Streaming Video Marketing For Business.

Friday, May 25, 2007

DigitalFX - Web 2.0 Innovator (and how to get a piece of the pie).






DigitalFX - Web 2.0 Innovator
Andrew Weinman
MN1 Staff Writer
LAS VEGAS (May 1, 2007) --

With the Internet evolving and growing every day, entrepreneurs
are being forced to adjust their businesses to fit the ever-changing requirements of today’s
technology. But one company – DigitalFX (OTCBB: DFXN) –isn’t just ready to meet the
challenges of the Web 2.0 community, it’s helping to bring it about.
“Web 2.0” is a popular phrase used to describe the next stage of the Internet’s evolution – the
point where the Internet becomes less a scattered collection of Web sites and more a
conglomeration of related user-managed pages. The phrase was originally coined by Tim O’Reilly
of O’Reilly Media, an American media company dedicated to publishing books and Web sites and
producing computer technology conferences.
Many people see the proliferation of user-manageable Web sites like YouTube, MySpace and
FaceBook, along with downloadable Internet communication accessories like BitTorrent, and the
various forms of instant messaging software, as the first stage in bringing Web 2.0 about. Their
popularity, ease of use, and speed of communication make them the natural precursors to the
Web 2.0 revolution.
But there’s still one problem: all these sites are unconnected, and no one site offers all the
services of the others.
Craig Ellins, CEO and president of DigitalFX International Inc., said the company’s innovative
flagship communications site, HelloWorld, will change all that.
“HelloWorld’s slogan is ‘making digital life simple,’” Ellins said in a recent interview with MN1.
“Everybody has a digital life ... because your music doesn’t come on CDs anymore, it comes on
MP3s, shortly your movies will not come on DVDs anymore thanks to IPTV, your cellphone,
camera and camcorders all have hard drives. Although the devices have advanced, the ways an
average person has to handle their digital life has been left up in the air. HelloWorld is an aspirin
for that headache.”
According to Ellins, the HelloWorld Web site (www.helloworld.com) offers the social networking
capabilities of MySpace and some instant messaging software, the video sharing abilities of
YouTube, and a slew of other specialty Internet services not offered anywhere else – and all for
as little as $10 a month.
“It’s a whole suite of really rich media tools that kids today might want to go out on the website,
they need to go to five or six different sites to get what we’ve got under one application,” Ellins
said. “The beautiful thing is that it’s all one application so you don’t have to go to multiple Web
sites … and there is no software download.”



(Note this article is exactly the kind of reason I personally became involved in Helloworld because it has placed me in a position ahead of a growing trend which equates to long term financial growth and freedom - it's very encouraging to see many recognizing and utilizing the huge potential of the tools I market).

If you would also like to tap into this market drop by my website for more information www.vmdirect.com/markspivey and leave a message on the contact page.

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