ReadWriteWeb

BBC Mobile, Business Models 2.0, Internet TV

Written by Richard MacManus / April 14, 2005 11:08 PM / 1 Comments

A daily shot of Web 2.0 news. Each item will have a main link, one or two lines of commentary from me, and views of the story from other bloggers (if available and if I have time). I'm still fiddling with the format...

BBC unveils five-year mobile strategy

NMA reports on the BBC's five-year strategy for mobile: "The strategy is centred around mobile browsing, establishing the mobile version of bbc.co.uk as important to the Corporation as the main Web site, moving to both richer on-demand and user-generated content." (via PaidContent.org)

My comment: This is the first time I've seen a major media corporation put mobile offerings on a par with its website.

Return of old Web business models

Andrew Madden in MIT Tech Review reviews some Web 1.0 business plans that have re-emerged successfully in Web 2.0. He cites online groceries and "the 'verticalization' of search and locally targeted online ad models."

Views:
- alarm:clock follows up: "One of the more striking aspects of the Web 2.0 is the familiarity of its business models - we've seen many of them before. Some of the early models died off with good reason, but others needed time to ripen."

My comment: Perhaps the difference this time round is that the underlying technologies (broadband, web services, browsers, etc) are now mature enough to support the Web as a business platform. Time to dust off that e-commerce-wap-portal business plan from 1999!

Internet TV is Open and Independent

Participatory Culture Foundation: "Announcing a new platform for internet television and video. Anyone can broadcast full-screen video to thousands of people at virtually no cost, using BitTorrent technology."

My comment: Sounds like a mix between Our Media and TiVo - they're building a "desktop video player application" and a "video publishing tool". Yet another sign that the Internet is where media will roam free in the 21st century.

Comments

Subscribe to comments for this post OR Subscribe to comments for all Read/WriteWeb posts

  • Re: Return of old Web business models

    One reason could be the maturation of web application technology has allowed more rapid development cycles, freeing time for creators to focus more on the customer experience aspect of their site.

    The business models may have always been fine, but the implementation is what differs.

    Posted by: Brady Joslin | April 15, 2005 2:32 PM




RECENT JOBS



TEXT LINK ADS


RWW PARTNERS


RWW READERS


RWW POLL