730 likes | 845 Views
Next Generation Web. IPMA -- Chelan, WA October 2, 2007 Dave McComb Semantic Arts, Inc. …or…. Where is the web headed?. And how will that affect us?. Forward looking statements. “prediction is difficult……. especially about the future”. “the future is already here…….
E N D
Next Generation Web IPMA -- Chelan, WA October 2, 2007 Dave McComb Semantic Arts, Inc.
…or… Where is the web headed? And how will that affect us?
Forward looking statements “prediction is difficult…… especially about the future” “the future is already here…… … it’s just not equitably distributed”
How we’ve been perceiving the web has been alternately as… Nuisance Wake up call or
Dave Johnson and Mark Ericks “Many of the items [the 140 IT related projects totaling $343 million] were related to the web”
1 Major Thesis Enterprise Applications have been and will be shaped by what is happening on the web
2 Minor Theses We have been reluctant to embrace the web because at each incarnation it seems irrelevant. Yet Web applications have taken on and solved very difficult problems, Which in turn made the approach relevant to the Enterprise.
3 Approach Retrace the evolution of the Web At each step review: • Why did weare we ignoreing it? • What did the Web do that caused us to no longer be able to ignore it? • How have we responded?
The “Web” Web 1.0 Web 2.0 Web 3.0
Web 2.0 Tim O’Reilly coined the term in September 2005 … … and by default made the existing Web:Web 1.0
So … What was Web 1.0? The first incarnation was mostly authored documents with hyperlinks.
Why did we ignore the Web(Web 1.0) through the 90’s? Scale User Interface Experience Security Moving Standards Deployment
Lessons? A rapidly evolving ecology can evolve rapidly. This ecology thrived because it dramatically lowered some key costs: • the cost of adding new users • the cost of rolling out new features. As it turned out, these were good things for an enterprise, too.
So, Web 1.0 gave rise to … Web 0.0
Back, back way back…. Before Internet Explorer Before Netscape Before Mosaic There was another web
1 How crummy that was
2 Why it succeeded Cost of communicating A lot And there is still a lot of benefit to be had
Now what? Events in the Web seemed to come out of nowhere and disrupt our Enterprise plans. Everything that is going to disrupt us over the next five years has already occurred.
On the web … … it takes about ten years to become an “overnight success.” … as in real life …
Ward Cunningham, wiki’s and Wikipeida 1996 2007
Web 2.0 Is really about mass publishing rather than mass consuming
facebook tag cloud RIA Wikipedia rss AJAX mashups blogs wikis folksonomy podcast myspace tagging xsl Digg del.icio.us web 2.0 FLICKR social networking
Wiki’s Most large enterprises have at least one now. Form of easy collaboration.
Blogs Also most large organizations, and many individuals, have blogs. Convenient place to comment on mostly current events.
What’s happening Many of these features are coming together. New applications are making participation easier and more convenient.
So, I decided to do some research • Have a MySpace account? Show of hands… How many of you… • Have a Facebook account? • Have teens or college students?
Timeline from inception to“we’ve gotta deal with this” 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 Web 1.0 Ent 1.0 Web 2.0 Ent 2.0
Wachovia This month announced a “facebook – like” social network/knowledge management platform Based on Microsoft’s Sharepoint 110,000 users over the next several months In the past this might have been a scary rollout, but …
Facebook Is adding 100,000 – 150,000 users per month Is adding a million users a week
Fourth Annual Hundreds of exhibitors Thousands of attendees Web 2.0 has arrived
Limits of Web 2.0 Web 1.0 and especially Web 2.0 are all about “eyeballs” There just aren’t enough eyeballs to go around
Limits of Web 2.0 Google can’t deal with this Paris Hilton Person Building