Web 3.0
Web 3.0
Just in case you missed it, the web now has version numbers. Nearly three years
ago, amid continued hand-wringing over the dot-com crash, a man named Dale
Dougherty dreamed up something called Web 2.0, and the idea soon took on a life of its
own. In the beginning, it was little more than a rallying cry, a belief that the Internet
would rise again. But as Dougherty's O'Reilly Media put together the first Web 2.0
Conference in late 2005, the term seemed to trumpet a particular kind of online
revolution, a World Wide Web of the people.
Web 2.0 came to describe almost any site, service, or technology that promoted
sharing and collaboration right down to the Net's grass roots. That includes blogs and
wikis, tags and RSS feeds, del.icio.us and Flickr, MySpace and YouTube. Because the
concept blankets so many disparate ideas, some have questioned how meaningful—
and how useful—it really is, but there's little doubt it owns a spot in our collective
consciousness. Whether or not it makes sense, we now break the history of the Web
into two distinct stages: Today we have Web 2.0, and before that there was Web 1.0.
To many, Web 3.0 is something called the Semantic Web, a term coined by Tim
Berners-Lee, the man who invented the (first) World Wide Web. In essence, the
Semantic Web is a place where machines can read Web pages much as we humans
read them, a place where search engines and software agents can better troll the Net
and find what we're looking for. "It's a set of standards that turns the Web into one big
database," says Nova Spivack, CEO of Radar Networks, one of the leading voices of
this new-age Internet.
HISTORY
The term Web 3.0 first appeared prominently in early 2006 in a blog article by
Jeffrey Zeldman critical of Web 2.0 and associated technologies such as Ajax.
Just in case you aren’t aware, Web 2.0 is a term coined to describe the phletora
of websites that exists nowadays catering to Internet users to have a place where they
can network and participate in a more interactive way. Examples of web 2.0 based are
Flickr, where users can share photos, and Wikipedia, a place where users can help to
contribute to an article’s content either by editing or adding to it.
And not forgetting, blogging is also included in the web 2.0 family. Compared to
the conventional fashion of publishing, it allows readers to share their views by
commenting on it. And recently there’s a discussion of the possibilty of the third wave to
hit the web in near future, the web 3.0.
What exactly is web 3.0? It basically means web browsing with 3D experience. If
Web 2.0 is built towards the social side of the online world, web 3.0 is expected to be
where the money will be made by the corporations. Although it have existed for quite
some time now, but the exposure is for web 3.0 based applications more towards
focused groups. This is possible, thanks to the development of faster processors and hi-
speed broadband access that keep on coming our way nowadays.
Web 3.0 based applications are expected to be a virtual reality location where
consumers can try anything. An example would be the Second Life, where more than 1
million players, including offline merchants participate. I can’t wait to try out my new shirt
virtually!
WHAT IS WEB 1.0, 2.0, AND 3.0
What do people mean when they talk about the Web 2.0?" is a query we receive
repeatedly, and probably has as many answers as the number of people out there using
the term. However, since talk about the Web 3.0 has surfaced in the last year or so, a
whole new level of confusion seems to have set in. In an effort to help people
understand the ideas behind buzzwords like Web 2.0 and Web 3.0, let's go through
what exactly these terms mean (if anything), and how they apply to your ecommerce
business.
A broad definition
I want to make it clear at the start that this article is meant to be a broad
definition of the challenges that cause people to think in terms of Web 2.0 and Web 3.0.
Since these are buzzwords and not clearly defined terms, think of this as an attempt to
provide a bird's-eye view of the ever-changing lay of the land on the web. In an effort to
create discreet "versions" of the web that can be compared, I will borrow from the W3C
Director Tim Berners-Lee's notion of the read-write web, which is often used as a way of
explaining what Web 2.0 means.
The first implementation of the web represents the Web 1.0, which, according to
Berners-Lee, could be considered the "read-only web." In other words, the early web
allowed us to search for information and read it. There was very little in the way of user
interaction or content contribution. However, this is exactly what most website owners
wanted: Their goal for a website was to establish an online presence and make their
information available to anyone at any time. I like to call this "brick-and-mortar thinking
applied to the web," and the web as a whole hasn't moved much beyond this stage yet.
Shopping carts are Web 1.0
Shopping cart applications, which most ecommerce website owners employ
in some shape or form, basically fall under the category of 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.
Currently, we are seeing the infancy of the Web 2.0, or the "read-write" web if
we stick to Berners-Lee's method of describing it. The newly-introduced ability to
contribute content and interact with other web users has dramatically changed the
landscape of the web in a short time. It has even more potential that we have yet to see.
For example, just look at YouTube and MySpace, which rely on user submissions, and
the potenital becomes more clear. The Web 2.0 appears to be a welcome response to a
demand by web users that they be more involved in what information is available to
them.
Semantic markup refers to the communication gap between human web users
and computerized applications. One of the largest organizational challenges of
presenting information on the web is that web applications aren't able to provide context
to data, and, therefore, can't really understand what is relevant and what is not. Through
the use of some sort of semantic markup, or data interchange formats, data could be
put in a form not only accessible to humans via natural language, but able to be
understood and interpreted by software applications as well.
Web 3.0
A web service is a software system designed to support computer-to-
computer interaction over the Internet. Web services are not new and usually take the
form of an Application Programming Interface (API). The popular photography-sharing
website Flickr provides a web service whereby developers can programmatically
interface with Flickr to search for images. Currently, thousands of web services are
available. However, in the context of Web 3.0, they take center stage. By combining a
semantic markup and web services, the Web 3.0 promises the potential for applications
that can speak to each other directly, and for broader searches for information through
simpler interfaces.
What's important to understand, I think, is that the nomenclature with which we
describe these differing philosophies should not be taken too seriously. Just because a
website does not employ Web 2.0 features does not make it obsolete. After all, a small
ecommerce website trying to sell niche products may not have any business need for
users to submit content or to be able to interact with each other.
Most importantly, you don't need to upgrade anything, get new software or
anything like that. These are abstract ideas used to contemplate the challenges
developers face on the web in addition to theories about how to address them.
SEMANTIC WEB
The Semantic Web is a web that is able to describe things in a way that computers can
understand.
Sentences like the ones above can be understood by people. But how can they be
understood by computers?
Statements are built with syntax rules. The syntax of a language defines the rules for
building the language statements. But how can syntax become semantic?
This is what the Semantic Web is all about. Describing things in a way that
computers applications can understand it.
The Semantic Web describes the relationships between things (like A is a part
of B and Y is a member of Z) and the properties of things (like size, weight, age, and
price)
The semantic web is an evolving extension of the World Wide Web in which web
content can be expressed not only in natural language, but also in a form that can be read
and used by software agents, thus permitting them to find, share and integrate information
more easily. Using the semantic web will be similar to asking a personal assistant to
help you accomplish something. You might say, “Find me all bilingual Porsche dealers
within 200 miles that are open on Sunday, and add their sales staff contacts information
to my address book. Also, let me know if any of their employees have published
contacts within 2 degrees of separation from me.” This will be possible because all that
information (business type, language proficiencies, location, contact information, etc.)
will be available through the company’s Internet presence. And most importantly, this
information will be easily processed and manipulated by any semantically-aware
software agent. That’s web 3.0. People build applications that other people can interact
with, companies build platforms that let people publish services by leveraging the
associations between people or special content (e.g. FaceBook, My Yahoo!) [4], [5]
Google Maps
Web 3.0 technologies, such as intelligent software that utilize semantic data,
have been implemented and used on a small scale by multiple companies for the
purpose of more efficient data manipulation. In recent years, however, there has been
an increasing focus on bringing semantic web technologies to the general public.
Web 3.0 has also been used to describe an evolutionary path for the Web that
leads to artificial intelligence that can reason about the Web in a quasi-human
fashion.However, companies such as IBM and Google are implementing new
technologies that are yielding surprising information such as making predictions of hit
songs from mining information on college music Web sites. There is also debate over
whether the driving force behind Web 3.0 will be intelligent systems, or whether
intelligence will emerge in a more organic fashion, from systems of intelligent people,
such as via collaborative filtering services like del.icio.us, Flickr and Digg that extract
meaning and order from the existing Web and how people interact with it.
E. EVOLUTION TOWARDS 3D
Another possible path for Web 3.0 is towards the 3 dimensional vision championed
by the Web3D Consortium. This would involve the Web transforming into a series of 3D
spaces, taking the concept realized by Second Life further. This could open up new
ways to connect and collaborate using 3D shared spaces. Web 3.0 as an "Executable"
Web Abstraction Layer Where Web 1.0 was a "read-only" web, with content being
produced by in large by the organizations backing any given site, and Web 2.0 was an
extension into the "read-write" web that engaged users in an active role, Web 3.0 could
extend this one step further by allowing people to modify the site itself. With the still
exponential growth of computer power, it is not inconceivable that the next generation of
sites will be equipped with the resources to
Fig.4. The Semantic Web run user-contributed code on them.
Nova Spivack defines Web 3.0 as the third decade of the Web (2010–2020)
during which he suggests several major complementary technology trends will reach
new levels of maturity simultaneously including:
In some respects, Web 3.0 is nothing more than a parlor game. Ideas tossed
out here and there. But at the very least, these ideas have roots in current trends. Many
companies, from HP and Yahoo! to Radar Networks, are adopting official Semantic
Web standards. Polar Rose and Ojos are improving image search. Google and
Microsoft are moving toward 3D. No one can predict what Web 3.0 will look like. But
one thing's for sure: It'll happen.
What will Web 3.0 look like? Who knows? But here are a few possibilities.
B. The 3D Web
A Web you can walk through. Without leaving your desk, you can go house hunting
across town or take a tour of Europe. Or you can walk through a Second Life–style
virtual world, surfing for data and interacting with others in 3D.
In the web 2.0 generation, web sites began to do amazing things to break
through the limitations of their underlying protocol and markup language (http and
HTML, respectively). In a way, this would be like “Web 2.0 meets massively multiplayer
online gaming”. I don’t like the word gaming here as it suggests something that is only
for entertainment, and ultimately, inconsequential. Rather, I believe that true value and
immediate person-to-person interaction will be possible, be it on a commercial,
scientific, entertainment, or personal level. Our own contribution to the growing number
of new web 2.x - or shall we dare call it web 3.0 - applications is TheBroth, The Global
Mosaic. This is a web site where you can collaborate in real time with other users from
around the world, dragging tiles to create mosaic-like artworks with other users in the
room. It fulfills the paradigm described in this article, namely web 2.0 with all the
trimmings, user generated content, blogs, a social networking system, chat, forum,
sharing, rating, commenting, you name it but it adds another dimension by being LIVE
(as seen )on the live player map, active rooms page, site map [3]. thing of the past, so
much so that in the web 3.0 era, by means of evolution and the pressure to adapt, only
quality sites that really are user-centric and user-friendly will prevail. One can only hope.
[3]
EXAMPLES OF WEB3
Maps:
Google street map made news early this year with its controversial drive-by
views of people’s front doors and people themselves. But, other innovative mappers
also are emerging. Openstreetmap.org is about people mapping everything worldwide
from great hiking routes to ski runs or and wine tours. Gatt describes it as a kind of wiki
of special interest maps.
Personal organizers:
[2] http://www.information-nline.com/Web+3.0.127.node
[3] http://www.thebroth.com/blog/194/web-20-massively-multiplayer-web-30
[4] http://www.awadallah.com/blog/2007/08/25/define-web-30-web-20-web-10/
[5] http://dmiessler.com/blog/the-difference-between-web-10-20-and-30