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Weekly Wrap-up: Twitter in the Library, iPhone Gets Multitasking, Goodbye Google Gears, And More...

By Abraham Hyatt / April 17, 2010 5:00 AM / Comments

weekly_wrapup-1.pngOur number one post this week was that Twitter's archives will soon be housed in the hallowed halls of the Library of Congress. There's got to be joke about librarians shushing tweets in there somewhere. We also continued our exploration of the significant Internet trends of 2010. We wrote about Internet of Things threads you'll be wearing soon, a real-time trip into Twitter's past, and that augmented reality is going to the fishes on the Discovery Channel. Read on for more.

10 Smart Clothes You'll Be Wearing Soon

By Richard MacManus / April 14, 2010 12:14 AM / Comments

In the emerging Internet of Things, everyday objects are becoming networked. Clothing is no exception. It's still early days for Web-enabled clothes - the best example so far is the Nike+ running shoe, which contains sensors that connect to the user's iPod. But expect to see everything from your shirt to your underwear networked in the not too distant future.

In the following list of ten 'smart clothing' items, we showcase Internet pants, a proximity sensing shirt, a heart sensing bra, biosensor underwear, a "thought helmet", and more!

What's Next For Mobile Apps?

By Richard MacManus / April 13, 2010 1:21 AM / Comments

Yesterday we looked at DASH7, a wireless sensor networking standard that may play an important part in next-generation mobile services - including location-based services, the Internet of Things and social networking.

In this post we analyze some use cases for DASH7, which also point to where the Mobile Web is heading. We'll look at how location-based services like Foursquare and Gowalla could evolve. Then we'll explore the potential of long-distance mobile advertising and mobile coupons.

Twitter's Advertising Scheme is Delightfully Boring - Just As It Should Be

By Marshall Kirkpatrick / April 12, 2010 10:58 PM / Comments

Why do people care how Twitter will make money? "We won't know where we, the users, fit in -- until they tell us how they're going to make money," Dave Winer wrote a year ago this week, "And when they tell us, we may not like it." That's one reason why people care how Twitter makes money.

Whether you're a person concerned that the popular social network you're investing your time and energy in might monetize in an anti-social way, or you're a skeptic who refuses to believe that the world-changing potential of Twitter is real until it proves itself economically viable - you probably heard that Twitter announced tonight it's got a plan for advertisements. You can breathe a sigh of relief; the plan is downright boring, just as it should be.

Is Gmail Giving Up on Tagging?

By Sarah Perez / April 9, 2010 6:59 AM / Comments

Gmail Labs, the "Settings" section featuring optional, experimental features for Google's webmail program has just received two new additions: "message sneak peek" and "nested labels." Now the sneak peek we definitely like - it lets you preview a message without opening it so you can take immediate action. Handy!

But nested labels is a somewhat curious addition. It turns Gmail's once-revolutionary "tagging" system into something that more closely resembles the traditional folder structure found in email programs like Outlook. So now you can drag-and-drop your email into these so-called labels and you can create hierarchies, too? Oh, c'mon, Gmail, let's just call them folders already and be done with it.

Open Thread: What Would You Build With a Web of Data?

By Richard MacManus / April 8, 2010 10:15 PM / Comments

Recently we looked at the state of Linked Data in 2010, noting developments such as governments putting public data online and Thomson Reuters putting structure around commercial data using OpenCalais. In a follow-up post, we explained the distinction between Linked Data, Open Data and the Semantic Web.

Georgi Kobilarov, who runs a Linked Data startup from Germany called Uberblic Labs, recently issued an interesting challenge on his blog. He asked: if we had a Web of Data, what would you build? Not to steal Georgi's thunder, but we think this is a great question to put to ReadWriteWeb readers too.

Apple Announces iPhone OS 4 with Support for Multitasking

By Frederic Lardinois / April 8, 2010 10:20 AM / Comments

iphone_os_4_logo_apr10.jpgDuring a presentation on Apple's Cupertino campus this morning, the company's CEO, Steve Jobs, announced the next version of the iPhone operating system: iPhone OS 4. Apple will release a preview version to developers today and plans to release the OS to consumers in the summer. Among the new features in the OS are multitasking with the help of a new set of APIs. Developers will get access to over 1,500 new APIs, and users will see over 100 new features.

Jobs also announced that Apple has already sold 450,000 iPads.

Gowalla Adds Real-time Feeds and Activity Streams For Maximum Mashup Action

By Marshall Kirkpatrick / April 7, 2010 1:55 PM / Comments

Location based social network Gowalla quietly released a big new feature today: real-time PubSubHubbub feeds for check-ins by people and at locations. Hello, mashups and 3rd party apps of the future!

In addition to being real-time and easy to access, Gowalla's new feeds are also marked-up with the beginnings of the widely used Activity Streams format. Put all of this together and Gowalla to Google Buzz is one obvious connection, but the possibilities are endless.

iPad: The First Real Family Computer

By Sarah Perez / April 5, 2010 7:38 AM / Comments

With the iPad's arrival this weekend, a holiday weekend for many Americans, this new iPad owner had the chance to see the device in action. In fact, "see" is the operative word here. Not, "play with myself," as is the case with most new tech gadgets I purchase. Instead, I simply watched from a distance as, over the course of the day, the iPad found its way into the hands of nearly every family member from ages 4 months to 87 years old. The incredible thing? No one walked away confused, frustrated or disappointed. It did precisely what they wanted it to do and with such ease that my tech support was not required - not even once - allowing me to sit back and relax...with an old-fashioned, paper-based magazine.

You Are Not a Gadget: The Continuing Case Against Web 2.0

By Richard MacManus / April 4, 2010 8:30 PM / Comments

Jaron Lanier was a pioneer of "virtual reality" in the early 1980s and in his book, You Are Not a Gadget: A Manifesto, he makes the case for a more humanistic approach to Internet technology. Lanier rails against web 2.0, which he calls at the start of the book "a torrent of petty designs" and "freedom [...] more for machines than people."

Lanier's main issue with web 2.0 is that, in his view, it promotes the 'hive mind' over individual expression. He writes that web 2.0 presents the current generation of kids with a "reduced expectation of what a person can be."

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