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    The Best Web 2.0 Software of 2005

    posted Saturday, 10 December 2005
    It's getting towards the end of the year and I'm feeling the need to take stock of where we've actually come with Web 2.0 in the last 12 months.  So much has happened in this space recently and a tidal wave of innovative, high-quality software has been released this year.  So much in fact, that it's hard to keep track of it all.  While many of us talk about Web 2.0 ideas, there's no substitute for pointing to concrete examples. And this also gives credit where credit is due to all the hard-working folks building the next generation of the Web.

    So in spirit of the holidays, here is a list of some of the best Web 2.0 software that I've come across so far.  You may have heard of some of these, but hopefully you'll find a few nice new Christmas presents under your Web 2.0 tree.

    Finally, the usual disclaimer: This list is entirely subjective and any errors or omissions are my fault, you may not (and probably won't!) agree with some of the software I've listed.  But this isn't a one-way web, I definitely encourage you to list anything you feel we missed or got wrong below in the comments.  Please use the wiki link syntax ([url text_desc]) help to make sure you embed plenty of good links.  Finally, a big thanks to Kate Allen for help compiling this list. Enjoy!


    The Best Web 2.0 Software of 2005



    Category: Social Bookmarking


    Best Offering: del.icio.us


    del.icio.us

    DescriptionJust acquired by Yahoo!, which already has a social bookmarking service called My Web 2.0, the exact future of this seminal bookmarking site is now a little up in the air.  But
    del.icio.us remains the best, largest, fastest, and most elegant social bookmarking service on the Web.  In fact, del.icio.us is the benchmark that all others use.  And because del.icio.us appears to take the Web 2.0 ideas pretty seriously, they provide a nice API for others to build new services on top of.  As a consequence of this, and because social bookmarking sites makes everyone's data public, witness the amazing array of add-on services (or if you have 15 minutes to spare, look here) that mash-up or otherwise reuse del.icio.us functionality and content.  If you want access to your bookmarks anywhere you go along with engaging and satisfying functionality, this is your first stop.  I personally can't live without my tag cloud of del.icio.us bookmarks.


    Runners-Up
    :



    Category: Web 2.0 Start Pages


    Best Offering: Netvibes


    Description: There are a rapidly growing number of Ajax start pages that allow your favorite content to be displayed, rearranged, and viewed dynamically whenever you want.  But if the traffic to this blog is any indication (though possibly it isn't) Netvibes is far and away the most popular one.  Available in multiple languages, sporting new integration with Writely, and offering an extremely slick and well-designed interface that provides some of the best DHTML powered drag-an-drop organization, Netvibes has no major vendor backing, yet it has captured mindshare out of pure excellence.  While many of the major Web companies like Microsoft and Google are offering competing products, none of them are yet very good.


    Runners-Up
    :





    Category: Online To Do Lists


    Best Offering: Voo2do




    Description:
    Ever more of the software we use on a daily basis is moving online, from e-mail to feed readers.  To-do list managers are no exception.  I've used a variety of them and so far the one that's resonated with me most is Voo2do.  A one person operation run by Shimon Rura, Voo2do uses Ajax sparingly but very effectively to let you create and manage multiple to do lists.  With an API available for you to access or export your data with your own programs, support for Joel Spolsky's Painless Software Scheduling method, Voo2do is the embodiment of simple, satisfying software.

    Runners-Up




    Category: Peer Production News


    Best Offering: digg


    Description: While not packed with Ajax, digg frankly doesn't lack for it.  And of course, Ajax is only one of many optional ingredients on the Web 2.0 checklist.  The important Web 2.0 capability digg provides is that it successfully harnesses collective intelligence.  All news items listed in digg are supplied by its users which then exert editorial control by clicking on the digg button for each story they like.  The home page lists the most popular current stories, all selected by its registered users.  And digg's RSS feed has to be one of the most popular on the Web.  Digg has been so successful that Wired magazine has even speculated it could bury Slashdot, which also allows users to submit stories, but doesn't let them see what stories were submitted or vote on them.

    Runners-Up:




    Category: Image Storage and Sharing


    Best Offering: Flickr




    Description:
    Also acquired by Yahoo! earlier this year, Flickr is the canonical photo/image sharing site par excellence.  Sprinkled with a smattering of just enough Ajax to reduce page loads and make tasks easy, Flickr provides an open API, prepackaged licensing models for your photos, tagging, a variety of community involvement mechanisms, and a vast collection of add-ons and mashups.  There are other sites but none of them compare yet.  Flickr is one of the Web 2.0 poster children and for a good reason.

    Runners-Up:




    Category:  3rd Party Online File Storage


    Best Offering:
    Openomy



    Description:
    As more and more software moves to the Web, having a secure place for your Web-based software to store files such as documents, media, and other data will become essential.  There is a burgeoning group of online file storage services and Openomy is one that I've been watching for a while.  With 1Gb of free file storage and an open API for programmatic access to your tag-based Openomy file system, and you have the raw ingredients for secure online storage of your documents wherever you go.  There is even a Ruby-binding for the API.  Expect lots of growth in this space going forward, especially as other Web 2.0 applications allow you to plug into your online storage service of choice and the desire also grows to offload personal data backup to professionals.

    Runners-Up:




    Category:  Blog Filters


    Best Offering: Memeorandum.com



    Description:
    Gabe Rivera's Memeorandum service is a relevance engine that unblinkingly monitors the activity in the blogosphere and appears to point out the most important posts of the day with a deftness that is remarkable.  The growing attention scarcity caused by the rivers of information we're being subjected to in the modern world needs tools that effectively help us cope with it.  Blog filters are just one key example of what the future holds for us.  Memeorandum covers both the political and technology blogospheres, and hopefully others in the future.  There are other blog and news filters out there, but none compare in terms of simplicity, elegance, and satisfying results.

    Runners-Up:



    Category:  Grassroots Use of Web 2.0


    Best Offering: Katrina List Network



    Description:
    I covered Katrinalist.net in a detailed blog post a while back but it remains one of the best examples of grassroots Web 2.0.  Katrinalist was an emergent phenomenon that triggered the peer production of vital information in the aftermath of this year's hurricane disaster in New Orleans. In just a handful of days participants created XML data formats, engineered data aggregation from RSS feeds, and harnessed volunteer efforts on-the-fly to compile survivor data from all over the Web.  This led to tens of thousands of survivor reports being aggregated into a single database so that people could easily identify and locate survivors from the Katrinalist Web site.  All this despite the fact that the information was distributed in unstructured formats from all over the Web with no prior intent of reuse.  A hearty thanks again to David Geilhufe for help making Katrinalist happen.

    Runners-Up:





    Category:  Web-Based Word Processing


    Best Offering: Writely



    Description:
    Easy to set-up, fast, free (in beta), and familiar to those with even a passing familiarity to MS word, Writely.com is an effective and easy to use online word processor. With its WSIWYG editor, users can change font and font size, spell check and insert images (up to 2MB).  It also uses tagging and version control, both excellent features for any word processor. A very useful word processing tool, especially for those who can't afford to buy MS Office. In addition to being a word processor, Writely.com also serves as a collaboration tool. Users invite others to collaborate on a certain documents via email. It is can also serve as a tool to help a user blog and publish. Built with an AJAX user interface, it maximizes many of the new features available with Web 2.o.  It ends, once and for all, any uncertainty that productivity tools can and should stay online.  Writely is the best out there but just by a nose. The others are very close runners-up.

    Runners-Up:




    Category:  Online Calendars


    Best Offering: 
    CalendarHub



    Description:
    Online calendaring is a rapidly growing product category in the Web 2.0 software arena.  The fact is that a lack of good, shareable electronic calendars is still a real problem these days. I'm fond of saying that the software world has vast collections of synchronization utilities and integration capabilities, yet it's incredible that we still can't routinely do simple things like keeping our personal, family, and work calendars synchronized.  CalendarHub is the best online calendar I've seen so far, with Kiko a close second.

    Runners-Up:





    Category:  Project Management & Team Collaboration

    Best Offering:
    BaseCamp



    Description: Web 2.0 has terrific social collaboration models for two-way information exchange like blogs and wikis, open enrichment mechanisms like tagging, ranking, popularity, and organizing techniques like folksonomies.  All of these provide a great backdrop for team collaboration and project management.  Surprisingly, there aren't many terrific Web 2.0 project management tools.  Part of this is because project management tends to be very specific between different types of projects.  Fortunately for Web 2.0 companies, this means there isn't a lot of competition from traditional software companies like Microsoft and Primavera, which churn out somewhat mediocre products in the shrinkwrapped software space.  This is why 37Signal's Basecamp is such a pleasant surprise.  It's an excellent team-based project management tool that continues to delight me the more I use it.

    Runners-Up:

    The Story Continues However, As It Must!

    No one person could accurately list the best Web 2.0 software of 2005.  This is the wisdom of crowds bit of Web 2.0.  In order to complete this list, I'll need your help.  Please contribute your selections below.  Keep in mind that I haven't worked with many of the terrific Web 2.0 software applications out there but many of you have.  There are whole product categories I'm not covering here and I'm glad to keep extending this post if we get lots of feedback.  Tell me about social spreadsheets, Web 2.0 project management tools, video versions of Flickr, additional grassroots Web 2.0 events, and whatever else you know of.

    Web 2.0 is an exciting, vibrant community.  Let's show the world what Web 2.0 is made of...

    Update: I added an online calendar section and put a few new runners-up.  Also added project management and team collaboration.

    Update 2: Two follow on lists have been very popular, check them out for more great software, especially in the comments:  More Great Web 2.0 Software and Most Promising Web 2.0 Software of 2006.

    Update 3: My first Enterprise Web 2.0 software list is out.  It has an extensive list of many enterprise-ready Web 2.0 software applications.

    Update 4: August 14th, 2006 - A List of Major Web 2.0 Up-and-Comers: Predicting the Next YouTube or MySpace.




    links: del.icio.us    



    AddThis Social Bookmark Button

    1. Griffin left...
    Saturday, 10 December 2005 8:34 pm :: http://griffinopolis.com

    Great list Dion. Good place for people to start in on a Web 2.0 journey.

    In the Peer Production News category, I've been tinkering with Shoutwire recently. Maybe to similar to Digg for some, but I've been enjoying it. Not sure if it counts as Web 2.0 but Pandora is one of the best services out there, in my opinion.


    2. Christoph Janz left...
    Saturday, 10 December 2005 9:01 pm :: http://christophjanz.blogspot.com

    Great list, Dion.

    How about these additions:

    CalendarHub (newly created "calendars" category)

    TailRank (Blog Filters)

    Reddit (Peer Production)


    3. karl left...
    Saturday, 10 December 2005 10:04 pm

    I second in the "peer production" category.


    4. karl left...
    Saturday, 10 December 2005 10:05 pm

    I second -> reddit <- in the "peer production" category. (sorry for the double post, I think I broke the wiki)


    5. Klim left...
    Saturday, 10 December 2005 11:17 pm :: http://25thdimension.blogsome.com

    This is a great post. A few sites I never even heard of.

    But I'm surprised the Glide Effortlessly made it there. I have not heard of valid good reviews of it yet.


    6. Brian Benzinger left...
    Saturday, 10 December 2005 11:47 pm :: http://www.solutionwatch.com

    Excellent list, Dion. Your list is pretty spot on to my feelings, although I too feel that Reddit fits great in Peer Production.

    Also, just heads up that the Rallypoint URL is wrong.. its actually: http://www.rallypointhq.com/

    Nice work on the roundup, Dion.


    7. Michael Bayler left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 3:13 am :: http://metacoms.blogspot.com

    So helpful, many thanks. Exactly what I've been looking for!


    8. Michael Bayler left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 3:20 am :: http://metacoms.blogspot.com

    So helpful, many thanks. Exactly what I've been looking for! BTW, I find Basecamp (http://www.basecamphq.com/) absolutely invaluable for business communications, basics project management team co-ordination and to-do tracking.


    9. Nancy McGough left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 7:33 am :: http://deflexion.com

    The most interesting part of this list is what's missing, namely that there's no webmail client. I think you might be right that none of the existing webmail clients should make it into a "Best Web 2.0 Software of 2005' list, but if I had to make a list like this, I'd probably include Gmail. I know it came out in 2004, but so did del.icio.us. As far as I can tell Gmail has had a huge influence on getting people used to (and happy with) using web-based software and storing their data on the Net rather than on their local system. I think (hope!) that in 2006 we finally get a decent webmail client (and service providers) with more open APIs than what Gmail currently provides.


    10. Duncan left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 8:23 am :: http://www.suttree.com

    How about Millionsofgames.com?

    http://www.millionsofgames.com/

    A social bookmarking service that serves a niche audience, casual gamers, which solves a number of the problems with tags and tag grammar. By having such a small target the grammar is smaller and therefore the tags are more powerful.


    11. Dion Hinchcliffe left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 10:20 am :: http://sphereofinfluence.com

    Folks:

    I've incorporated most of the feedback so far.

    Keep your suggestions coming and use the wiki link syntax to post lots of good link!


    12. Ralph Inselsbacher left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 10:59 am :: http://rainonline.ws

    I miss eg. Simpy, ClipMarks, MeasureMap, Google Mail, Rojo, Last.fm, 23, Zoto,...

    I wonder why Shadows made it as a runner-up - one can't even edit / delete / merge tags.


    13. karl left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 11:49 am

    Thank you for adding reddit. Unfortunately, the link is broken.


    14. Adil Sardar left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 12:20 pm

    I think you might want to add www.pandora.com to the list. It is a really cool music streaming service that plays songs based on your preferences. It learns what you like and dislike.


    15. anon left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 12:53 pm

    Grassroots = Democracy 2.0. Just started, amazing grassroots potential. http://wiki-law.org/mwiki/index.php?title=Democracy_2.0:_Main_Page


    16. Sumeet left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 1:02 pm :: http://sumeet.info/

    Best podcasts site?


    17. Walden left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 1:03 pm :: http://wikicompany.org

    The Wikicompany project is an ambitious attempt to create a new form of online business directory.

    Wikicompany is a Wiki site with: GoogleMaps, RSS aggregation, semantic web annotions, and more.


    18. Deepak left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 1:27 pm :: http://mndoci.blogspot.com

    You need a category for Backpack. Indispensible app for me.


    19. Amit left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 1:28 pm :: http://bufiji.blogspot.com

    For my start page, I personally like google.com/ig. Being able to track rss feeds and my gmail, makes it pretty useful.


    20. Support Guy left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 1:45 pm

    Seems like you need to add a category for "project management / information sharing." Basecamp is popular in this category as you can see from the response...as well as Central Desktop.


    21. Zeman left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 2:11 pm

    How about a category for best open API use or user created mash up?

    Flickrmap

    Liveplasma

    Coverpop


    22. James left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 2:18 pm :: http://www.jamesbritt.com

    I believe the use of the official Web 2.0 Validator ("We're the dot in Web 2.0") would go a long way in scientifically determining just what sites are or are not Web 2.0.

    http://web2.0validator.com


    23. Otis Gospodnetic left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 2:31 pm

    I also don't get why those runner ups are there in the Social Bookmarks category. What about Simpy? None of the other services (del.icio.us including) can't do full-text search or don't even have support for AND, OR, and NOT...


    24. Someone left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 4:17 pm

    Ghaa, I can't beleive basecamp was first. our entire class had to use it for a project, and almost everyone hated it by the end.


    25. Grue left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 5:18 pm :: http://grue3.tripod.com

    Why does everyone likes del.icio.us? It's frontpage is ugly as hell and looks like a spam site you get to by typing a wrong URL accidentally. Even my home page looks better! If this is Web 2.0, I'd rather downgrade to previous version...


    26. Bob Afifi left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 6:58 pm :: http://www.bobafifi.com

    Thanks Dion for the list. I signed up for CalendarHub but can't figure out where the info is for "Publish a calendar on your own website?." I sent them an email but have not heard back yet, curious do you know? Also, any leads on 2.0 spell checkers?

    Thanks again!


    27. jeff left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 7:41 pm

    otis: actually del.icio.us does support AND and OR in search (not sure about NOT though)


    28. Jay Cross left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 7:45 pm

    Aggregate your blog faves with suprglu.com It's great. For a simple wiki, try pbwiki.com

    Thanks for posting the list.


    29. Mark Hurst left...
    Sunday, 11 December 2005 10:51 pm :: http://www.goodexperience.com

    My Goovite and Gootodo tools aren't on the list? Oh well :)


    30. physio left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 12:07 am :: http://automailer.com/tws/

    I strongly feel that AirSet should be in your onine calendar list, although it is much more than just a calendar. I have tried out just about every variation of online calendar out there and it is by far the best.

    Perhaps it isn't flashy enough? It's functionality is far far beyone CalendarHub, which I was initially impressed with as well. However, I have never received any reply to any feedback from the CalendarHup people while AirSet and HipCal.com are both very open to user feedback.

    HipCal is not quite as full featured as AirSet but it too is superior to CalendarHub.


    31. Chandu left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 12:22 am :: http://www.chanduonline.com

    Great Compilation Dion... Thanks for posting.


    32. 223 left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 12:43 am

    http://www.glypho.com


    33. yshie left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 12:44 am :: http://www.yazai.com

    great list... thanks for posting.


    34. anon left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 1:00 am

    you sure that's the right democracy 2.0 logo?


    35. 666 left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 1:03 am

    where is Google Maps?


    36. Mojo left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 1:13 am

    Avvenu, Pandora, MP3Tunes


    37. Rod left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 1:15 am :: http://www.blockrocker.com

    Hey Dion, awesome list.

    I'd like to suggest my own site for your consideration:

    BlockRocker.com

    Its a classifieds site with a Web 2.0 twist, mashing up Google Maps, Amazon Product data, IP localization, and customizeable RSS feeds to offer a streamlined user experience for buyers and sellers.

    The most noticeable thing about BR is that it uses Google maps for primary navigation. This allows to you search as local or as global as you'd like, anywhere in the world, from your block of the street, to your city, or continent.

    Another key feature is the ability to haul in product data from Amazon for posting ads in certain categories. For example, enter the UPC code of a DVD you want to sell, and pictures and product description info are added to your classified automatically.

    Finally, customizeable geographic RSS feeds provide a means to stay on top of items for sale in your area, or add relevant classifieds to your community website. Example: OhMyCharlotte is a community website for Charlotte, NC, that uses a custom BlockRocker RSS feed to add classifieds posted in Charlotte to their website:

    OhMyCharlotte

    The RSS feeds are also being picked up by FreeCycle groups as better means of staying in touch than email listservs.

    Anyway - that's it in a nutshell. The site is about 2 weeks old now, and has been continuously evolving. That's a point I'd like to repeat: my goal with BR is to continue to expand/improve functionality without compromising simplicity in execution.

    So, thanks for reading, and thanks for posting an excellent list of Web 2.0 tools - I'll be using this post as a required-reading list for ongoing research.

    Best regards, Rod Edwards


    38. jason left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 1:27 am :: http://www.escapist.net

    This is a good list, but is lacking some very important players in the field.

    Bookmarks: Furl, Spurl, Wists

    Trusted Search: Rollyo, Squidoo

    Traffic: Measure Map, Mint, Google Analytics

    Might also have been nice to see listings for MAPS and MASH-UPS:

    Maps: Google(duh), Yahoo, MSN, MSN Earth, Wayfaring


    39. Hoss left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 2:04 am

    SpinSpy.com has a chance. Sort of a community media watchdog digg.


    40. David Stein left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 2:10 am

    Great list Dion...in my opinion...the best citizen 2.0 news site out there is www.nowpublic.com. They were truly the pioneers in this space and are really still the best. It is not re-blogged stories but often great original content.


    41. Matthew left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 2:19 am :: http://www.demeusy.com

    Lots of reasons to prefer Simpy over del.icio.us in my opinion. Why does everyone seem to overlook it? I tried Furl and found it annoying.

    http://www.simpy.com


    42. kingkool68 left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 2:23 am :: http://www.russellheimlich.com

    Some of the big ones I use daily: Gmail Google Reader Planzo.com

    I also like llor.nu for those fleeting spare moments that i need to waste.


    43. Jason Richards left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 2:25 am :: http://www.sendspace.com

    As for online storage and file sharing, http://www.sendspace.com appears to be the absolute leader


    44. miss moose left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 2:32 am

    not sure if this counts but "stumble upon" is a super fun tool - good way to find some gems


    45. Mark left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 2:47 am :: http://tinymce.moxiecode.com

    I can't believe you mention WYSIWYG without including the most popular open source WYSIWYG editor, TinyMCE (http://tinymce.moxiecode.com). It is beeing used in ALL (more or less) the major open source CMS for publishing content on the web.


    46. Frank Smadja left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 2:56 am :: http://www.rawsugar.com/user/frank

    I think you can add RawSugar to the list. We offer great search, publish and personalization features. This is very attractive for bloggers or WebSite owners, as well as for individual linkbloggers. You can check out some of our users.

    We are not just a tagging service :-)

    Thanks


    47. gill left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 3:01 am :: http://www.snowball.be

    Great list, lots of sites I did'nt know... I put a link to this page from my site (http://www.snowball.be).


    48. steve left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 3:29 am

    i think you have missed :Planner , Jot Live.


    49. Godfrey Daniel left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 4:18 am

    Another vote for Pandora.

    Odeo Webjay Raw Sugar Slawesome! WebNote


    50. strangedaze left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 4:19 am :: http://last.fm/user/strangedaze/

    http://last.fm/ does everything Pandora does with similarities radio--with a lot more obscure independent artists judging from a few cursory searches-- and it's also a fully-featured social music site.

    The quality of the similarities engine is good because it's based on data from tens of thousands of users whose media players submit their recently listened to tracks to the site.

    Also has RSS feeds, API for stats on your listening habits, journaling, tags, forums... funnest web2.0 site I've played with short of flickr.


    51. Ashish left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 5:00 am

    Hipcal (http://www.hipcal.com) is by far the best online calendar tool I've come across. It's also one of the most improved web 2.0 applications around.


    52. Zach L left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 5:18 am

    Not sure if a software might count, but Qube websearch client has recieved rave reviews all around, might want to include it.

    Nice List anyway, I use most of them already. :)


    53. Kenzo left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 5:34 am :: http://dreamgirls.globbo.org/

    Thank you, this list is very useful. For the bookmark service I think http://www.kopikol.net/ is a cool service too


    54. Tom Churm left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 5:41 am :: http://rss2pdf.com

    I love almost all the apps on this list!

    Although I'm not conceited enough to think my app can compare with these, i still think it's pretty cool, and it launched in 2005:

    RSS 2 PDF / OPML 2 PDF

    http://rss2pdf.com

    Thanks,

    Tom Churm

    Creator, RSS2PDF.com


    55. Moses left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 5:58 am

    I think the spanish viajeroo as well as kayak, is a good web2.0 app for travel deals search. :)


    56. John left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 6:05 am

    Omnidrive as a runner up in online storage - has it actually been tested yet? Still seems to be in closed beta to me.


    57. Stigsen left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 6:14 am

    Cool list ... I want to add 180 news http://www.180n.com/ cheers


    58. Nik Cubrilovic left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 6:48 am

    John you are right about Omnidrive - it is still being tested and developed internally and I am also suprised it is on this list (gives you an idea then of how poor the other offerings are). I look forward to starting the public beta so that it can be included in lists such as this one based on its merit!


    59. rick left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 7:16 am

    planzo.com, its better than calendarhub or kiko


    60. HASH left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 7:54 am

    Did you consider eSnips for you 3rd Party Online File Storage category?


    61. Hervé left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 8:25 am

    Hello Dion,

    Cool list, I would add a new category : digital content market place with : - fotolia.com - istockphoto.com

    Hervé from Belgium


    62. PierreS left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 8:30 am

    Hi,

    In the blog filering tools I would certainly add TechTiki

    Although it's not currently the best, I think it has great potential...

    Regards


    63. Steve left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 8:39 am :: http://steve.osdir.com

    180n.com (just lauchned) is a web2.0 play for regular news stories. Users mod stories up to Important as they come in over the news wire. "Google News x 10"


    64. James left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 8:43 am

    Hi,

    I really like MyEmail.com for checking my pop3 email accounts. It has a nice interface that is really easy to use.

    James


    65. Michael McDerment left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 9:07 am :: http://www.michaelmcderment.com/

    Looks like you are missing a "business" category ... for billing and invoicing there is <a href="http://www.2ndsite.biz">2ndSite</a>.

    Michael McDerment

    Founder | 2ndsite.biz

    Over 30,000 users in more than 65 countries


    66. Dave left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 9:19 am

    The ultimate in web2.0,IM in a browser,integrates all the major IM clients in on single easy to use web interface.


    67. Butch left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 9:28 am :: http://www.computer-savy.com

    I have really come to love www.hipcal.com It is a fairly new calendar site and still in beta but it is so pretty!


    68. David left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 9:33 am

    tempinbox.com has saved me a ton of time lately...


    69. ig left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 9:38 am

    How about email/collaboration? Citadel http://www.citadel.org has ajax-based email, calendar/scheduling, message boards, instant messenger, real time chat, and a bunch of other stuff *plus* a really powerful back end.


    70. David left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 9:42 am

    How come there is no category for online mapping tools. You also missed Google's Personalized Page under the start pages section.


    71. Aaron Post left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 10:29 am :: http://www.30secondrule.com

    The Best Web 2.0 Software?

    But do any of these Validate?

    Its social validation at its finest.


    72. J. Shirley left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 10:37 am :: http://www.toeat.com

    I'm happy to plug my site: http://www.toeat.com

    Web 2.0 Restaurant Finder. Hope you all enjoy.


    73. Matt from 37signals left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 11:15 am :: http://www.37signals.com

    Thanks for including Basecamp, Writeboard, and Ta-Da Lists here. You may want to also check out Backpack, 37signals' personal and small business information manager.


    74. Jeremy W left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 11:39 am

    What about RSS aggregators? The guys over at attensa (attensa.com) have a pretty slick one, though their website needs a bit of updating. ;)


    75. Topper left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 11:41 am :: http://quimble.com

    http://quimble.com - Create polls... the right way.


    76. nathan left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 11:56 am :: http://www.fluctu8.com

    fluctu8.com .. nice little podcast /rsscast /atomcast aggregator supporting mp3, ogg, and flac


    77. vitaly left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 12:14 pm

    better than flickr. $50 = unlimited space/bandwith for a year. public sharing. practically every method of uploading -- ftp, web, java, some integrated cliets, etc.


    78. bruce spector left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 12:27 pm :: http://www.riffs.com

    Your Social Recommender Don't know what category you'd put this in but 'Recommendation Engine' & 'Social Networking'come to mind.


    79. marco left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 1:25 pm :: http://minchiachefame.iobloggo.com

    I love meebo.com to log into msn messenger and gtalk from any browser when I am not at my pc.

    a question for everybody: any (free) expense tracking app out there? I'd like to use a web2.0 app to record my expenses while not in office, and to get reports monthly... thanks. -m.


    80. JT left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 1:39 pm :: http://www.ispott.com

    http://www.ispott.com looks interesting. Still in very early beta.


    81. Ryan Williams left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 1:48 pm :: http://www.networthiq.com

    Great list. I'm wondering if a not so tech-centric category, such as personal finance would be a good fit for your list? <a href="http://www.networthiq.com">NetworthIQ</a> is social personal finance tool that allows users to track, share and compare their net worth.


    82. Godfrey Daniel left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 2:05 pm

    As this is all about Web2.0, it's pretty amusing how many commenters are stuck at Web.01 when it comes to link posting.


    83. Hooman Radfar left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 2:20 pm

    I suggest Yubnub.

    www.yubnub.org

    It is a really great tool for power users that like a command-line interface.


    84. diego left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 2:35 pm :: http://wwwhatsnew.blogspot.com

    Hi! I love your blog, i am writting a spanish web 2.0 blog in http://wwwhatsnew.blogspot.com with the bests web 2.0 application i have found.

    I would like you add my link here.

    regards! Diego


    85. John left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 2:45 pm :: http://www.hipcal.com

    If you want a clean, usable calendar with a todo list check out HipCal.com. Kiko's interface is crap and CalendarHub is still pretty buggy (they dont even have standard recurrence options). I've been using it for a while and it has been pretty nice.


    86. hillary left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 2:46 pm :: http://staticfade.blogspot.com

    some seconds, and also some additions...

    Bookmarks: BlogMarks.net, Simpy, Spurl Trusted Search: Rollyo, Squidoo Calendar: HipCal (formerly MyPIMP)


    87. hillary left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 3:11 pm :: http://staticfade.blogspot.com

    some seconds, and also some additions...

    Bookmarks: BlogMarks.net, Simpy, Spurl Trusted Search: Rollyo, Squidoo Calendar: HipCal (formerly MyPIMP)


    88. bedingue left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 3:19 pm

    Still in early developpement, but www.eventsniper.com is worth a look !

    With features like iCalendar support, it looks promising!


    89. Justin left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 3:26 pm

    Consider Zvents.com for the calendar category. I recently took a look at many online calendar apps (mostly for the purpose of integrating with websites, not for personal use), and decided these guys were the best.

    Here's some buzz about their app


    90. Vinay left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 3:30 pm :: http://www.panchamonline.com/manbol

    manbol - Hindi mondegreens


    91. miscblogger left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 4:07 pm :: http://blog.art-app.com

    great list. though, i always wondered what web 2.0 was. this article made me want to research it even more at wikipedia. Why isn't wikipedia on this list. i'm sure it is part of web 2.0


    92. eric goldstein left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 4:26 pm :: http://clipmarks.com/user/egoldstein/

    Thanks for the honor! Hopefully with a lot of hard work Clipmarks will rise from runner up to best of the web for 2006.


    93. Robert left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 5:41 pm

    Interesting as well: the "do it yourself" searchengines like Rollyo.com and Scoopgo.com. Definitely something that fits in the web20 list.


    94. ycc2106 left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 5:48 pm :: http://3spots.blogspot.com/

    "AND WHAT ARE YOU GUYS PREFERRED ONLINE SOCIAL BOOKMARK MANAGER?":http://quimble.com/poll/view_poll/224

    I'm trying to find out which to choose...


    95. macewan left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 6:37 pm :: http://www.macewan.org/

    Right on with writely.com's vote. What really sealed it for me was their support of the Open Document format. Both import and export.


    96. Don left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 7:02 pm

    A great list, but no links to make eBay more managable, especially for Christmas shopping?

    How about www.AuctionMapper.com or one of the other eBay searches?


    97. Dave left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 9:44 pm

    I have been using filangy.com for a while now, works very good. Any opinions on it?


    98. Naveed left...
    Monday, 12 December 2005 11:31 pm

    I suggest http://www.hipcal.com under calendars.


    99. Lammert Postma left...
    Tuesday, 13 December 2005 5:30 am :: http://www.butterflyproject.nl

    I miss ButterFly a webbased application to redline and share webpages and in the WORD/PDF in the future.

    Movie Demo: http://ww w.butterflyproject.nl/help/butterflyreader.php

    DEMO: http://www.butterflypro ject.nl/reader/goPage.php?uN=lammert&uID=14&url=http://jcmc.indiana.edu/vol 10/issue3/lee.html


    100. Thom left...
    Tuesday, 13 December 2005 6:23 am :: http://www.surftail.com

    Surf Tail is a great use of all the Web 2.0 stuff, as users browse the web they leave trails for others to follow www.surftail.com


    101. Geo left...
    Tuesday, 13 December 2005 7:09 am :: http://www.furl.net/members/GeoFan49

    FURL.net has some great features. Takes awhile to master. Wondering why it did not make the list? Not web 2.0?

    More here on Furl + del.icio.us

    10 Cool Things to do with Furl


    102. Lars Koudal left...
    Tuesday, 13 December 2005 8:12 am :: http://www.koudal.dk

    Excellent list, lots of nice sites I've never heard about before. I believe you missed this one (or at pleast personally I would have put it higher on the list) for writing solutions: Thinkfree Office Online http://www.thinkfree.com/ I do prefer writely, who won the contest, but in my opinion, this should be a close second.


    103. Dave Reed left...
    Tuesday, 13 December 2005 11:50 am

    Good list, but I prefer this list:

    http://lopic o.blogspot.com/2005/12/web-20-picks.html


    104. David left...
    Tuesday, 13 December 2005 9:32 pm :: http://synapticburn.com

    I think you missed a whole big category, no? Social stuff? MySpace, My Web 2.0, Yahoo 360, LinkedIn, EventFul, Upcoming.com, Orkut


    105. Lauren left...
    Tuesday, 13 December 2005 9:49 pm :: http://www.fedira.com/blog

    I'm not sure if it counts, but Ning certainly seems like an excellent use of Web 2.0 technologies (it's a social app that uses Google Maps and several other APIs to allow non-developer users to make their own social software -- okay that was a horrible explanation, but it's an interesting site).


    106. sjk left...
    Tuesday, 13 December 2005 11:26 pm

    I'm surprised Zimbra wasn't mentioned.


    107. Tim Constantine left...
    Wednesday, 14 December 2005 6:58 am :: http://www.newsmob.com

    NewsMob is also a very nice free Web 2.0 service. NewsMob works with your existing Desktop, Palm, Pocket PC, and Mobile Phone web browser, sync or live, to provide you access to your favorite RSS news feeds. With NewsMob you can tag feeds, save them as favorites, and you can clip headlines (and optionally provide a RSS fee of your clipped headlines).


    108. Lain Burgos-Lovece left...
    Wednesday, 14 December 2005 5:15 pm :: [http://www.houseofbreath.org/]

    Great list, Dion, and great idea to share the comments! My suggestion would be in the project management category: ProjectPlace

    I've used it for a while and it's a joy!


    109. Marek Kowalczyk left...
    Wednesday, 14 December 2005 6:27 pm

    What about contact management / customer relationship management category? I think many businesses are missing a killer app in this area badly.

    And please don't tell me it's http://salesforce.com, because it's way to complicated and unwieldy. My nomination would be http://campaignmonitor.com (after they've added the recently announced new list segmentation features.


    110. Mark Hampton left...
    Thursday, 15 December 2005 12:32 am

    Another similar list, albeit without categories:

    http://www.articledashboard.com/Article/Top-10-Innovative-Web-2-0-Applicati o ns-of-2005/10891

    an interesting one on there which wouldn't fit into one of your categories is Givemeaning.com - they call it the network for the $5 philanthropist

    also I am kind of suprised that peerflix.com hasn't been making more of the top 10 lists, it's totally turned my movie watching methods upside down.


    111. Mark Hampton left...
    Thursday, 15 December 2005 1:28 am

    Another similar list, albeit without categories:

    http://www.articledashboard.com/Article/Top-10-Innovative-Web-2-0-Applicati o ns-of-2005/10891

    an interesting one on there which wouldn't fit into one of your categories is Givemeaning.com - they call it the network for the $5 philanthropist

    also I am kind of suprised that peerflix.com hasn't been making more of the top 10 lists, it's totally turned my movie watching methods upside down.


    112. spk left...
    Thursday, 15 December 2005 2:46 am

    i would love to see someone do a web2.0 app that uss the crowd to determine lines for games/sports and see how the masses do against bookies - like an open line generator that using groupthink.

    on apps - blinksale is delightful to use but still v1.0 all full of ajaxy goodness.

    www.blinksale.com


    113. matt northam left...
    Thursday, 15 December 2005 7:28 am :: http://www.scpgt.co.uk

    Looks like it's been said enough but still; great list!

    Would http://www.knowmore.org fit in the grassroots section?.. Makes really good use of wikiness.


    114. Bill V. left...
    Thursday, 15 December 2005 9:32 am

    Thanks for the list, Dion. It's a start, and it contributes to the critical growth of 2.0 services. Speaking of growth, a number of the services listed above have been stressed out by the jump in server hits and sign ups during the past few days inspired by this list and the increasing publicity in general ... growing pains:

    "We're Sorry

    We've seen a massive increase in users over the past couple of days.

    For the next few hours, we'll be attempting to upgrade the Openomy systems a bit and hopefully resolve some of the performance issues we've been facing.

    Sorry for the inconvenience, and please check back shortly."


    115. Bill O Reilly left...
    Thursday, 15 December 2005 1:16 pm :: https://www.billoreilly.com

    Awww, the smell of Web 2.0. Smells like a sourdough fart lofting around Cyberspace. Nerds and ******* liberals.


    116. pet lover left...
    Thursday, 15 December 2005 2:12 pm

    PetFinder: Either one: http://www.petfinder.org http://www.petfinder.com This web based application makes it easy to find the ideal pet.

    Well, http://www.Petfinder.com is showing its age, but it's still pretty good, really good, in fact. If only someone would just hitch rss feeds to it and integrate PetFinder as a Google desktop widget, maybe we could find homes for all those homeless pets.


    117. Dion Hinchcliffe left...
    Thursday, 15 December 2005 2:50 pm :: http://sphereofinfluence.com

    Hi folks,

    Two more Web 2.0 lists for 2005:

    Top 10 innovative Web 2.0 apps of '05

    Richard MacManus'Top Ten Web 2.0 Moments of 2005


    118. Yakov left...
    Thursday, 15 December 2005 3:46 pm :: http://www.quintura.com

    Cattegory: Search Application

    Offering: Quintura Search

    Description: The Windows-based program helps build a better search query on a visual map, suggesting hints - terms contextually related to your Web search.


    119. D.Goodmanson left...
    Thursday, 15 December 2005 4:58 pm :: http://www.goodmanson.com

    Best Church-Based Web Software (Content Management System (CMS), Contact Management System, Assimilation/Member Management System and Event/Registration Management System into one program.)

    Ekklesia Systems http://www.ekkl esia-systems.com/


    120. Frederic Beleteau left...
    Thursday, 15 December 2005 5:57 pm :: http://www.flashpaint.com

    no category for web painting and drawing tools ? -> want to sketch, draw, paint and show your art skill online ?

    so try this FlashPaint package, soon with ecard support.


    121. stjohn left...
    Friday, 16 December 2005 5:02 am

    Anyone interested in a free web based (you need your own server) project management tool should have a look at dotproject.net ,Basecamp is good but not for more technical projects. Dotproject really works for team collabortation projects.


    123. Paul Browne left...
    Friday, 16 December 2005 10:30 am :: http://www.firstpartners.net/blog/techno

    My vote goes to Rollyo - a roll your own search engine. It's got all the web 2.0 features - community, evolution, building on top of existing assets (Yahoo).

    Http://rollyo.com


    124. aslam left...
    Friday, 16 December 2005 1:13 pm :: http://www.mythicflow.com