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09 Nov 10
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Web 2.0 is the business revolution in the computer industry caused by the move to the internet as platform, and an attempt to understand the rules for success on that new platform. Chief among those rules is this: Build applications that harness network effects to get better the more people use them. (This is what I've elsewhere called "harnessing collective intelligence.")
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15 Oct 09
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02 Sep 09
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14 Apr 09
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13 Feb 09
Gordon HaffI pretty much agree, if only because "web 3.0" seems to encompass a variety of at least somewhat orthogonal things.
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26 Sep 08
Tania ShekoSomething struck me while listening to
Tim
O'Reilly's keynote speech
at the Web 2.0 expo yesterday: glancing at my
notes after he walked off stage, I noticed that his current definition for Web
2.0, is a lot like the definition he's given for Web 3.0. -
23 Aug 08
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25 Jul 08
Paul BeaufaitOne web to rule them all,
One web to find them,
One web to bring them all, and
In the present bind them.
(poetic frame from J.R.R. Tolkein's Lord of the Rings)-
conclusion: Tim O'Reilly, the man credited with popularizing the term Web 2.0, doesn't actually believe it exists. For O'Reilly, there is just the web right now. 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 -- it's all the same ever-changing web.
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matters is the discussions we have
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15 Jul 08
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11 Jul 08
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07 Jul 08
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Tim O'Reilly, the man credited with popularizing the term Web 2.0, doesn't actually believe it exists.
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Tim O'Reilly, the man credited with popularizing the term Web 2.0, doesn't actually believe it exists.
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Web 2.0 is the business revolution in the computer industry caused by the move to the internet as platform, and an attempt to understand the rules for success on that new platform. Chief among those rules is this: Build applications that harness network effects to get better the more people use them. (This is what I've elsewhere called "harnessing collective intelligence.")
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Recently, whenever people ask me "What's Web 3.0?" I've been saying that it's when we apply all the principles we're learning about aggregating human-generated data and turning it into collective intelligence, and apply that to sensor-generated (machine-generated) data.
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21 Jun 08
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12 Jun 08
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29 May 08
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27 May 08
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11 May 08
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08 May 08
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30 Apr 08
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29 Apr 08
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28 Apr 08
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Web 2.0 is the business revolution in the computer industry caused by the move to the internet as platform, and an attempt to understand the rules for success on that new platform. Chief among those rules is this: Build applications that harness network effects to get better the more people use them. (This is what I've elsewhere called "harnessing collective intelligence.")
We can perhaps simplify that even further: Web 2.0 is the web as a platform and collective intelligence (or, leveraging of user created data). Now let's look at Tim's definition of Web 3.0 (which actually predates his last Web 2.0 definition):
Recently, whenever people ask me "What's Web 3.0?" I've been saying that it's when we apply all the principles we're learning about aggregating human-generated data and turning it into collective intelligence, and apply that to sensor-generated (machine-generated) data.
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26 Apr 08
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- The Internet is the platform
- Harnessing the collective intelligence
- Data as the "Intel Inside"
- Software above the level of a single device
- Software as a service
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25 Apr 08
Rudy GarnsTim O'Reilly, the man credited with popularizing the term Web 2.0, doesn't actually believe it exists. For O'Reilly, there is just the web right now. 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 -- it's all the same ever-changing web. (ReadWriteWeb)
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- The Internet is the platform
- Harnessing the collective intelligence
- Data as the "Intel Inside"
- Software above the level of a single device
- Software as a service
Web 2.0 defintion he had up on a slide yesterday during his keynote:
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Jill ONeillI think he is quite right. It's just the Web -- part of our culture and part of the fabric of our lives. Just have to learn how to adapt to it.
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Ratcatcher"In other words, the versioning of the web is silly. Web 1.0, 2.0, or 3.0 is all really just whatever cool new thing we're using the web to accomplish right now."
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katarina peovicWeb 2.0 and Web 3.0 -- they don't really exist. They're just arbitrary numbers assigned to something that doesn't really have versions.
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