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What is Web 3.0?
1. What is Web 3.0? EDU 626 Integrating Educational TechnologySummer 2011
2. Web 1.0? Shopping carts are Web 1.0 The overall goal is to present products to potential customers, much as a catalog or a brochure does — only, with a website, you can also provide a method for anyone in the world to purchase products. The web provided a vector for exposure, and removed the geographical restrictions associated with a brick-and-mortar business. Basic Definitions: Web 1.0, Web. 2.0, Web 3.0
3. Characteristics of Web 1.0 Web 1.0 sites are static Web 1.0 sites aren’t interactive Web 1.0 applications are proprietary Is there a Web 1.0?
4. What about Web 2.0? Web 2.0: named by Tim O’Reilly in 2004, to refer to a second generation in Web history based on user communities and a wide range of services, such as social networks, blogs, wikis or folksonomies, that encourage collaboration and efficient exchange of information among users. MasterBase Glossary
5. Another definition Web 2.0 One of those “cool” terms that is batted around with little definition. It refers to the “second generation” Web, today’s WWW that is more interactive and participatory than the Web used to be. Most people use it to refer to things like social networks such as Facebook, and other sites such as YouTube, where people can post stuff and others can comment. Some people are referring to “Web 3.0” already.
6. What about Web 3.0, then? Web 3.0 Even cooler than Web 2.0.
7. OK, what does Google say? Eric Schmidt, Web 2.0 vs. Web 3.0in a YouTube video from 2007
8. Let’s try again! What is ‘Web 3.0,’ and should you care? Nova Spivack, Twine’s founder, said in an interview last week [2 years ago!] that Web 3.0 is more chronological and simple than some would make it out to be. It just means we’re in the third decade of the Internet, which technically began in March [2009], he said. CNN SciTechBlog May 25, 2009 is a new way for you to collect online content – videos, photos, articles, Web pages, products - and bring it all together by topic, so you can have it in one place and share it with anyone you want. See next slide!
9. Twine is now Evri! SEATTLE and SAN FRANCISCO, March 11, 2010— Evri(www.evri.com), the search and discovery engine that filters the real-time web for news and conversations that matter and distills them into intelligent information streams, announced today the acquisition of Radar Networks including its flagship property, Twine.com. The acquisition of Twine.com, which gives users a smarter way to share, organize and find information with people they trust, brings together the two key players in the semantic web space and creates the industry’s most comprehensive consumer semantic search & discovery company. Press Release
10. Trends to come? Real-time: Information is moving faster online now than before. Breaking news events occur on Twitter, the micro-blogging site, not just on news Web sites. Real-time searches allow users to get the latest buzz and to converse. Read more from Siegler at TechCrunch. What is ‘Web 3.0,’ and should you care? Posted by: John D. Sutter -- CNN.com writer/producer
11. More trends? Semantics: Researchers are trying to teach computers to understand us better so they will know what we mean when we search for something, not just which keywords we're typing in. CNET’s Tom Krazit writes that Google is downplaying the importance of the ‘Semantic Web’ but is actually moving in that direction. What is ‘Web 3.0,’ and should you care?
12. Another? Open communication: There’s a lot of data online. Citizen scientists are compiling it and computer scientists are using it, but some predict open communication and product development will be stamps of the new Web era. More on this from Richard MacManus at ReadWriteWeb. What is ‘Web 3.0,’ and should you care?
13. A Fourth? Mobile and Geography: Some say geography is playing a bigger role in the information we post online. As Will Sullivan points out in a recent post to Poynter.org, the rise of GPS-enabled phones is feeding this trend. What is ‘Web 3.0,’ and should you care?
14. But what is Web 3.0? The suggestion seems to be that If Web 1.0 was the content web And Web 2.0 was the social web Then web 3.0 will be the one that brings them together and creates meaning out of it—putting the content into the social context
15. How to make that work? One way is Tim Berners-Lee’s Semantic Web . . . a world in which software “agents” perform Web-based tasks we often struggle to complete on our own. A Semantic Web agent could be programmed to do almost anything, from automatically booking your next vacation to researching a term paper. . . . it involves a reannotationof the Web, adding all sorts of machine-readable metadata to the human-readable Web pages we use today . . . Tim, Lucy, and The Semantic Web
16. What’s metadata? That’s something librarians know about! metadata Literally, “dataabout data.” Structured information describing information resources/objects for a variety of purposes. Descriptive metadata facilitates indexing, discovery, identification, and selection
17. Let Tim Explain Metadata is like keywords or subject headings attached to webpages
22. But is that really Web 3.0? What are they saying in 2011? LinkedIn founder and chairman Reid Hoffman says that the future of the web will be all about data and how we utilize it. While he conceded that mobile is an obvious candidate for what will define “Web 3.0,” he said that data will be the platform of the next era of the web. “This is where some massive innovation will happen that will transform our lives,” he told Liz Gannes of AllThingsD on stage, during a fireside chat at the Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco. [Italics added!] From LinkedIn Founder: Web 3.0 Will Be About DataMarch 30, 2011 by Ben ParrItalics added!
23. Another Prediction Better, Smarter, Faster : Web 3.0 and the Future of Learning APRIL 2011 Training+Development
24. Web 3.0? What about Web 4.0? See presentation “Web 4.0 and beyond”!