Pearltrees : Presse, blog

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video Patrice Lamothe - Pearl Trees : Faites votre carte web - b

http://ma-tvideo.france3.fr/video/iLyROoafM4uU.html Description : Chaque jour, plus d’une centaine de millions de pages de contenus vient se greffer à l’actualité. Des plate-formes comme YouTube ou Daily Motion proposent une myriade de vidéos, textes, à por[...]
Traveling geeks !!!!

http://www.lesinrocks.com/2009/10/07/medias/internet/web-la-fin-des-moteurs-de-recherche-1136891/

Web : la fin des moteurs de recherche? : LesInrocks.com

Le web 2.0 a fait naître un paradoxe : la multiplication des contenus en ligne n’a pas entraîné la démocratisation de l’accès à ces informations. Au contraire, face au trillion de pages web disponibles, le système Page Rank de Google, c’est un peu l’éclairage à la bougie. Si les agrégateurs de type Del.icio.us , les systèmes de flux et les réseaux sociaux présentent à différents niveaux des alternatives enthousiasmantes, les visions futuristes de la recherche et de l’organisation de l’information sur la toile semblent s’organiser autour d’un paradigme d’apparence simple : l’homme ou la machine ? Les algorithmes complexes du web sémantique constituent un premier élément de réponse. Twine en est l’exemple le plus probant, fournissant à ses utilisateurs une information sur mesure établie d’après une analyse de leurs recherches personnelles.

Meet Pearltrees: Bookmarks with a social twist | Between the Lin

http://www.zdnet.com/blog/btl/meet-pearltrees-bookmarks-with-a-social-twist/27704 A French Web site, called Pearltrees , is developing a Web service that is trying to bring a social networking element to bookmarking - but with the connections based on content instead of people. Think Facebook and Twitter mixed with one Amazon's recommendation system. You don't add friends in Pearltrees. Instead, you add links.
Posted by Tom Foremski - November 16, 2009 Patrice Lamothe is the CEO of PearlTrees , an unique social bookmarking service that uses the visual metaphor of "pearls" with each containing a web page. And like all visual metaphors it is best to see it rather than read a description. Here is a quick video and a sample image: "PearlTrees is a way for people to map the Internet by collecting related web pages.

PearlTrees: A Novel Approach To Human Mapping Of The Internet -

http://www.siliconvalleywatcher.com/mt/archives/2009/11/pearltrees_a_no.php
http://www.web-strategist.com/blog/ Which VC invested the most frequently in Silicon Valley Social Networks? Surprise! They’re from NY! This is part of my continue industry analysis of the changing digital space (see all posts tagged VC ), but probing which investors are most active –and are bellwethers for finding future growth companies. Ever wonder who’s behind the backing of some of the fastest growing technology companies? To find out, I created tables and collected public data to list out the specific investors of each of the major social networks, and social media sites, and conducted frequency analysis of the investors to find out.

Web Strategy by Jeremiah Owyang | Social Media, Web Marketing

Comment renaît la musique sur le Web? Que va devenir la vidéo en ligne? Que signifie l’essor des émotions sur le Net? Toutes ces questions vont être débattues lors de la grande messe du Web09 , organisée mercredi et jeudi aux portes de Paris par Loïc et Géraldine Le Meur. Le thème de la conférence de cette année? http://www.20minutes.fr/high-tech/369086-High-Tech-Le-Web09-dans-les-starting-blocks.php

Le Web09 dans les starting-blocks

http://matthewbuckland.com/?p=1194

Visual social bookmarking: Innovative, but will it fly?

Fresh off the plane, I’m on the road with the Travelling Geeks , and the first startup on our schedule is an innovative Paris-based social bookmarking operation, Pearl Trees . Their founder and CEO, Patrice Lamothe, says the site offers users a new way to “curate” or organise their lives on the web. They’ve secured about US$3,5m in funding for what is essentially a type of visual social bookmarking site, offering a relatively unique drag-and-drop interface.
If you’re the type of obsessive-compulsive person who needs to organize the firehose of information confronting you every day on the web, then Pearltrees might work for you. It’s a visual social bookmarking service that allows you keep track of what you’ve read and establish relationships between different pieces of content. Using Pearltrees is like drawing a mind-map, but with online content.

Pearltrees: A visual social bookmarking tool that has its own ta

http://venturebeat.com/2009/12/07/pearltrees-a-visual-social-bookmarking-tool-that-has-its-own-take-on-pagerank/

Pearltrees: Bookmarking Program for Organization Lovers | Techno

http://technologizer.com/2009/12/07/pearltrees-bookmarking-program-for-organization-lovers/ (This review is part of the Traveling Geeks tech tour of Paris. David Spark ( @dspark ) is the founder of Spark Media Solutions and a tech journalist that blogs at Spark Minute and can be heard and seen regularly on ABC Radio and on John C. Dvorak’s “Cranky Geeks.” ) For the first stop for the Traveling Geeks trip to Paris, we stopped by the offices of Pearltrees , a Web bookmarking, organizing, and organizing tool. Sitting inside their offices I could have been sitting at any Web 2.0 company in Silicon Valley.
Paris-based entrepreneur Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry is covering the Le Web conference for us this year. Here's what to look for. Le Web is the brainchild of Seesmic founder Loic Le Meur , and takes part each year in Paris. (This year, it's this Wednesday and Thursday.) http://www.businessinsider.com/le-web-gears-up-2009-12

Le Web Gears Up

[France] Paris-based Pearltrees has been catching interest around the web the last few days not least because a gaggle influential Silicon Valley bloggers have descended on Paris for Le Web , but mainly because of its interesting model for visually mapping how people collect and share information on the Web. But today the startup opens the kimono on its full system. They will announce two new things today: Twitter synchronization (enabling a user to create a pearl automatically from Twitter and to tweet automatically from their new Pearltrees), Pearltrees search, Real time discussion and connection. The other new aspect announced today on stage at Le Web is the Pearltrees Social System.

Pearltrees launches Twitter sync and reveals its social system

Paris-based entrepreneur Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry is covering the Le Web conference for us this year. Follow him on Twitter for more updates. After my first day at LeWeb, here are some thoughts on the conference and startups I've met: The conference is really slick.

Meet 3 Cool French Startups From Le Web

[LeWeb] Pearltrees, des perles pour organiser le web | Owni.fr

Pearltrees est une start-up particulièrement remarquée, qui a été écoutée attentivement à l'occasion de l'événement LeWeb'09. [...] Patrice Lamothe, infatigable évangélisateur du web et des usages numériques, mais aussi passionné de sciences dures et de sciences humaines, a répondu à quelques questions des visiteurs de la soucoupe. Pearltrees est une start-up particulièrement remarquée, qui a été écoutée attentivement à l’occasion de l’événement LeWeb’09 . Pearltrees propose un outil qui innovant permet de créer très simplement des séries de liens dynamiques sous forme de perles, en quelques clics, puis de les assembler en les rapprochant par un simple glisser-déposer : on obtient des sortes d’arbres thématiques, voire généalogiques si l’on enchaine plusieurs niveaux.

Are any of these the Web's next big thing?

Internet start-up ventures ply their wares at LeWeb conference in Paris Entrepreneurs hope their innovations can match success of Twitter or Facebook Inventions range from Wi-Fi bathroom scales to 3D instant messengers Paris, France (CNN) -- With more than 2,000 Internet movers and shakers, the LeWeb conference in Paris is an ideal spot for start-up ventures to hoping to attract the investment and attention that will propel them to Twitter or Facebook-style success. A series of stalls across the venue -- a giant arts complex converted from a disused morgue -- saw fresh-faced entrepreneurs demonstrating gadgets and applications they insisted will change the way we interface with the Internet. These might just be the inventions that everyone will be talking about next year or they could simply slip below the radar. Either way, all will face the same question still being leveled at today's household names -- can they make money?