This link has been bookmarked by 13 people . It was first bookmarked on 28 Apr 2007, by Hans Wobbe.
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06 Jul 10
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14 Dec 07
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27 May 07
claudedechaunyBonus sur la page, un lien qui permet de trouver des accés wifi
innovation internet prospective forbes via:micropersuasion via:steverubel futur wifi hotspots
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25 May 07
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24 May 07
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In 2007 making old stuff available on a new computer ought to be a ten-second job. But modern software specializes in making simple jobs hard--and the transfer took one whole barking, screaming headache of an afternoon. The transfer task is a small symptom of a big problem. The solution lies not in the computer but in the Internet and the Web. Right now the Web is built from the bottom up. Its structure of linked sites reflects the underlying machinery: lots of servers in a dense rabbit warren of connections. Links connecting computers are less numerous than those connecting Web sites because software connections are cheaper than physical ones. Yet both structures find inspiration in the same glorious strategic vision: total chaos. Today's Web is indeed weblike, but it's no beautiful design of the sort talented spiders weave; it is a tangled cobweb of the type you find in broken-down shacks and haunted houses. The next Web--the Worldbeam, we call it--will resemble today's Web imploded or, if you prefer, turned inside out. It will be a single global "information beam." Every Web page ever posted is in this beam. Whenever someone updates a page or designs a new one, it is added to the end.
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In 2007 making old stuff available on a new computer ought to be a ten-second job. But modern software specializes in making simple jobs hard--and the transfer took one whole barking, screaming headache of an afternoon. The transfer task is a small symptom of a big problem. The solution lies not in the computer but in the Internet and the Web. Right now the Web is built from the bottom up. Its structure of linked sites reflects the underlying machinery: lots of servers in a dense rabbit warren of connections. Links connecting computers are less numerous than those connecting Web sites because software connections are cheaper than physical ones. Yet both structures find inspiration in the same glorious strategic vision: total chaos. Today's Web is indeed weblike, but it's no beautiful design of the sort talented spiders weave; it is a tangled cobweb of the type you find in broken-down shacks and haunted houses. The next Web--the Worldbeam, we call it--will resemble today's Web imploded or, if you prefer, turned inside out. It will be a single global "information beam." Every Web page ever posted is in this beam. Whenever someone updates a page or designs a new one, it is added to the end.
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23 May 07
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28 Apr 07
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The Inside-Out Web
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