rlebherz wrote: Alf,
Interesting article. I think the Cloud services and cloud infrastructure lines are a bit blurred, but I agree with most of what you are saying.
Dont underestimate the SLA's role in accountability. For companies that have dynamic requirements and no down time can be afforded, make sure you have very tight SLAs. For example, OpSource provides a 100% SLA in the cloud and 100%SLA around production application environments. Now 100% is ideally perfect, it comes down to accountability, yo...
SEATTLE, WA -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 11/05/07 -- Nearly every educator is looking for
opportunities to embrace Web 2.0 technology in the classroom, however
teachers have struggled to incorporate Web 2.0 services that use
advertising to monetize. Wetpaint (www.wetpaint.com), the
consumer-friendly wiki for collaborating and publishing online, today
announced it will offer ad-free, no cost wikis to qualified educators so
easy online collaboration can extend into any classroom. The availability
of ad-free, no cost Wetpaint Wikis builds on the core mission of the
company to empower consumers, brands, and now educators to create
collaborative Websites written for and by those who share a passion or
interest.
"Since the launch of Wetpaint, we've heard from several classrooms that
have benefited greatly by using Wetpaint to collaborate and share
information outside the classroom," said Ben Elowitz, CEO of Wetpaint. "We
also heard from many teachers who were unable to share in the fun because
of school-mandated ad-free policies. By removing the ads for educators,
Wetpaint Wikis will be available for any classroom that wants to move the
learning experience online."
Thousands of educators worldwide have launched a Wetpaint Wiki, which
offers educators the best aspects of blogs, message boards, social
networking, and other collaborative technologies to advance School 2.0
initiatives. Teachers are able to extend the learning process out of the
classroom by creating "click and type" wiki sites that any designated
person can edit. This allows both students and teachers to easily create
and participate in collaborative forums for discussion, share lesson plans,
and distribute class presentations and much more. In addition, users of the
wiki site can easily take advantage of Wetpaint Widgets to add third-party
applications like YouTube videos, RSS feeds, Google Calendar, Vizu Polls,
chat, and more to offer a fully integrated Web 2.0 solution in the
classroom.
"Wetpaint has helped me integrate the Web 2.0 technologies my students love
to use in their personal life into their learning process, and now they are
actually excited about working on coursework," says Jason Welker, an AP
Economics teacher at the Shanghai American School in China who started a
wiki, Welker's Wikinomics, for his class. "My students have fully embraced
the wiki by engaging in peer-to-peer and student-to-teacher collaboration
on a broad range of topics from tests, study guides, and other important
classroom initiatives that further their learning potential."
To better understand educators and their unique needs, Wetpaint invited
Jonathan Bartels, a high school English teacher and MAEd student at East
Carolina University, to become its first Education Ambassador. Mr. Bartels
shared his own applications and experiences with School 2.0 to help
Wetpaint build out a robust Education Wiki section on Wetpaint.com, and is
available to help guide other educators to wiki success by providing
suggestions, tips, and answers to questions that teachers post to the
Education Wiki pages.
To learn more about qualifying to get ads removed and find great tips for
creating education wikis, visit: www.wetpaint.com/education.
About Wetpaint
Wetpaint is changing the way people share and collaborate about passions
and interests online through its consumer-friendly wiki platform. For the
first time, anyone who knows how to use Microsoft Word can use Wetpaint to
click and type online. Wetpaint has powered more than 500,000 user-created
community sites since launching in June 2006. The Seattle startup has also
caught the attention of prominent consumer brands such as CBS, Dell,
Discovery Channel, HP, HTC, and T-Mobile. These companies have partnered
with Wetpaint to create community sites for their most active and
knowledgeable users. Wetpaint is backed by Accel Partners, Trinity
Ventures, and Frazier Technology Ventures. For more information, visit
www.wetpaint.com.
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