I put a lot of time and effort into this site: http://www.englishclass.tv It has some incredible content and a very unique model. But the traffic is basically non-existent. Open to offers. Keep in mind, it took hundreds of hours of programming, audio recording, photo gathering, etc.
Very Nice job on the site, just dont know what type of traffic this should receive and exactly where to get that traffic. Very hard business to get into. Abby,
if you can alrdy make a web 3.0 website. you should alrdy have traffic coming from a year in the future.
Ofcourse its not web3.0(its not existed yet, if several bloggers have posts about their visions about web3.0, its mean nothing). But anyway its very good site and I have interest but I notice that its on Struts(Java), its hard to find good J2EE webhosting..
The reason I called in Web 3.0 is because I basically took the web browser and changed it into an application interface. Web 2.0 was about social interaction... thinks like Facebook and Wikipedia. With this application I broke ground by ignoring the traditional limits of web applications and tried to make a truly interactive application.
As for the Struts issue, the Struts are really only used for the Ajax interface. This could be replaced with any interface to the Java database calls. The hard work was designing the application. It could be rewritten to use PHP or otherwise in a week by a good programmer. Most of the difficult programming is in the JavaScript and the database.
Web 3.0 is not so much a technology, but rather a concept of the ideal web. I wrote an article on this subject that should be more clear than the wiki stuff You can read it here: http://www.lifecaptureinc.com/blog/social/2008/07/web-30-the-power-of-the-semantic-web/