Web 2.0 Clones - where is all the innovation?

By | October 3, 2006, 5:15am PDT

Cloning has been one of the biggest themes to come out of my Read/WriteWeb series on international web markets. I've noticed that every country has its set of 'web 2.0' clones - bookmarking sites that look like delicious, photo sharing sites like Flickr, social networks like MySpace, community news sites like digg, etc.

Occasionally I find a very nice original app, such as Moltomondiale in Italy - a special automatic semantic news aggregator that became popular in the World Cup. Or Cyworld in Korea. Or dirty.ru in Russia. But these are far outnumbered by cloned apps. And even in America of course there are a lot of clones. New Netscape = Digg is one high-profile example.

There's a lot of money to be made cloning web apps, particularly in huge, growing markets like China (where there is a lot of cloning of web 20 apps). It's much riskier to create something innovative, untried. You have little idea how it will turn out and if there will be a market at all for it. Whereas with cloned apps in a foreign market, you have a well established product template and there are a lot of opportunities for 'localized' clones.

Social news site Digg is one of the most cloned 'web 2.0' sites. Here is a list of digg clones - and an example below:

digg clone

The above is Mingaco, a Spanish version of digg. But at least with foreign languages, there is a reason to clone an english language web 2.0 success story.

I asked in the header: where is all the innovation?

Well one place where you won't find clones (generally speaking) is at the DEMO conference. Some of the innovative new products that caught my eye at last week's DEMOfall were BuzzLogic (social influence tracker), blueorganizer ('smart browser' extension), PostPath (a Linux version of Microsoft Exchange) and MojoPac (allows Windows users to save their entire PC onto a USB or iPod). Viva la innovation! 

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Biography

Richard MacManus, formerly a ZDNet blogger, is a Web consultant and writer based in Wellington, New Zealand. He specialises in next generation web technology and runs a popular weblog called Read/WriteWeb on this topic. He currently does research, analysis and writing for Internet companies in Silicon Valley, the UK and beyond. Prior to that, he worked with some of New Zealand's top commercial companies as a web manager and producer.

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Connected WebApps
trush_convos 23rd Oct 2006
In my mind, just because an appliation is web-based does not mean it is "connected". I think people get caught up in the space of moving traditional applications to a web-based version but not improving the connectivity to data and skimping on the user interface / experience.

Products should provide value by saving time and allowing people to be more productive / organized. For me, this means a better way of organizing up-to-date information that is relevant to me and the people with which I interact.

I'm a fan of seeing new web-based applications improve the user experience to make me more productive AND improve connectivity to relevant data.

Any thoughts?

Matt

www.convos.com
I think that you may want to broaden your net while trolling for innovation. It is not just about web-based apps but also those desktop apps that seamlessly focus and deliver the power of the internet down to users' desktops. Browsers, RSS readers, and gadgets/widgets immediately come to mind as well as up-and-coming information aggregators. Full disclosure - I make one - www.mentations.com. Perhaps you'll find some innovation there? ;^)
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Connected apps
Web20Explorer 4th Oct 2006
Great point schneeberg, there is a lot of innovation in the 'webified desktop' apps (aka connected apps) space.
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Do you want to see it?
Mikael_66 4th Oct 2006
At http://www.xinteleport.com we have a feature that's quite original, a real innovation, but it's a question of understanding it.

We can save any app, deepfreeze it exactly as it is, and then fetch it back later, at any given time, exactly the way is was, with all the data you worked with at the time, and all the settings associated with it, intact.
Nobody accomplished that before, and it's useful because you can restore apps, you can save data and the app both, making sure it appears and runs the same way as when originally saved, and you can share not only the file, but the entire app with others, making sure they see it the same way you do, because they will run the same app as you do temporarily.

The problem associated with innovations is that people have no prior knowledge of them, and can't judge on whether it's a good thing or not.
It's easier to improve on something established, and there's where the cloning comes into the picture.

It's a truth hold high among investors and it's true most of the time.

- But not always!
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Well put Mikael!
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Connected WebApps
trush_convos 23rd Oct 2006
In my mind, just because an appliation is web-based does not mean it is "connected". I think people get caught up in the space of moving traditional applications to a web-based version but not improving the connectivity to data and skimping on the user interface / experience.

Products should provide value by saving time and allowing people to be more productive / organized. For me, this means a better way of organizing up-to-date information that is relevant to me and the people with which I interact.

I'm a fan of seeing new web-based applications improve the user experience to make me more productive AND improve connectivity to relevant data.

Any thoughts?

Matt

www.convos.com

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