12-11-2012, 12:35 PM
WEB 3.0
WEB 3.0.pptx (Size: 249.83 KB / Downloads: 27)
Introduction
Web 3.0 is the next step in the evolution of the Internet and Web applications.
metric for evaluating Web 2.0.
Most people agree web 3.0 is the lack of a clear, distinct definition of at Web 2.0 is an interactive and social web facilitating collaboration between people.
This is distinct from the early web (Web 1.0) which was a static information dump where people read websites but rarely interacted with them.
If we distill the essence of change between Web 1.0 and Web 2.0, we can derive an answer. What is Web 3.0? It is the next fundamental change both in how websites are created and, more importantly, how people interact with them.
Intelligent Web
The threshold to the third-generation Web will be crossed in 2007.
At this juncture the focus of innovation will start shift back from front-end improvements towards back-end infrastructure level upgrades to the Web.
This cycle will continue for five to ten years, and will result in making the Web more connected, more open, and more intelligent.
Because the focus of the third-generation Web is quite different from that of Web 2.0, this new generation of the Web probably does deserve its own name. In keeping with the naming convention established by labeling the second generation of the Web as Web 2.0, I agree with John Markoff that this third-generation of the Web could be called Web 3.0.
When Will Web 3.0 Begin?
Many people believe that Web 3.0 is just around the corner.
But it took over ten years to make the transition from the original web to Web 2.0. and
it may take just as long for the next fundamental change to reshape the web.
The phrase "Web 2.0" was coined in 2003 by Dale Dougherty, a vice-president at O'Reilly Media, and the phrase became popular in 2004.
If the next fundamental change happened in roughly the same time span, we will be breaking into Web 3.0 sometime around 2015.
Network Computing
Software-as-a-service business models
Web services interoperability
Distributed computing (P2P, grid computing, hosted “cloud computing” server farms such as Amazon S3)