Om Malik, Emily Chang, Pete Cashmore, Guy Kawasaki, Brian Solis, Chris Brogan,
Deborah Shultz...if all or any of these names sound familiar, it's because they
are some of the leading Web 2.0/technology experts on the Web today. In their
various positions, they have all recognized a strong connection between Web
2.0 and Israel. Most recently, they were part of a panel of judges that selected
ten of Israel's most promising Web 2.0 and Mobile 2.0 startups who presented
at the.co.ilsWeb
Startup 2008 competition.
The.co.ils is the leading Hebrew blog on the Israeli Web startup scene and
is authored by Yaron Orenstein and Yami Glick. This year's competition, which
took place in Tel Aviv, had over 280 entrepreneurs, VCs and other industry members
in attendance. Om Malik of GigaOm
gave the Keynote. While some of the selected startups cater directly to the
enterprise and the enterprise 2.0 concept, the others represent the blurring
boundary of information access between devices that IT professionals should
also know about and understand.
The 10 Websites that were selected and presented include:
Wix is an authoring platform
that allows users to create striking and easy-to-build web content in flash
(web sites, widgets, blogs, etc.), and publish it anywhere they want online.
Users can create content without coding in flash/html or being constrained by
templates. At the heart of the product is the drag & drop editor that allows
users to pull in any content from the web or from their own media files (video,
audio, animation, text, etc.) and create web content.
WorkLight develops
and markets a line of server products that allow organizations to do more business
securely, using popular consumer Web 2.0 tools and technologies like iGoogle,
Windows Live, Netvibes, Facebook, and others. Through WorkLight, employees,
channels, partners, and consumers connect to protected enterprise data (and
to each other) using Web 2.0 services.