Update September 27 - I emailed the World Can't Wait folks and they said that the permit negotiations seem to be going smoothly now. Thanks everybody for writing!
Please take a couple minutes this morning to send an email and make a phone call to Gavin Newsome, our sometimes-liberal SF Mayor, and tell him to "grant World Can't Wait their Oct 5 Justin Herman Plaza protest permit." (I have a letter you can cut and paste below)
It's already a little hokey to need to get a permit to have a protest, but it can be a good thing too, in that portopotties and other civic arrangements can be made when everyone knows what's going on that day.
But not granting the permits, or waiting till the last minute to grant the permits, adds an air of uncertainty around the whole thing that hurts the process. I'd like to think that Gavin Newsome isn't blocking the permits on purpose. But at the very least, there is some incompetence going on. And it's really bad timing for it. And it can't be tolerated.
So email Gavin at gavin.newsom@sfgov.org AND call him at 415-554-6141
and for that matter, Fax him at 415-554-6160
thanks!
Here's the letter I wrote - so you can just cut and paste it:
Dear Gavin,
Please grant World Can't Wait its protest permit for the October 5 Justin Herman Plaza event.
I hope this is just an oversight or something, and there aren't seriously people in your administration that are knowingly blocking these permits.
Thanks for your time,
Lisa Rein
address here
OCT 5 PERMIT EMERGENCY
EMERGENCY NOTICE: OCT 5 permits being stalled - call
Greetings!
WCW has applied for permits to rally at Justin
Herman Plaza at noon, OCT 5 to march on Market
Street to a main rally with prominent speakers at
4PM in Union Square, and then to march back to
Justin Herman Plaza for the all-night vigil.
The San Francisco Police Department has denied the
march permit. The SF Recreation and Parks Department
is responsible for permits at the sites and has not
yet granted them.
Everyone who knows how important the October 5
demonstrations will be needs to call and email THIS
MORNING to let SF City officials know you support
the plans to rally, march and vigil on October 5.
Demand that all the permits be immediately granted
for the sites and routes applied for!
Please contact Mayor Newsom to urge him to take
urgent, immediate action to grant all requested
permits for World Can’t Wait on October 5-6. Please
also contact SF Supervisors and the General Manager
of the SF Recreation and Park Department. Letters
should clearly and respectfully state your reasons
for supporting the permit applications from World
Can’t Wait to demonstrate as part of the national
day of mass resistance called with actions across
the country.
Somebody's Name
* CALL NOW!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* CALL NOW!
NOTE: Supervisors Tom Ammiano, Chris Daly, and Ross
Mirkarimi are signators and supporters of the World
Can't Wait Call. Assemblymen Mark Leno and Leland
Yee have also signed the Call, as has State Senator
Carol Migden.
(1) Mayor Gavin Newsom: Phone: 415-554-6141
gavin.newsom@sfgov.org Fax 415-554-6160
City Hall, Room 200
(2) San Francisco Supervisors:
Tom Ammiano: (415) 554-5144 Fax 554-6255
Tom.Ammiano@sfgov.org
Chris Daly: (415) 554-7970 Fax 554-7974
Chris.Daly@sfgov.org
Ross Mirkarimi: (415) 554-7630 Fax 554-7634
Ross.Mirkarimi@sfgov.org
Jake McGoldrick: (415) 554-7410 Fax 554-7415
Jake.McGoldrick@sfgov.org
Michela Alioto-Pier: (415) 554-7752 Fax 554-7843
Michela.Alioto-Pier@sfgov.org
Aaron Peskin: (415) 554-7450 Fax 554-7454
Aaron.Peskin@sfgov.org
Fiona Ma: (415) 554-7460 Fax 554-7432
Fiona.Ma@sfgov.org
Sean Elsbernd (415) 554-6516 Fax 554-6546
Sean.Elsbernd@sfgov.org
Bevan Dufty: (415) 554-6968 Fax 554-6909
Bevan.Dufty@sfgov.org
Sophie Maxwell: (415) 554-7670 Fax 554-7674
Sophie.Maxwell@sfgov.org
Gerardo Sandoval: (415) 554-6975 Fax 554-6977
Gerardo.Sandoval@sfgov.org
(3) Mr. Yomi Agunbiade, General Manager (415)
831-2700
San Francisco Recreation and Park Department
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
World Can't Wait! Drive Out the Bush Regime!
2940 16th Street
San Francisco, California 94103
(415) 864 5153
sf@worldcantwait.org
http://www.worldcantwait.org
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Read “The Call to
Drive Out the Bush Regime”
(http://rs6.net/tn.jsp?t=szqdqybab.0.yavxdtbab.9ii95sbab.2281&ts=S0207&p=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.worldcantwait.org%2F)
and take a look at
the rest of the site!! See today's reason to Drive
Them Out located on the right side of our Home Page.
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I love talk like a pirate day. This pic is from 2003 at the Internet Archive.)
Someone sent me this great pirate translation software. I have included a translation of my blog in the "more" section.
Here's the official Talk like a Pirate Day website. The cool thing is that ABC contacted the founder of it and got his Wife to participate in a special season premiere of "Wife Swap" - "Wench Swap." (Here's the commercial for the Wench Swap episode.)
You know how I love it when Internet stuff gets on to the silver screen!
Here's a blog post from the official Pirates of the Carribean website talking about it.
When I saw the above post, I was afraid for a minute, that Talk Like A Pirate Day had originated to promote Disney's Pirates Of the Carribean, not to make fun of how the RIAA was calling us all pirates in the early 2000's. But I was wrong on both counts.
According to the wikipedia article, it was started by John Baur and Mark Summers way back in 1995, just cause they thought pirates were cool.
Here's a nice How To Talk Like A Pirate video, to help you ham it up today.
Sierra Rein and Matt Demars
Update 9pm - due to airport hell coming down in Oakland this evening (more on this later), I'll be at tomorrow night's show, instead.
I've decided to hop down to LA tonight to see my sister,
Sierra Rein, perform in L.A. It's a classy singer/piano gig that comes with dinner.
It is a bit pricey, at $50 a couple -- But I'll give you $25 back if you show up and come over to say hi during the show. It's a nice dinner too.
My sis is pretty talented! I'm sure you'll have a good time. It's her first time performing this new act she's been working on for a while, so it would really great to have you there!
(If you decide to go Saturday night, I can paypal you the $25 :-)
When: Friday and Saturday, September 15 and 16, 2006
Time : 7:00 dinner (8pm show)
Place: Sterling's Upstairs, Vitello's Restaurant, 4349 Tujunga Ave, Studio City, CA 91604
http://www.vitellosrestaurant.com/
(818) 981-3077 or (818) 769-0905
Here's the letter from Sierra explaining the show:
Hello Y'all!
Hello Friends! Family! Classmates! Castmates! Industry peeps!
Former lovers (you know who you are!)!
Have a hot date this Friday or Saturday? Love music, great singing,
and fun piano playing? Want to see me in a sleek, skin-tight black
satin dress?
Spend a special night this weekend with me and my friend Matt DeMars
as we debut our Cabaret nightclub act, DEMARS AND REIN.
It would mean a lot to me to see you in the audience. A lot, as this
is our first Cabaret show. I know, I know, I know $50 may be steep
right now, but I won't be lying when I tell you a great night of music
(perfect for a birthday gift, a date, or a special night out with your
loved one) is in store for you. We will knock your socks off, and if
you're not wearing socks I'll knock something else of yours off,
guaranteed. Live theater, cabaret music, and a meal all in one is not
a traditional or easy-to-find venue in Los Angeles. Come and support
new acts, great food, and the pleasure of live performance.
And may I remind you about the sleek, skin-tight dress?
SIERRA REIN and MATT DEMARS IN
"DEMARS AND REIN" at Sterling's Upstairs, Vitello's Restaurant
(818) 981-3077 at 4349 Tujunga Ave
LOS ANGELES DEBUT!
September 15th and 16th, 7pm seating, 8:30 show.
Dinner and Theater in one! $50 gets you a four course meal and an
hour of music!
See you there for two very special nights!
-Sierra
On September 15th and 16th, Sterling’s Upstairs presents the exhilarating Cabaret debut of LA’s own DeMARS and REIN. Classically trained on the piano since the age of 7, Matt DeMars’ repertoire includes nearly 500 songs ranging from 1920’s Jazz to the Great American Song Book. Influenced by Billy Joel, Nat King Cole, and Andrew Lloyd Webber, his composing talents resulted in Pieces of My Heart which debuted in 2003. Sierra Rein’s love of singing began at age two, when her family’s kitchen table became her first stage. She was inspired and instructed how to belt out tunes by watching video tapes of MGM musicals starring Judy Garland, Kathryn Grayson, Anne Miller, and Dolores Gray. Ms. Rein’s romance with Broadway musical theater in Los Angeles includes starring roles in The Sound of Music, Camelot, The Little Shop of Horrors and appearing as Edith Piaf in The Night of the Black Cat, to name but a few. www.sierrarein.com.
Just wanted to give you all the heads up that tonight's NOW Broadcast on PBS features bloggers:
From an email sent to me:
Left-leaning political bloggers are determined to demonstrate their real world influence in the upcoming mid-term elections. But will they finally make political headway, or just more hype? On Friday September 15, at 8:30 pm (check local listings), NOW visits a major political blogging convention and examines the candidacy of surprising U.S. Senate primary winner John Tester of Montana to find out. The bloggers' effect on Tester's success is hard to accurately measure, but bloggers do take much credit for it and indeed made a strong push for his against-the-odds win.
"You have a couple million people reading liberal blogs...and they're looking for ways to get involved. And they're looking for ways to participate and take hold of their own democracy. And that is powerful," says Markos Moulitsas, founder of one of the Internet's most popular blogs, to NOW.NOW meets the real people behind some of the Internet's most opinionated and widely-read liberal blogs to find out if they can really move the political needle. Next time on NOW.
This week, the NOW website at www.pbs.org/now features insightful web-exclusive commentary from blogging heavyweights Andrew Sullivan and Arianna Huffington. Also, in another web-exclusive, NOW's Maria Hinojosa interviews journalist Maziar Bahari from his home in Tehran about what drives and hinders efforts to halt Iran's nuclear ambitions. NOW also invites users to go "beyond the byte" with Election Insight 2006, a comprehensive political investigation tool.
Dabble was written up in USA Today!
Silicon Valley starts to party like it's 1999
The eight employees of digital media start-up Dabble work out of a cheap office, decorated mainly with sticky notes, not far from San Francisco.They work long hours for below-market rates. Their boss, CEO Mary Hodder, is a 39-year-old Internet expert who has never started or run a company before.
Dabble has received funding from angel investors. But it must fight dozens of other start-ups for attention. And when they finally get off work, the Dabble team grapples with heavy traffic, crowded restaurants and outrageous housing prices.
But it's all OK, because Hodder and her crew are convinced that their company offers a compelling online service that will be a huge success - and will make their stock options pay off.
Sound a lot like 1999? Silicon Valley and the San Francisco Bay Area, the world's technology hub, is starting to buzz again for the first time since the dot-com bust. The Valley's infamous start-up community is coming back, thanks to Dabble and its contemporaries. New powerhouses such as Google, eBay and Yahoo are driving growth and hiring workers. Stalwarts such as Hewlett-Packard and Oracle are reporting stronger sales and posting higher stock prices.
Here is the full text of the article in case the link goes bad:
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/2006-09-11-tech-valley_x.htm
The eight employees of digital media start-up Dabble work out of a cheap office, decorated mainly with sticky notes, not far from San Francisco.
They work long hours for below-market rates. Their boss, CEO Mary Hodder, is a 39-year-old Internet expert who has never started or run a company before.
Dabble has received funding from angel investors. But it must fight dozens of other start-ups for attention. And when they finally get off work, the Dabble team grapples with heavy traffic, crowded restaurants and outrageous housing prices.
But it's all OK, because Hodder and her crew are convinced that their company offers a compelling online service that will be a huge success — and will make their stock options pay off.
Sound a lot like 1999? Silicon Valley and the San Francisco Bay Area, the world's technology hub, is starting to buzz again for the first time since the dot-com bust. The Valley's infamous start-up community is coming back, thanks to Dabble and its contemporaries. New powerhouses such as Google, eBay and Yahoo are driving growth and hiring workers. Stalwarts such as Hewlett-Packard and Oracle are reporting stronger sales and posting higher stock prices.
Evidence of an uptick is everywhere. The amount of venture capital invested in Internet companies has jumped almost 75% since hitting bottom in 2003. The Valley unemployment rate has dropped to 5%, down from 9.3% during the darkest days. The median home price is $700,000 and rising. Party invitations are going out — and the buffets once again include shrimp.
It's a welcome change after five tough years of layoffs, bankruptcies and empty office parks.
"Bubbly things started happening three, four months ago," says Hodder. "It's exciting." This round of growth will be based on real, useful products without the excesses of the dot-com boom, she says.
Many other Valley technorati agree. But critics, especially those outside California, say that the Valley is once again getting caught up in its own hype.
Nicholas Carr, the Massachusetts-based author of the book Does IT Matter?, says he expects the tech industry to grow but at an increasingly slower pace. The current frenzy is a "miniboom" that will soon peter out, he says. "There isn't any sign that this new wave of entrepreneurial activity is capturing the imagination of the public the way it did before."
That hasn't stopped John Chambers, CEO of San Jose, Calif.-based networking giant Cisco Systems, from predicting that his already-huge company could see its revenue rise as much as 20% this fiscal year. (An acquisition accounts for part of the increase.)
Chambers and Cisco were badly burned by the bust. Cisco shares trade at about one-fourth their boom-era high. But Chambers believes Cisco and the industry can grow without a crash. This time, "The circumstances are dramatically different," he says. "There were a lot of lessons learned."
Many tech entrepreneurs insist that they, too, will not make the same mistakes. Hodder started Dabble — a site that allows people to search, organize and bookmark videos — with $350,000 in seed money. Future funding proposals are modest. "We're not going to go crazy," she says.
Budgets are also tight at Redwood City, Calif., start-up Renkoo. Co-founder Joyce Park has strong memories of being unemployed during the bust, "sitting in front of Palo Alto City Hall, drinking triple espressos, going, 'Man, this is depressing,' " she says.
She started her company, which offers an online service to help people plan casual gatherings, with longtime friend and co-worker Adam Rifkin in her kitchen. She carefully sought out venture capitalists that offered advice, not just money. (Renkoo closed a $3 million round in March.) And she has made a habit of hiring engineers and other technical workers who are inexperienced but have potential to grow.
Playing it safe, mostly
Some of the Valley's biggest companies are also being cautious. No. 1 chipmaker Intel last week said it is cutting 10,500 jobs in a bid to save money and make the company more nimble. Hewlett-Packard is cutting about 15,000 jobs as part of a restructuring. (The No. 2 PC maker is also embroiled in a boardroom scandal related to the aggressive way the board hunted for the source of news leaks to the press. Story, 1B.)
Caution is wise, says Kevin Wagner, an equity analyst at Baring Asset Management. New technologies such as advanced cellphone networks and state-of-the-art video game systems should help keep tech growing, he says. But the growth will be more modest than before, with small busts in limited areas, he says.
Still, the Valley isn't playing it completely safe. Video site YouTube has received $11.5 million from venture capitalists, despite the thorny issue of thousands of copyrighted videos that are uploaded by users. Staffers maintain a chatty blog about the site's inner workings, including a recent video of them goofing around with a dead rat caught in the office.
Venture capitalists gave more than $38 million to Facebook, a college community site run by a 22-year-old CEO, Mark Zuckerberg. When a USA TODAY reporter recently called Zuckerberg a businessman, he burst out laughing. "I don't think anyone's ever said that to me before," he said.
And Valley darling Google has more than 600 types of jobs open at its Mountain View, Calif., headquarters. The search giant, which officially launched in 1999, also offers bubble-like perks such as free meals prepared by a high-end chef, a staff doctor and onsite car wash. (The company also has a market capitalization of about $116 billion, which is higher than that of PepsiCo, Home Depot or Genentech.)
The largesse is starting to spill into the local economy. "We see a whole lot of money flowing out here right now," says Ginny Cain McMurtrie, a vice president at Saratoga, Calif.-based Alain Pinel Realtors.
In the first quarter of 2006, 82 homes were sold for more than $2.5 million in Santa Clara and San Mateo counties, the real estate firm says.
"I hear the agents talking about the Googlers and eBayers looking at $3 million houses," Cain McMurtrie says. A home in the tech-executive hamlet of Woodside recently sold for $10.3 million.
That's a striking contrast to the rest of the country, where a softening market has caused the median home price to nearly flatten at about $230,000, says the National Association of Realtors.
Commercial real estate is seeing growth, too. Real estate firm Brandenburg Properties recently offered to rent a 55,000-square-foot office building in Santa Clara to one or more start-ups in exchange for an equity position in the companies. Brandenburg received several proposals but pulled the offer when Yahoo began buying up office space in the neighborhood.
"I wouldn't say there's stellar demand (for office space), but there's unquestionably growing demand," says partner Bill Baron.
Intel CEO Paul Otellini, speaking at a recent party thrown by the No. 1 chipmaker, said he, too, has noticed an upturn in the economy. But he's not worried, because boom and bust cycles are a natural part of tech, he said. The industry will be fine "unless there's a major economic change," he said. Then he wandered off to sample the party's swanky Asian cuisine.
Upfront investments
One reason for the economic swings is that some fundamental tech products require huge upfront investments.
A semiconductor factory requires billions of dollars and several years to build. Thus, a factory planned during good times often isn't ready until the economy softens. Then it floods the market with new chips, causing prices and profits to fall.
Yet even seasoned veterans such as Cisco's Chambers were stunned by the dot-com bust, which caused the tech-heavy Nasdaq stock exchange to lose 78% of its value in just over two years.
Janet Yellen, president of the San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank, says she doesn't believe that type of collapse looms. "I'm not so concerned about a bubble," she says. "Some venture-capital money is coming back into the tech sector ... (but) nothing like the amount that we had during the dot-com phase."
Indeed, it seems as if most of the excitement is limited to the tech-centric area around San Francisco.
J.P. Auffret, a professor at George Mason University in Virginia, says the only tech buzz he's noticed recently is an increase in Silicon Valley job postings. Few of his colleagues are interested, he says. "There's a more rational view on opportunity and risks. And there's the perception that it's quite expensive to live there."
Author Carr says the Valley's highs and lows will level out as the tech industry matures. After all, the PC is 25 years old, and the Internet is 13. "The really rapid growth stage of the tech industry is behind us," he says. "It's beginning to look like any other manufacturing industry."
Stability in maturity
And it's easy to forget that the tech industry has grown steadily since hitting bottom in 2001. While the industry is still far below its dot-com-era highs, a five-year growth spurt is a kind of quiet boom.
"Before you know it, the glory days will have already happened," says Su-Ming Wong, managing director of Champ Ventures in Sydney.
But Wong says tech will always bounce back, and Silicon Valley will likely remain at the heart of the industry. "Despite every country's best efforts, no one ... has successfully replicated the Valley, and I doubt it can ever be done," he says.
That's what Valley entrepreneurs want to hear. Most of the time.
"People are having fun, but less fun than you'd think," Renkoo's Park says. "Because the way it works in the Valley is: When things are good, you work 24/7. When you get laid off — when everything tanks — is when you have time to spend with your friends."
Contributing: Janet Kornblum
I'm starting to find Tailrank's meme pages very useful.
They have a nice one going now about the
ABC 911 propoganda film controversy.
A couple weeks ago, I appreciated catching up on the
Amanda Congdon leaving/getting fired from Rocketboom controversy.
I need it for a music video i'm making of one of my new songs....and for my archive, of course!
thanks!!
lisa@lisarein.com
and of course, I've put a Dabble Request in for it too!
WHAT: 9/11 Conspiracy Theory Debate
WHO: The RU Sirius Show
WHERE: Off-Market Theater, 965 Mission Street (at 5th), San Francisco
WHEN: Sunday, September 10, 2PM
COST: FREE
http://laughingsquid.com/2006/09/05/ru-sirius-show-live/
Over the last year, RU Sirius and Jeff Diehl have been hosting the amazing RU Sirius Show, a weekly podcast that launched in June 2005 as part of The MondoGlobo Network. It’s featured a stunning line-up of guests, discussing intriguing topics and cultural phenomenon.This Sunday, September 10th, they will be producing their first ever live show, in the form of a public debate: “9/11: Considering All the Claims”. The show starts at 2PM and takes place at the Off-Market Theater in San Francisco. Admission is free.
9/11: Considering All the ClaimsThe producers of The RU Sirius Show bring you 9/11: Considering All the Claims. During this rare, FREE public presentation, you will be able to examine all the issues at one event on Sunday, September 10th, 2006.
The backers of the “shadow government” camp have many issues that they believe were not addressed by the authorities in investigating the attacks; the backers of the “Bin Laden-did-it” camp have questions of their own. Both sides have accused the other of perpetrating wild conspiracy theories and hoaxes upon the public, so we thought we’d provide an open examination and critique of the major points, especially given recent polls that show 42% of Americans suspect the government had a hand in causing the destruction of the Twin Towers.
Joel Schalit, a Managing Editor for Tikkun Magazine, will be representing those who are skeptical about the “conspiracy theories.” Fred Burks, who served as a foreign language interpreter for top officials in many countries, including Presidents Clinton and George W. Bush, will be representing the “pro-conspiracy” view.
RU Sirius will host the panel along with RU Sirius Show co-host Jeff Diehl.
Posted by Lisa at 12:46 PM
Dabble got a mention in India's The Hindu (India's National Newspaper).
Tracking on-line video content
Dabble (http://www.dabble.com/), the video search service that indexes a multitude of video hosting services such as Dailymotion, Ourmedia, YouTube and so on is another excellent tool for identifying video content.
Hey even GQ/Details online knows Dabble is the place to be :-)
WEB: The hunt for the latest celebrity sex tape just got easier, thanks to Dabble.com, a just-launched clearinghouse for more than 240 Web video sites (including Google Video, YouTube, ClipShack, etc.).
Pretty funny considering the search celebrity sex tape only actually delivers 2 search results...
The SF Chronicle did a roundup of cool web 2.0 sites, and we made it!
It's by Dan Fost and Ellen Lee.
DabbleWeb address: www.dabble.com
Where they are: Berkeley
What they do: A TV Guide for Internet video, the site lets users tag and rate clips found throughout the Web. Viewers form communities based on their interests, helping sort the Web's top videos on such topics as baking a dessert and Japanese animation.
The skinny: Even before the company's premiere, Dabble Chief Executive Officer Mary Hodder was quoted in Newsweek and featured in a series of technology conferences. Now it must prove that it can easily help users find the gems without wading through all the junk on the Internet.
The competition: Though it counts YouTube and other online video sites as its partners, it also competes with them for attention in this crowded and popular space.
Here is the full text of the entire article, in case the link goes bad:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/08/28/BUG32KOH9R1.DTL
San Francisco Chronicle
COOL WEB 2.0 SITES
Dan Fost and Ellen Lee, Chronicle Staff Writers
COOL WEB 2.0 SITES
08/28/2006
Flickr founders Stewart Butterfield and Caterina Fake made the cover of Newsweek for their popular photo-sharing site. Digg founder Kevin Rose made the cover of BusinessWeek after his news-ranking site took off. Online video hub YouTube is ubiquitous, while social networking giants MySpace and Facebook are in everyone's faces.
OK, we get it. Web 2.0 is a big deal.
[Podcast: Benny Evangelista with Phil Leigh on Apple settlement; Ellen Lee on cool 2.0 sites; Web-based word processing programs; and protecting laptop data.]
But what about the Web 2.0 companies that haven't made the cover of a magazine?
This is their week. The Chronicle today highlights some of the startups from this hot sector of the tech world -- companies that fulfill the Web 2.0 philosophy of community, sharing and user-created content, and that fit in the modern gestalt with things like video, music and digital photos.
The only real requirement is that the companies are something you probably haven't heard of before. And if you have, consider yourself hip. Debbie Landa, chief executive officer of the IBDNetwork, which runs the Under the Radar conference, says, "I'm definitely jaded because I know most of these really well."
This survey is far from scientific. Many intriguing companies did not make the list, including FareCast, which tells you when the airline ticket you want to buy is likely to go up or down in price, and Vyew, a utility (like Google's Writely) that lets you collaborate with someone online, and -- well, a list like that might never end.
In the first quarter of this year, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers, 134 Web 2.0 companies received $869 million in venture funding, on pace to beat the $3 billion that 465 firms raked in last year. And that's just the companies taking funding. Much of Web 2.0's appeal is that engineers can start firms in their basements.
So next year, check those magazine covers for the companies on The Chronicle's list. These guys are growing.
StumbleUpon
Web address: www.stumbleupon.com
Where they are: San Francisco
What they do: A free, downloadable browser button that lets people rate and recommend random Web sites to their friends as they "stumble" around the Internet.
The skinny: Three guys from Calgary, Alberta, developed the software and moved to San Francisco this year. They have $2 million in funding from some big Net names, including Lotus founder Mitch Kapor, Google board member Ram Shriram and famed angel Ron Conway.
The competition: Anyone who leads a Net surfer to something interesting. One could say competitors range from the news-ranking site Digg, Netscape and other news sites built on user ratings, to Google and Yahoo and other search giants.
Imeem
Web address: www.imeem.com
Where they are: Palo Alto
What they do: Users participate by joining online communities, called meems, or creating private meems where they can share music, video, photos, comments and blogs with their friends. It also rolls in instant messaging.
The skinny: Founder Jan Jannick came from the original Napster, as did many of Napster's engineers. In three months, its audience has grown from 50,000 to 800,000, though still less than the millions that congregate on MySpace.
The competition: It faces an uphill battle against other social networking and online community sites, such as the original and newly cash-infused Friendster, Tagworld, Bebo and South Korea's Cyworld. And of course the biggest and baddest of them all, MySpace and Facebook.
Slide
Web address: www.slide.com
Where they are: San Francisco
What they do: It's a toolbar that sits on your desktop as photos slide by, fed from whatever site you fancy -- whether it's your friends' Flickr feeds, or things you want to buy on eBay.
The skinny: Founded by Max Levchin, who struck it rich in his 20s when he co-founded PayPal and sold it to eBay, Slide attempts to organize the sprawling information of the Internet. It's a neat gadget but a crowded field. Net-watchers say Levchin's work ethic, to say nothing of his stellar track record and computing expertise, may give him an edge.
The competition: RockYou, which purportedly has a larger following, and FilmLoop, which has had more exposure.
Meebo
Web address: www.meebo.com
Where they are: San Francisco
What they do: Instead of downloading popular instant messaging services such as Yahoo Messenger and AOL Instant Messenger, Meebo lets you access your buddy list and IM all you want from its Web site.
The skinny: Backers include Sequoia Capital, the same folks that invested in Google, PayPal and YouTube.
The competition: Instant messaging services from AOL, Yahoo, Microsoft, Skype and others, as well as copycats such as KoolIM.
popURLs
Web address: www.popurls.com
Where they are: Austria
What they do: Popurls aggregates content from the Web's most popular social sites, so you can see in one fell swoop the hottest stories from Digg, the most popular photos from Flickr, the latest bookmarks on Del.icio.us, the most watched videos from YouTube, and other sites.
The skinny: Thomas Marban, who produced the site, says on his blog that he started it in March, and is now in the top 50 sites bookmarked on Del.icio.us.
The competition: NetVibes, founded by some Parisians, does something similar, including even your Google e-mail and allowing you to add other sites to the tracker. Microsoft and other tech giants have similar products in the works.
Dabble
Web address: www.dabble.com
Where they are: Berkeley
What they do: A TV Guide for Internet video, the site lets users tag and rate clips found throughout the Web. Viewers form communities based on their interests, helping sort the Web's top videos on such topics as baking a dessert and Japanese animation.
The skinny: Even before the company's premiere, Dabble Chief Executive Officer Mary Hodder was quoted in Newsweek and featured in a series of technology conferences. Now it must prove that it can easily help users find the gems without wading through all the junk on the Internet.
The competition: Though it counts YouTube and other online video sites as its partners, it also competes with them for attention in this crowded and popular space.
Pandora
Web address: www.pandora.com
Where they are: Oakland
What they do: Your personal Internet radio station.
The skinny: "I love Pandora. It's potential is limitless," said Kevin Smokler, a San Francisco author and blogger (and, he discloses, a friend of Pandora founder Tim Westergren). "For what it does, it's pretty damn great. Pandora creates a radio station based on collaborative filtering based on your musical preferences. There's more music than you can categorize. It's pretty great at exposing you to new things. It's the best window I have into the Web 2.0 idea that music is an endless garden of varietals you can just pluck from."
The competition: Many other Web sites are in the music game, from iTunes on down. "Pandora is cool, but Last.fm is more 'Web2.0' in the conventional sense of participation," says Garrett Camp, one of the founders of StumbleUpon. "Pandora is expert/algorithmically driven, whereas Last.fm is user driven."
Twitter
Web address: www.twitter.com
Where they are: San Francisco
What they do: A text messaging service that lets people send notes to groups. "You can send something to one number and it's distributed to other people," said Ryan Freitas, an interaction designer at Adaptive Path in San Francisco. "It tells people where you are. It's kind of like microblogging. It's really a lot of fun. Part of Web 2.0 is that it's fun and it's a utility combined with one another, so people enjoy what they're doing while they're getting something out of it."
The skinny: Founded by the team behind Odeo, a podcasting company in San Francisco's South Park (which is led by Evan Williams, who founded Blogger and sold it to Google).
The competition: Google bought Dodgeball, and many of the big cell phone companies are looking to add different messaging features to their menu of services.
Eyespot
Web address: www.eyespot.com
Where they are: San Diego
What they do: Upload your video to Eyespot and use its tools to edit it and publish it on other sites.
The skinny: Eyespot ranks among the top video editing sites, according to trade publications and analysts, tapping into the popular pastime of mixing and mashing video clips.
The competition: Software programs such as Apple's iMovie offer more whiz-bang features. Then there's Palo Alto's One True Media, which also makes it simple for users to create and edit music montages of photos and videos on the Web, then post them online. It also competes against San Francisco's VideoEgg, another site that make it easy for users to edit and publish videos on other sites.
Songbird
Web address: www.songbirdnest.com
Where they are: San Francisco
What they do: Download Songbird to play music from a host of sources.
The skinny: Called the potential "iTunes killer," Songbird was developed by the same people who created Winamp and the basis for Yahoo Music.
The competition: Apple's iTunes dominates the digital music sphere. And there are Web 2.0 sites that aren't the same as Songbird, but are also focused on music, such as MOG, a new MySpace-like site that helps users find fellow Black Sabbath aficionados, and La La, which also helps music lovers find those with similar tastes and swap CDs. And did we mention iTunes?
Revver
Web address: www.revver.com
Where they are: Los Angeles
What they do: Online video site.
The skinny: Revver helped make the "Mentos guys" $30,000 in shared advertising revenues and made them famous to boot. Now the Mentos guys have gotten an infusion of Mentos from the candymaker for future Mentos and Coke experiments. Oh, and Revver has attracted more viewers.
The competition: Too many to count. At the top are YouTube and MySpace, not to mention JumpCut, Fliqz, Veoh, Blip.tv, Guba, GoFish, vMix, Vidilife, iFilm, Panjea, Metacafe, Google, Yahoo, AOL and specialized sites such as Break.com aimed at young men.
E-mail the writers at dfost@sfchronicle.com and elee@sfchronicle.com.