Gartner Touts Web 2.0, Scoffs At Web 3.0
An anonymous reader writes to mention that even though Web 2.0 is just now starting to gain widespread acceptance, there are those who are already trying to hijack the term Web 3.0. According to Gartner, there are quite a few new technologies and incremental modifications to existing Web 2.0 technology, but nothing that could equal the level of fundamental change exhibited by the shift to Web 2.0.
Useless whores.
I have something in common with Stephen Hawking...
Sorry, but Google Maps is one of the very few places where "Web 2.0" actually gives me something that wouldn't have been doable in "Web 1.0". Most places just use it as "look it moves"-type eye-candy.
Wake me when people are using "Web 2.0" to make their sites more useable, instead of just more shiney. Those that do are still a tiny minority. Until then, shut up about higher version numbers. Bugfix the old one first.
Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
Web 2.0 = Broken and slow.
Web 3.0 = ?Not working at all?
Does web 4.0 actually remove information from your brain?
I've said it before and I'll say it again: If I can't get to the information I'm looking for it doesn't matter how pretty it is.
Anyone even know what Web 2.0 means?
For me Google Gears is the first sign of (ugh) Web 3.0... or at least, the next level of capability.
It's now perfectly possible* to build a database driven app that is 'installed' over the internet and will run _totally_ off line. You can run a background thread to do data syncing for you.
This is a really neat deployment method for a lot of apps - OS independent! - that don't warrant a full install process. You could build a web store that was available all the time for example, and grabbed current prices when on line and remembered your (selected off line) shopping list when you had a connection available again.
Obviously this would be of no use if we lived in a perfect world where connection was continuous, but out here where 3G doesn't work in tunnels and free public wifi is getting more, rather than less, rare, well designed off line capable web apps are a serious potential move forwards in usability and well worthy of a web x.? increment.
*Actually, it's been possible for a while but someone made a neat package to help you do it.
Beep beep.
Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
... is just maketing drivel. Anyone who uses that term to describe anything in particular is talking out of their ass.
"widespread acceptance" - WHERE, who, what ? the big boys, google msn and such ? do they even count as acceptance compared to millions of sites that constitute the internet ?
"the level of fundamental change exhibited by the shift to Web 2.0" - and WHAT are those for god's sakes ? placing streaming video in web pages ? just what ?
just what is 'web 2.0' for frigging christ's sake anyway ?
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