Sunday, January 20, 2008
Imagine Wikipeida was owned by members...
Here's your chance for a real, ground-floor opportunity... contribute to the next big web reference at http://helpGlobe.com, and you can own a piece of the action!
Too good to be true? Well, check it out yourself. Signup free at http://helpGlobe.com, add a question, answer your question, and you'll see the results from google in a few short days. You'll see that you've created a new reference source! Easy!
Still hard to believe? Try googling this "compare gps units". And you'll see how easy it is to get a top google placement.
Saturday, October 20, 2007
Web 3.0 – The Future is Here
That is the nature of predicting the future. From afar, everything looks good. From up close, it’s a mess. The good news is we can affect the future, that the future is not some inevitable result assigned to us.
What will Web 3.0 look like? Let’s start from how the web has evolved, and go from there.
What Happened?
In the old days, you really need to read a whole book to get all the nuggets of knowledge from an author. With search, you can get to what you need faster and faster. So more people can now publish more ideas. Referred to as Web 1.0, static websites have sprung from every corner of the world.
Fast forward to today. The core of Web 2.0 is the latest generation of user-contributed content.
- The unit of communications has shrunk dramatically. Instead of publishing a book or article, we can publish a simple blog. Just a few words and we’re done.
- The speed of publishing has increased dramatically. It’s now lightening fast from the time the author has a thought to the time the reader understands it.
- Multi-user collaboration has become massively parallel. Forums, Chats, people are communicating everywhere.
With Web 2.0 applications, anyone can easily setup a blog or shop on eBay. Or join the major Web 2.0 sites like Wikipedia, Facebook, and Digg. These sites provide dynamic user-contributed content. People now flock to Web 2.0 sites because they can find any idea, or any community.
What’s Missing?
So if things are so good, what’s wrong?
Well, Google often returns a whole bunch of garbage, because it can’t read our minds. That’s because search terms aren’t expressive enough. Search terms are not sufficient to provide your meaning, your context. There are billions of pages out there now, with text that can only be understood after being read by humans. So with search results, we must wade through pages and pages before we get what we’re looking for.
So the direct thought for a solution is, why not make these billions of pages contain the meaning, not just the words? And then create an engine that understands your meaning, and search for your meaning, instead of the today’s simple search terms. Will that work?
What’s Not Happening?
Web 3.0 has been touted as the saviour. So what is it?
It’s been 6 years since the prediction of the Semantic Web evolution, with RDF, OWL, SPARQL,
Why will this grand vision of Web 3.0 involving intelligent machines never happen? Because humans will never be surpassed by machines in judgemental intelligence. To be interested in certain things, that is a uniquely human trait. To belong to groups, another human trait. Because a machine-generated solution, regardless of how advanced, cannot replace humans. In the end, only humans can help other humans.
What’s Next?
Web 3.0 is about ideas and knowlege. It’s not about shopping or entertainment. Technology-wise, w7e’re ready for the next generation of the web, the real Web 3.0. We have everything we need to create that vision. Let me describe that vision.
Are You Ready?
- If you would benefit with more accurate search by providing accurate demographics, wouldn’t you?
- If you would benefit with more accurate search by asking what you’re interested in, wouldn’t you?
- If you would benefit with more accurate search by answering what you know, wouldn’t you?
- If you would benefit with more accurate search by rating what you like, wouldn’t you?
Given your usage, the system should know what you’re interested in, and can show you questions based on the community you naturally belong to. So you will not have to avoid people you find annoying… the system will segregate you naturally. Also, other people similar to you will, through their ratings, constantly be finding things that are interesting to you. This system is adaptive, so that as your interests change, your search results change with you.
The good news is Web 3.0 is here. And it’s simpler than anybody have thought.
The bad news? It’s just not what anyone expected.