About Us Service Status Contact Us Testimonials
Home COMPANY SERVICES WEB PORTFOLIO Contacts
 

Posts Tagged ‘Next Wave’

The Shift From Web 2.0 to Web 3.0

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010
Michael M Tasner asked:




Web 2.0 began when Web users started to drastically change the way they were using the Web on a day-to-day basis. The main trends that shaped Web 2.0 include content sharing, creativity, segmentation, social components, and added functionality. The four key components of Web 2.0 are Social Networks, Social Media, User-Generated Content, and Social News and Bookmarketing. Although these components have been king of the mountain for a time, there are limitations and loopholes, which in turn, become fresh opportunities.

Enter Web 3.0. Web 3.0 describes the next wave that is already taking place and is the shift from Web 2.0. The key driving factors to Web 3.0 include browsing habits, browsing methods, more intelligent information, the experience we’re looking for, and the openness of the Web. BlackBerrys and iPhones, portals into Web 3.0, are ruling the day. Simplified: Web 3.0 marketing is the convergence of new technologies and rapidly changing consumer buying trends.

Live, streaming video is outpacing static video, and companies like Twitter, Plurk, and Jaiku are growing much more rapidly than Blogger, WordPress, or TypePad. The Web 3.0 marketing world is where customized, intelligent information is available at our fingertips, on any device, from anywhere in the world!

The Five Key Components of Web 3.0:

• Microblogging is the ability to share your thoughts with a set number of characters. People are busy with limited time, so why not get right to the point of the story in 140 characters or fewer? Examples include Twitter, Plurk, and Jaiku.

• Virtual reality worlds are places users visit to interact with others from around the world in a 3-D setting. Meetings are being conducted in these spaces, and trade shows are being replaced with virtual reality shows. Examples include Second Life and Funsites.

• Customization/personalization allows visitors to create a more personalized experience. They are starting to expect their name to appear at the top of Web sites, personal e-mails, and even advanced checkout options that suit their buying habits. As the Web becomes more and more intelligent, personalization will be the norm. Examples include SendOutCards, Google, and Amazon.

• Mobile plays on the fact that there are billions of cellphone users throughout the world. This number is much larger than those that use PCs. Consumers are surfing the Web and purchasing products right from their mobile phones. They are also using their phones and becoming instant journalists by shooting raw footage of random acts. Examples include iPhone and BlackBerry.

• On-demand collaboration allows users to interact in real time by looking over documents, collaborating, and making changes in real time. Software as a service also fits into on-demand collaboration as it allows users to leverage only Web-based solutions. Examples include Google Docs, Salesforce.com, Slideshare.net, and Box.net.

Full Article Resource: http://www.tazsol.com/blog/

Read about successful people.

What is Web 3.0?

Monday, August 23rd, 2010
Elazar Nudell asked:




While I may soon need another source, right now I’m glad I use Twitter. Today, I saw a tweet from @ToddGilmore that mentioned Web 3.0. It was in the context of leaders learning to use social media, but that’s all I could figure out in terms of defining “Web 3.0.”

To arrive at a definition for Web 3.0, we should start by defining Web 1.0 and Web 2.0. Web 1.0 was the beginning of the Internet. Examples included the type of website that one might have posted as a school assignment in the early 1990s. It typically followed the format (and included the phrase) “Hi, my name is (Your Name Here.) This is my website about Topic X” immediately followed by what was essentially an article about Topic X. The information was often accompanied by a graphic (or several) and a primitive MIDI (music) file playing in the background. I may be exaggerating a bit, but that’s the clearest example I can think of.

Web 2.0 is what a lot of people have come to use the Internet for now. It’s the interactive websites that allow us to share the information about ourselves and the world that we might have used to create Web 1.0 (or new information.) Examples include Facebook, MySpace, Wikipedia, YouTube, Twitter, blogs, etc.

Likewise, Web 3.0 is an extension of the interactive nature of the Internet that is developing through Web 2.0. Many experts say that it will be focused on and tailored to the individual. It will most likely have an artificial intelligence-like component now referred to as “the semantic web” with which people can search in human terms such as questions and requests as opposed to keywords, as well as a great deal of personalization and even more mobility than there is now.

New Fact: Web 3.0 is the next wave of Internet advancements. It is expected to be user-centered, more human-like, and highly portable.

Web 3.0

 
 
     
Client Accounts  Website Solutions RAG Corporate Royal Online