Thank you for using Upcoming! To help focus our efforts on core Yahoo! product experiences, we will discontinue Upcoming by 30th April 2013. You can find more details here
2 New Montgomery Street San Francisco, CaliforniaGet Directions
The Web 2.0 Conference focuses on emerging business and technology developments that utilize the Web as a platform and defines how the Web will drive business in the future. Now that the Web has become a robust platform with countless innovations driving its ongoing development, widespread disruptions in traditional business models are well underway. But within the chaos of disruption lies the seeds of opportunity. We'll focus on the startups and financiers tending those seeds, of course - including the second annual Launch Pad. But we'll also highlight how the incumbents are also taking advantage of disruption, or, at the very least, how they are responding to it so as to protect their market positions.
Going is relative to if you are actually accepted. I don't know why they would want a blogging, vlogger who plays with technology for a living to go to their conference, so I guess i tmakes sense that I wasn't accepted.
I'm planning on hanging out in the lobby of the Palace as I couldn't score a ticket. I figure at worse case, it will be like telecommuting. Best case, I'll learn a lot from osmosis.
For those attending (or not attending) Web 2.0 and also interested in Mobile and Mobile Web topics, come along to mobile2.0, a one day event running on November 6th. See http://upcoming.org/event/119756/ for more detail and be sure to register at http://www.mobile2event.com if you plan to attend.
For those attending (or not attending) this year's Web 2.0 Conference who are interested in web 2.0 made in Germany, please check out Web Monday Silicon Valley, Monday, November 6, at 6.30pm at Cooley Godward Kronish LLP in Palo Alto, CA.