atop a traditional laser-based mouse. Dell offers a <a href="http://www.dell.com/tablet?s=biz&amp;cs=555">laptop with a multi-touch screen</a>. Wacom offers a <a href="http://www.wacom.com/bamboo/bamboo_pen_touch.php">multi-touch tablet</a>. <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/surface/">Microsoft&#8217;s Surface technology</a> boasts table-sized multi-touch surfaces.</p>
<p>Multi-touch is arriving in a big way. But what&#8217;s the hubub about? What&#8217;s the big feature that suddenly makes these technologies attractive? It is the extension of &#8220;point and click&#8221; to &#8220;touch, tap, pinch, swipe, expand, drag, rotate, throw&#8230;&#8221;. The simple mouse model that has driven graphical interaction for decades is mid-way through an extreme makeover. And with deflection- and pressure-sensing surfaces rapidly advancing, mice and fingers are just the tip of the input iceberg.</p>
<p>The PyMT team took an hour-long trip to Google&#8217;s hands-on room and came back with an impressive demonstration. Beginning with some Lego pieces, a flat sheet of metal, and a PlayStation 3 camera, the pair of programmers from PyMT built a <a href="http://gsoc-wiki.osuosl.org/index.php/Sunday_Sessions_2009/Programming_with_novel_interfaces">gaming surface and a couple of paddles</a>. The camera tracked the motion of the paddles on the surface, transforming the physical paddles into virtual ones in a game of Pong projected onto the wall. In an hour!</p>
<p>When we can build new input devices with an Open Source library and $35 worth of corner-drug-store toys, a whole new universe of possibilities appears.</p>
<p>And that&#8217;s where Wave returns to mind. As I walked out of the room with UX Design guru <a href="http://stevefisher.ca/">Steve Fisher</a>, he turned to me an remarked, &#8220;When I watch a demo like this, it makes me wonder&#8230; What is the Web going to look like in a few years.&#8221; Yeah, it makes me wonder, too.</p>
<p>Wave is a fantastic architecture. But the architectural gems are obscured behind yesterday&#8217;s user interface limitations. In that way, Wave is a milestone that marks the death of Web 2.0. And it is more than that. It&#8217;s a fingerpost pointing not to the technologies touted as Web 3.0, but toward a new mode of human-computer interaction. What is going to make tomorrow&#8217;s web compelling? Not metadata. Not cleaner layout. Not even native support for videos. Better user interfaces. Interfaces tuned to convey information more effectively. Reactive interfaces. That&#8217;s where tomorrow&#8217;s success stories are waiting.</p>
<p>HTML 5 and RDFa are good and all, but the real sea-change is coming from your fingertips. All ten of them.</p>
<p>DISCLOSURE OF MATERIAL CONNECTION: <a href="http://cmp.ly/4">http://cmp.ly/4</a></p>
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<p><a href="http://www.techstartups.com/2009/10/29/the-demise-of-web-2-0/">The Demise of Web 2.0</a> is a post from: <a href="http://www.techstartups.com">TechStartups.com</a></p>
<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Tags: <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/drupal-developer/" rel="tag">Drupal Developer</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/drupal-developer/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/google-summer-of-code/" rel="tag">Google Summer of Code</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/google-summer-of-code/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/googleplex/" rel="tag">Googleplex</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/googleplex/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/gsoc/" rel="tag">GSOC</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/gsoc/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/javascript/" rel="tag">Javascript</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/javascript/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/jquery/" rel="tag">jQuery</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/jquery/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/matt-butcher/" rel="tag">Matt Butcher</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/matt-butcher/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/mentor-summit/" rel="tag">Mentor Summit</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/mentor-summit/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/multi-touch/" rel="tag">multi-touch</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/multi-touch/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/panlantir/" rel="tag">Panlantir</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/panlantir/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/pymt/" rel="tag">PyMT</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/pymt/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/querypath/" rel="tag">QueryPath</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/querypath/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a>, <a style="display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/web-2-0-demise/" rel="tag">web 2.0 demise</a> <a style="text-decoration:none;display:inline" href="http://www.techstartups.com/tag/web-2-0-demise/feed" rel="tag"><img style="border:none; display:inline" src="/img/tagrss.gif" border="0"></a><br /><br />]]></content:encoded>
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