It's interesting that a high school in Conn. has banned iPods, but my little school in podunk East Texas encourages learning through downloadable iPod lessons.
tudio executives say they're optimistic that particular headache will be resolved soon. But the pay channels are unlikely to allow movies to be sold online while they have the rights unless they negotiate a reduction in rights fees worth hundreds of millions of dollars per year.
Animated classic presenting what an atom is, how energy is released from certain
kinds of atoms, the peacetime uses of atomic energy and the byproducts of
nuclear fission.
Only last week Google splashed out on Writely, a web-based word processor that requires no downloads or installation and just runs in a browser window.
Maybe Web 2.0 is a transitional phase, and once we get used to interacting with online tools in a more natural way and dispense with static web, we will move to a world of true distributed computing.
We'll need to make sure that the successful Web 2.0 companies don't just sit on progress because it doesn't serve their business plans, like so many other computing companies have done in the past and continue to do today.
If Web 2.0 is the first stage in a revolution, we need to make sure it's a permanent revolution.