What is Web 3.0? It’s all about “the shift”.

If you are in the corporate world grind, or have read a business magazine within the past two years, at some point you’ve come across the phrase Web 2.0. What is Web 2.0 anyways? What is Web 3.0? You and most people out there have no freakin’ clue what that even means. Well Marc Benioff, the chairman and CEO of SalesForce.com, wrote a great article on TechCrunchIT that gives one perspective of what “Web 3.0″ means — it’s short and succinct and well worth your attention.

Web 3.0 by his definition, is “the shift” in software as web-based applications, in an environment stored “in the cloud” — that can be done anywhere.

He also does a great job of also backtracking and defining the terms Web 1.0, Web 2.0, Web 3.0 as well:

Web 1.0: Anyone Can Transact
…the emergence of the “killer app” from companies like eBay, Amazon.com, and Google. Although we thought of them as Web sites at the time, they were really amazing applications with a level of functionality, ease of use, and scale that had rarely been seen before by the average consumer. Transactions, not just of goods but of knowledge, became ubiquitous and instant.

Web 2.0: Anyone Can Participate
…the next generation of applications on the Internet, featuring user-generated content, collaboration, and community. Anyone can participate in content creation. Posting a viral video on YouTube, tagging photos from a party on Flickr, or writing about politics on Blogspot requires no technical skill, just an Internet connection. Participation changes our idea of content itself: content isn’t fixed at the point of publication — it comes alive.

Web 3.0: Anyone Can Innovate
…it changes all of this by completely disrupting the technology and economics of the traditional software industry. The new rallying cry of Web 3.0 is that anyone can innovate, anywhere. Code is written, collaborated on, debugged, tested, deployed, and run in the cloud. When innovation is untethered from the time and capital constraints of infrastructure, it can truly flourish.

While I personally cringe when anyone utters these buzzwords, these are in fact real movements of the Web that are important to understand for anyone in business (not just for us geeks). The shift of some form of platform as a service in the cloud is only going to continue to increase.

0 Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment


(c) 2008 www.ramseymohsen.com - Ramsey Mohsen; web consultant, DJ, video blogger, lifecaster & internet addict.