Jot notes to yourself, and then create a URL, so you can retrieve the note, regardless of where you are. Share the URLs with your other selves, or with others.
Combine your photos, videos, audio, and text to create aesthetically compellling multimedia scrapbooks (blogs). It's "drag & drop" easy. Create photobooks, DVDs, other media for sharing and archiving.
Divvio Inc., will turn on a service that automatically finds audio, video, and, eventually, text, on your favorite subjects. Then it weaves these clips together to create personalized multimedia channels that are updated each time you sign on.
Compares many of the most well-known photo sharing sites, although it seems to have missed Fotki. Fotki is a top notch site, and deserves to be in any list of top contenders.
"It didn’t take long for me to fall in love with Wesabe. At every point where Quicken stood in the way of my progress with ease-of-use roadblocks, Wesabe makes it painless."
A web-based mapping application that actually provides more than just simple mapping capabilities...it's surprisingly polished and well-behaved...he best of the three web-based mind mapping applications I've seen so far.
Compares many of the most well-known photo sharing sites, although it seems to have missed Fotki. Fotki is a top notch site, and deserves to be in any list of top contenders.
Information is stuck inside HTML pages, formatted in esoteric ways, difficult for machines to process. "Web 3.0", precursor to a refined semantic web, will change this. ‘Web 3.0′ will transform web sites into web services. Unstructured information bec
If you'd like to try this surveygizmo out for yourself, go to Questia and try to win an 80GB iPod by taking their survey. It's actually fun to complete, and the mechanism couldn't be smoother, or less aggravating.
This blog article characterizes various "social bookmarking" or "social harvesting" or "social aggregating" sites, as search engines, and then categorizes them by their primary objective or agenda (since most are only secondarily "search engines," althoug