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Susie
12-26-2006, 02:35 PM
http://technology.guardian.co.uk/we...1975939,00.html


Two years ago most Britons didn't have broadband and Web 2.0 was barely
a twinkle in a developer's eye. Things have changed - as our cream of
the crop for 2006 shows

Thursday December 21, 2006
The Guardian

In 2004, the internet was a different place: there was, for example, no
YouTube, and most Britons online didn't have broadband. That's changed
dramatically: now, more than 75% of users have broadband, and the
arrival of Web 2.0 has brought sites where the interaction is as fast
as if it were on your machine. So we've revisited the "cream of the
crop" that we brought you two years ago.

Some of the crop is brand new; some has stood the test of time. As
before, we have 100 sites in 20 categories. That of course means that
your favourite might not be here (even if you suggested it on our
blog). Email us with your suggestions for the ones we should have
included.

Article continues
Many of the categories here are new since the last crop. Many of the
sites from that time still exist, of course - and are still hugely
useful.

One category that's missing is mobiles, where data speeds haven't kept
up with broadband. Maybe in 2007?

Contributors: Charles Arthur, Kate Bulkley, Michael Cross, Bobbie
Johnson, Vic Keegan, Jack Schofield, Keith Stuart

Applications

Why have an application to run in your browser? Because for tasks
shared between people at different locations, it makes sense to access
password-protected sets of work. 37signals offers Backpack (note the
domain is backpackit) for simple tasks and the bigger Basecamp for
grown-up projects. Tadalist is simpler, being just to-dos (but isn't
that what it's about?), while Google's Documents & Spreadsheets
requires a Google account (they're free) and doesn't try to compete
with Microsoft Office. Wikicalc is a free online spreadsheet, and
developing smartly.

backpackit.com

basecamphq.com

tadalist.com

docs.google.com

softwaregarden.com/wkcalpha

Blogs: reading

There are millions of blogs out there; you need to pick the best. Step
forward RSS (aka web feeds) and blog search engines to simplify things.
Technorati is occasionally flaky, but generally a reliable indicator of
what's being blogged about. Icerocket runs it close. And you'll need an
online aggregator to keep abreast of the feeds you're most interested
in: Newsgator and Google Reader are good choices. Bloglines is an
excellent alternative feed reader.

technorati.com

icerocket.com

newsgator.com

google.com/reader

bloglines.com

Blogs: writing

To do it rather than read it, you need a good set of tools. The
open-source and free software project Wordpress has risen to
prominence, elbowing aside many rivals with its blog creation,
management and (importantly) spam-beating tools. Wordpress.org is the
free software; wordpress.com offers paid-for, managed versions of the
free package. Blogger is the best of the rest; Vox is neat, easy and
free, and plugs into lots of social applications. Statcounter counts,
well, statistics for your site; the free Google Analytics (if you can
get an account) is good too.

wordpress.org

blogger.com

vox.com

statcounter.com

google.com/analytics

Email

Google's Gmail has become the web-based email system of choice for
those who can get access. Its main drawback is that it's still an
invitation-only system in the UK. However, Yahoo's free email service
is a decent competitor, and Microsoft has Live Mail. Unlike Microsoft's
old Hotmail service, none will delete all your old emails if you fail
to log on every 30 days. Among the dozens of free alternatives,
Bluebottle is a decent option for its focus on spam filtering. The free
version offers 250MB of storage and supports the POP3 and SMTP
standards, so you can use a proper email program as well as web access.
There's also TempInbox, which provides free, temporary, throwaway email
accounts with no registration.

mail.google.com

mail.yahoo.com

mail.live.com

bluebottle.com

tempinbox.com/english

Gaming

There are far too many videogame news sites on the internet today; you
need an aggregator like Gametab to filter through to the best.
Pocketgamer specialises in handheld games, while Gamasutra is
absolutely unmissable. Gamesfaqs has FAQs and walkthroughs (plus
cheats, reviews and previews) for loads of games. And the ESRB lets you
search by age rating.

gametab.com

pocketgamer.co.uk

gamasutra.com

gamefaqs.com

esrb.org/ratings/index.jsp

Maps

Maps matter, but once you're past Google's maps and satellite detail,
everyone's thrown back on the Ordnance Survey's data, which means
there's little to choose between them. Ordnance Survey has improved its
site, and can at least now tell you which map to buy for an area; its
placename search is nifty. Meanwhile, the New Popular Edition site
shows how the country looked in the 1940s. Delightful.

maps.google.co.uk

streetmap.co.uk

multimap.com

ordnancesurvey.co.uk

npemap.org.uk

News: mainstream

The BBC marches on, adding more media forms while also letting users
add their comments. The New York Times site is vast (though it has shut
off some of its content behind a "paywall"). Both sites' (short) RSS
feeds can be read on a mobile at bbcriver.com and nytimesriver.com.
Google News extends its reach, though the top headline is still
whichever site last updated rather than the one which is most accurate.
Nowpublic is a US rival to OhMyNews and claims 52,000 (and counting)
"mojos" - amateur journalists with mobile phones whose location can be
figured out from GPS or phone triangulation.

news.bbc.co.uk

nytimes.com

news.google.co.uk

english.ohmynews.com

nowpublic.com

News: recommendation

One thing that Web 2.0 is really good at is letting lots of people vote
on things. It can be (and is) abused, but generally the system works.
That's seen the rise of sites which let people vote stories up, or
which news stories (and how) bloggers are talking about (at
memoerandum).The biggest is Digg, which overtook Slashdot earlier this
year. Reddit was recently bought by Wired magazine. Findory is slightly
different, learning what you like the more you use it.

digg.com

reddit.com

memeorandum.com

megite.com

findory.com

Offbeat

Snopes checks out unbelievable tales, scams and urban legends and
debunks (or confirms) them. Slightly less useful is the 100-strong
webring of Unusual Museums of the Internet. These include the Virtual
Toilet Paper Museum, the Old Calculators Web Museum and Signalfan's
museum of traffic control signals. You can find links to lots of other
offbeat sites via the Weird Site's Other Weird Links page. The Onion is
the web's leading satire magazine, though with an American bias.
Otherwise, for five minutes of fun, try browsing B3ta. This UK site
sends out a weekly newsletter of cool links and runs a message board
where people post amusingly manipulated pictures. But be warned: it's
often offensive - that's part of the point - and most definitely rated
NSFW (Not Safe For Work).

snopes.com

ringsurf.com

theweirdsite.com

theonion.com

b3ta.com

Politics

The MySociety team remains unbeatable for turning Hansard inside out
with Theyworkforyou and Publicwhip, but bloggers have begun to expose
the unwritten workings of politicians to greater public scrutiny too.
Guido Fawkes' blog has the inside gossip from Westminster, while NO2ID
agitates on arguably the most important political and technological
issue around, while NHS 23 is a wiki outlining the problems with the
political, technological and medical drama of the NHS computer- isation
programme.

theyworkforyou.com

publicwhip.org.uk

5thnovember.blogspot.com

no2id.net

editthis.info/nhs_it_info

Public action

Now, it's time to bug someone in power. The idea that the web can make
a difference is growing; politicians are on the web and there's an
online petition site at No.10. Pledgebank and HearfromyourMP are both
part of the excellent MySociety (mysociety.org) family of sites
enabling citizens to connect to decision-makers - and, one would hope,
vice versa. Netaction includes The Virtual Activist, a manual for
anyone looking to build and promote a cause online. Those interested in
helping out in their area might try Timebank, which finds organisations
to which to donate spare time.

pledgebank.com

petitions.pm.gov.uk

hearfromyourmp.com

netaction.org

timebank.org.uk

Susie
12-26-2006, 02:36 PM
Continued


The new 100 most useful sites



Radio

Radio now travels over wires, at least to our homes. The BBC dominates
here, but there are thousands of stations to choose from. AOL's
Shoutcast is interesting: find whatever's on right now (you can tune in
via iTunes or any internet radio-enabled player.) Radio-locator and
Live-radio list broadcasters worldwide, so you can find something new
to listen to. Reciva does the same, but if you buy its internet radio
you can add your own favourites online and they show on the gadget; or
just listen online.

bbc.co.uk/radio

shoutcast.com

radio-locator.com

live-radio.net

reciva.com

Recommendation: music

Another new category: being able to find stuff that's similar to music
you like is increasingly important, both to listeners and to record
companies trying to profit from niches. Last.fm requires an application
that runs on your machine, and shows what other people with the same
music like. Pandora says you need a US postcode; so give it one, then
enjoy its expert-chosen stations. Liveplasma can search relationships
in films as well as music. Tuneglue is a relatively new venture between
last.fm and EMI, using data from Amazon and last.fm. Goombah requires a
small download and only works on music in an iTunes library, but has
been at it for some time.

last.fm

pandora.com

liveplasma.com

audiomap.tuneglue.net

goombah.com

Reference

Wikipedia now dominates the reference side of the web, partly because
its pages are ranked so highly in Google. User-written, it's not always
reliable, but is usually a good place to start. It competes with the
Encyclopedia Britannica, which isn't free. However, another traditional
alternative is the HighBeam Encyclopedia, which searches more than
57,000 articles from the Columbia Encyclopedia. Otherwise Jim
Martindale's Reference Desk, started in 1994, provides an astonishing
collection of links to reference sources. For words, try Onelook, which
indexes more than 7.5m words in 931 dictionaries. It also has a reverse
lookup to find words from their meanings. Finally, Teldir (on the
infobel site) has links to the world's online phone books.

en.wikipedia.org

encyclopedia.com

martindalecenter.com

onelook.com

infobel.com/teldir

Science

Alphagalileo gives a view of public-facing science in Europe and is a
counterpart to eurekalert, the American Association for the Advancement
of Science's press announcements forum. Space.com remains fascinating
for all things spacey. Nasa contains a wealth of information. The
growing importance of climate change makes the RealClimate blog written
by climate change scientists important.

alphagalileo.org

eurekalert.org

space.com

nasa.gov/home

realclimate.org

Search

Google continues to tighten its grip on our hunt for information (it
now gets half of all searches) but that doesn't necessarily mean it's
the best. Search can now encompass your hard drive, blogs (a separate
category - see above), images, peer-to-peer and even what used to be
out there. Blinkx remains unique with its focus on video, while Ask
(now without Jeeves) has made great strides recently, though it only
gets a tiny portion of searches.

google.co.uk

search.yahoo.com

search.msn.co.uk

blinkx.com

ask.com

Social software

The browser has grown up: now it's the path to meeting people of
similar interests and creating your own personal space online in a
shared area. Social networks have become a cliche, but that hasn't
stopped MySpace becoming the biggest site online. Bebo is popular,
Habbo is more tuned to the kids, while Friendster and LinkedIn will
appeal to the older user.

myspace.com

bebo.com

habbo.com

friendster.com

linkedin.com

Video

The crowds are all over at YouTube, the poster child of online video (a
category too niche to merit mention two years ago; YouTube was founded
in February 2005). But it's not the only place to find video. Revver
offers a revenue-sharing system (people pay to watch your video, you
get some cash). You can also start your own TV station at brightcove
and currenttv. And Videojug has demonstrations of how to do lots of
possibly useful tasks.

youtube.com

revver.com

brightcove.com

currenttv.com

videojug.com

Virtual worlds

The key distinction from social sites like MySpace is that virtual
worlds give you an avatar - your representation of yourself in the
online world. The advent of broadband allied to faster machines has
made them usable. When the BBC held a concert in Second Life, it seemed
like an anomaly; then IBM's chief executive got an avatar, and suddenly
everyone's there. Habbo Hotel is booming with teens. World of Warcraft
has millions of users; Everquest, its own culture. Or you can play the
Sims online. Whether an influx of new users will make these worlds more
antisocial remains open.

secondlife.com

habbohotel.co.uk

worldofwarcraft.com

thesimsonline.com

eqplayers.station.sony.com/index.vm

Zeitgeist

It's what everyone's talking about. Some of these sites appear above
because they're the places to go to find out whatthe webworld is
thinking. Watch them whizz by, but don't forget to breathe. YouTube is
the moving picture of the web; Flickr the static one. Google Trends
shows what the world's looking for; Digg, what it's found. And
Technorati shows what it's writing about. youtube.com flickr.com
google.com/trends digg.com technorati.com

Readers' suggestions

VideoJug (videojug.com). Videos on how to do everyday stuff such as
tying a tie etc. (HiddenAway)

Slideshare (slideshare.net) . For sharing presentations; Best Tech
Videos (bestechvideos.com). Very techie tutorial videos; TechXtra
(techxtra.ac.uk). Has a long enough 'tail' to answer real queries.
(RoddyM)

Online apps and desktops: Zoho (zoho.com); Cosmopod (cosmopod.com);
eyeOS (eyeos.org). Online video editing: jumpcut.com. (hakluytbean)

Reevoo (reevoo.com) is a very handy site for people looking for honest
feedback on products, as it only publishes reviews known to come from
customers. (TechMonkey)

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