This post will probably take even longer to load than usual because of the audio/visual content.
Just as most of feel we are finally getting our heads around Web 2.0, here comes Web 3.0.
There are parts of Web 3.0 that sound like a giant leap forward in terms of organizing data so that the internet is less of a great library where all the books are lying on the floor. It should make the routes to the information you are looking for more transparent and easier to follow.
There are parts of the "semantic" web that sound a little Big Brother to me.
If you use Gmail, Facebook, or Google, you will have seen the beginnings of the personalization that is part of Web 3.0. Gmail and Facebook use "behavioral advertising" -- those little sidebar ads based on keywords in your emails or your Facebook profile (try changing the information in your profile and see how the ads change). Google is starting to introduce "intelligent search" where the items that get top ranking are based less on Search Engine Optimization (SEO) strategies implemented by companies and more on what you have searched for before, what you have clicked on and what you have ranked yourself.
Digital Inspiration has collected a series of slideshows of Web 3.0 Concepts Explained in Plain English. I have embedded my favourite two below. The first one explains the concept clearly and simply IMHO. The second part is the "behind the scenes" look at how the semantic web is built. It is a bit techy but it explains the alphabet soup that is Web 3.0 so we will be less baffled by acronyms.
I have included Michael Wesch's InformationR/evolution video which is another look at indexing in the semantic web.
Unfortunately, you have to read all these presentations. And the Wesch video has that anxiety-producing music that seems to accompany all videos about technological change.
Web 3.0 explained with a stamp (pt I: the basics)
View more OpenOffice presentations from Freek Bijl.
Web 3.0 explained with a stamp (pt II: techniques)
View more OpenOffice presentations from Freek Bijl.
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