guardian interviews web 2.0 movers & shakers – but forgets to put them on a nice linkable page (ugh!)

Main_art In Saturday’s Weekend supplement, The Guardian’s John Lanchester tried to get to grips with “web 2.0” and met with some of it’s movers and shakers. Some of those interviews have been published as podcasts but, sadly, there isn’t a full list of them anywhere other than the technology index page which will probably update with new content soon, making the audio impossible to find.

Any chance someone over there can fix this oversight by publishing a full list, with links, on a single page somewhere? Here’s who they’ve got…

Because they didn’t publish a full list, with links, on a page that could be easily and permanently linked to, I grabbed their source code, cleaned it up a bit, and am providing list of the Guardian’s interviews below:

  • Bebo, Michael and Xochi Birch
  • Blogger/Odeo, Evan Williams
  • Craigslist, Craig Newmark and Jim Buckmaster
  • Del.icio.us, Joshua Schachter
  • Digg, Kevin Rose
  • Feed Burner, Dick Costolo
  • Flickr, Caterina Fake and Stewart Butterfield
  • Last.fm, Martin Stiksel
  • Netvibes, Tariq Krim
  • Technorati, David L Sifry
  • Wikipedia, Jimmy Wales
  • WordPress, Matt Mullenweg
  • Writely, Sam Schillace
  • 6 Comments

    1. Thanks for that Robin, very helpful.
      I know last.fm and Bebo have a touch of the UK, but I wonder if it is too late for the UK to find a spot on the web 2.0 map???
      The list is dominated by US start-ups and I wonder if the Guardian tried to feature some UK equivalents but struggled to find any.

    2. Perhaps they did try Craig. You’re right about it being a difficult task. Friends Reunited might be on a potential list but classmates.com, the American equivalent came first. Perhaps the supermarket websites – never heard of anyone ordering their groceries online, at least not in any scale, in other countries. Etribes would probably want to be on the list too but other than some pretty impressive venture capital backing I haven’t heard much about how things are going – but then, I wouldn’t necessarily hear anything.
      Joanna, thanks for the comment. I was a bit annoyed that the Guardian didn’t make it easy to link. I don’t have time to read and listen to all that content today and figured it might disappear soon, which is why I made the list. I wish they would have thought of that!

    3. Blush…thanks for doing the hard work for us. Better yet, we should have just added these in our tech blogs and used microformats to add them to the RSS. Thanks for prodding us to be better Robin.

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