Blogger Started by a tiny company in San Francisco called Pyra Labs in August of 1999. This was in the midst of the dot-com boom. But we weren't exactly a VC-funded, party-throwing, foosball-in-the-lobby-playing, free-beer-drinking outfit.
FeedBurner The largest feed management provider. Our Web-based services help bloggers, podcasters and commercial publishers promote, deliver and profit from their content on the Web.
WordPress A personal publishing platform with a focus on aesthetics, web standards, and usability.
Wikipedia Is likely the most commonly known public wiki and according to Wikipedia, it is the worlds largest functioning wiki.
MySpace Likely the most popular online social networking site in the English-speaking world.
del.icio.us A service that provides a way for people to organize their favourite websites. Much like many other social bookmarking services, del.icio.us is not private; therefore, whatever information one puts in becomes available for everyone to see.
StumbleUpon Enables “social surfing” – it retrieves websites that other Net surfers deem relevant to you according to your user profile.
Flickr A photo sharing website, thus it is a unique social bookmarking tool because it contains digital images. Flickr serves the same purpose as the social bookmarking tools that contain links because Flickr photos are also tagged and browsed.
Connotea A free social bookmarking site that is geared towards clinicians and scientists. Users can save and tag links to any web pages that they want to remember and/or reference.
Socialtext 2.0 A fundamental redesign of the user interface, resolving the complexity that confronts new wiki users while preserving the power of a flexible enterprise tool.
BlogPulse An automated trend discovery system for blogs. Blogs, a term that is short for weblogs, represent the fastest-growing medium of personal publishing and the newest method of individual expression and opinion on the Internet.
Technorati A source on what's happening on Blogs, right now. We search and organize blogs and the other forms of independent, user-generated content increasingly referred to as “citizen media.”
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