eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More.
3No Title
4No Title
Comcast CEO Brian RobertsRoberts tells the crowd “Twitter has changed the culture of our company.”
5No Title
6No Title
PayPal President Scott ThompsonThompson announces PayPal will open up its Web payment platform to third-party developers to build payment applications Nov. 3.
7No Title
8No Title
Wowd CEO Mark DrummondWowd to public beta Oct. 20 at the show. Drummond said Wowd is a real-time search engine for discovering fresh, popular content from the Web. We haven’t seen that before! (wink, wink). Welcome Wowd to the Collecta, CrowdEye, Topsy club.
9No Title
Twitter CEO Evan WilliamsEasily the biggest draw of the Web 2.0 Summit Oct. 20, Williams swatted away.
10No Title
General Electric CEO Jeffrey ImmeltImmelt shows off the Vscan portable ultrasound gadget for journalists in a special media briefing after unveiling the device at the event.
11No Title
Facebook COO Sheryl SandbergSandberg declines to say whether Facebook will build a payment processing system to sell applications, but confirms Bing will be indexing public Facebook status updates.
12No Title
Whither Journalism?Executives from leading news organizations and Google discuss the state of journalism with event co-host John Battelle. From left to right are: Robert Thomson, managing editor of the Wall Street Journal; Huffington Post CEO Eric Hippeau; Marissa Mayer, vice president of search products and user experience at Google; and Martin Nisenholt, senior vice president of digital operations for The New York Times Company.
13No Title
14No Title
15No Title
16No Title
Google’s Sundar PichaiSundar Pichai, a vice president of product management at Google, discusses the progress Google is making with the Chrome Web browser and Chrome Operating System
17No Title
Surprise VisitGoogle CEO Sergey Brin stopped by to say Hi, and talk about Microsoft Bing, the search engine gunning for Google’s 65 percent market share; the Microsoft-Yahoo deal; Chrome for Mac; Google Book Search; and the alleged Google Phone.
18No Title
Father of the World Wide WebWeb 2.0 Summit ends where the Web began as Sir Tim Berners-Lee discusses his original vision for the Web, and fears that an entity will control it.