TechGina Bianchini Is Taking On Facebook Once Again With Mighty NetworksThe creator of Ning and Mightybell thinks that mobile devices can make the idea of personalized social networks a success this time around.
Most Creative PeopleUsing Your “Dark Moments” To Inspire Creative SolutionsThink Pinterest or Instagram is a great source of creative inspiration? You’re looking in the wrong place.
TechMarc Andreessen: Facebook, Twitter’s Success Means Ning Could Soar, Score Big BrandsThe social site maker was ahead of its time, says Andreessen. Now Ning 3.0 makes a play for top brands.
TechMightybell Is Just Another Social Network Inspired By AOL Chat Rooms. Wait, What?Mightybell founder Gina Bianchini thinks today’s social networks are too much about broadcasting our individual lives and not enough about engaging with each other. She’s using AOL as inspiration (for real!) to try to change the way we connect online.
Fast Company MagazineHow Much Are You Worth to Facebook?Facebook and others have tapped into the power of viral loops to build massive audiences in record time. Now they’re using these growth engines to create the future of online advertising.
TechThe Most Innovative Companies in Web 2.0You read our Fast Company 50. Now learn about the companies within specific industries that are doing both creative and ground-breaking work. Here we present the top ten in Web 2.0.
TechMost Influential Women in Web 2.0Women have been heavily instrumental in redefining the way we interact online. Here’s a look at the most influential of these.
Fast Company MagazineNing’s Infinite AmbitionIt isn’t just a site where users can build their own social networks — Ning is a model of how to create a perpetual growth machine.
Co.DesignFrom industrial waste to floating wetlands, how Chicago’s Wild Mile is reinventing the urban river