webjam.gif In private beta since the end of November Webjam was publicly launched last week.

Pete Cashmore from Mashable called it “Myspace plus Netvibes on steroids”, Sam Sethi from Vecosys “An extremely powerful tool for creating and remixing web pages”.

Squeezing this UK start-up into a nutshell isn’t easy. It seems to be a lot of things in one place. Webjam give you three pages to start with, when you sign up. These include the Homepage, which follows the model of a personalised startpage. You can chop and change modules/widgets and RSS feeds. There is also the Profile page to which users can add a blog complete with WYSIWYG editor and RSS feed subscription. Then there is the Main Site which is intended to be a community site, which you can knock up from scratch or simply copy stuff from other Webjam sites if those sites users’ settings allow it. These privacy settings can be applied to web pages as well as individual modules so you can have the world and its sister visit your pages but have certain modules on those pages like photos, kept out of sight.

But, you don’t have to stop there, you can continue adding more sites – private, community or otherwise. With all these possibilities and more, it’s a good job Webjam offers well garnered tutorials & vids. There is also a simple video tutorial on YouTube for a quick gist of the feel of it.

via | vecosys