A law professor has been arguing for years that Wikipedia will "fail" by the end of 2010, and he's now out to prove it with an academic paper. "Failure" doesn't mean the site will die—but the dream behind it might.
Nachdem sich seine Freundin von ihm getrennt hatte, wollte ein 26-Jähriger aus Busdorf bei Schleswig eigentlich nur eine Party mit rund 100 Bekannten feiern. Seinem Internet-Aufruf, eine Party auf Sylt zu feiern, folgten dann jedoch deutlich mehr: Mehr als 13 000 Menschen meldeten sich an. -
Reddit can be both a pleasure and a mystery. Even long-time users admit Reddit can be weird (to say at least) and very often they just fail to explain some of
One of the defining features of Web 2.0 is user-uploaded content, specifically photos. I believe that photo-sharing has quietly been the killer application which has driven the mass adoption of social networks. Facebook alone hosts over 40 billion photos, over 200 per user, and receives over 25 million new photos each day. Hosting such a huge number of photos is an interesting engineering challenge. The dominant paradigm which has emerged is to host the main website from one server which handles user log-in and navigation, and host the images on separate special-purpose photo servers, usually on an external content-delivery network. The advantage is that the photo server is freed from maintaining any state. It simply serves its photos to any requester who knows the photo’s URL.