Home Weekly Wrapup, 5-9 February 2007

Weekly Wrapup, 5-9 February 2007

Here is a summary of the week’s Web Tech action on Read/WriteWeb.

Top Web News

All of the big Web companies were in the news this week, but probably the one that
made the most impact (as usual) was Apple. Steve Jobs is the master of getting attention,
and his call for record companies to abolish DRM
was no exception. It turned out that not many commenters agreed with my stance that Apple
could do more than just pass the ball to the record companies. A commenter named ‘mark’
noted these reasons for Jobs’ anti-DRM article (comment #21):

 “As for self-serving reasons: MS holds key DRM patents, which makes enhancing
FairPlay for new innovative uses (such as wifi sharing) difficult unless Apple is willing
to pay MS for licenses.

And there’s another self-serving reason: Apple’s negotiations with the labels are
coming up.”

But Michael Meiser seemed to
agree with me that more can be done by Apple:

“Apple can offer musicians the opportunity to sell non-DRM mp3’s. The major labels
aren’t the ONLY ones with music to sell. There are plenty of independant musicians.”

The other big news of the week was the release of Yahoo Pipes, an
RSS Remixer
. R/WW readers love to think big and so William Peterson left a comment
suggesting that Yahoo could go further and develop “the ultimate mashup maker”. He
wrote:

“What if you could apply that same sort of logic to ANY web content? RSS feeds, news
sites, email, any sorts of web services!”

The other main Web news of the week:

Analysis Posts

As usual, the various Read/WriteWeb authors and guest bloggers taxed your brain with
in-depth Web analysis. Jawad Shuaib’s post entitled 6 Startup Lessons
For The Year 2007
got some excellent feedback. Comment #10 from Emil sounded a note
of caution about focusing on niches:

“If google offered a Seccond-best-in-breed solution to all the webservices I’ve
signed up with I would personally be glad to trade a superior solution with a single
login and easy adaptation.

In that sense a small startup with a carefully carved niche may still find them selves
competing with MySpace simply because they are still that deadly one-extra-click away
from the site the user is already on.”

Mike Rundle chimed in at comment #13, also
disagreeing that niches are necessarily good:

“What’s wrong with coming up with an original idea and doing it huge, doing it for the
entire planet, regardless of if you’re a teacher, designer, geek, or anything else? Why
not tackle the huge and complex problems, aren’t those infinitely more satisfying? Why go
after the small fish when you could be busy with your app that exists for $500 million
instead of $5 million?”

RJ then defended the niche in comment #17:

“Real entrepreneurs solve problems regardless of the size. There will be plenty of
opportunities to create gigantic start-ups as new (online/offline) technologies appear,
so you should never forget about the big picture. At the same time, looking at the
current state of the web…there are clearly a lot of opportunities for niche and the
super-niche.”

There’s more excellent comments on that theme – well worth perusing if you’re a
budding Web entrepreneur.

Other analysis posts this week:

Startup Action

We did a
thorough review of 30 Boxes
, which turned 1 year old this week. If you want to read
some practical lessons gained from a best-of-breed site focusing on a niche (and battling
Google to boot), then check it out. Also see our review of
Change.org
, a Social Network For Social Activism. We gave it top marks, but commenter
Matthew Ogston rightly pointed
out that offline social action needs to happen too:

“I’d love to see some of the content, ideas and support taken further than just this
site. It’s great to experience an online social network like Change, but you could reach
a new , more mature audience if the service evolved into offline events, gatherings and
meetups.”

Change.org founder Ben Rattray responded to that later in the thread, noting that they
have “an “Actions” feature for facilitating just that”.

We also reviewed the following three innovative startups this week:

Poll

Finally this week’s poll was kind of admin-focused: What type of content
keeps you coming back to Read/WriteWeb?
But the results are illuminating for us, so
thanks to all who participated.

1. Web Analysis 30% (278 votes)

2. Startup Reviews 24% (227 votes)

3. Web Tech News 19% (173 votes)

4. Web Design Discussions 13% (117 votes)

5. Bigco Products (Goog, MS, Y!, etc) 12% (108 votes)

6. Other (please leave a comment) 3% (25 votes)

That’s a wrap for another week!

About ReadWrite’s Editorial Process

The ReadWrite Editorial policy involves closely monitoring the tech industry for major developments, new product launches, AI breakthroughs, video game releases and other newsworthy events. Editors assign relevant stories to staff writers or freelance contributors with expertise in each particular topic area. Before publication, articles go through a rigorous round of editing for accuracy, clarity, and to ensure adherence to ReadWrite's style guidelines.

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