Welcome to DeuxpointZero - a wiki about web2.0
I have spent the past few years watching the web2.0 bubble grow, and I have been tracking it through my blog.
This is an attempt to re-organize the information in a non-linear format that should help make better sense of the whole thing.
This is a public wiki, feel free to contribute - password is "getthis"
Web2.0 trends
I was asked yesterday whether I think that Web2.0 is a bubble or not. And I think it is, but clearly nothing as bad as what happened in 2000. There is a lot of hype, and there is a lot of unknown, but what cannot be ignored are the fundamental underlying trends that are shaping beyond the hype.
The buzz words are the growth of P2P, marketplace disruptions, swarm innovation, social webs, folksonomies, long tail economy, etc...
Many thought leaders have been preaching to the crowd already:
- Yochai Benkler describes in his book "The wealth of networks" how grassroot movements have been able to resist and fight against large corporations, for example on the voting machine issue. He demonstrates that the cloud is a very powerful and productive force.
- John Seely Brown talks about swarm innovation in ecosystems across Asia. In his book "The only sustainable edge", he describes how a network of independent subcontractors can produce faster better goods than a large corporation.
- Tomi Ahonen and Alan Moore recently published a book called "Communities dominate brands", in which they show how the next generation is about more than just being connected, it is a Community generation. They show how start-ups with low budget can outperform large corporations by fostering a solid ecosystem around their business and by engaging their customers.
- Seth Godin talk about "The purple cow" and the need to move from push marketing to engagement marketing
- Chris Anderson exposes the power of the web to enable the long tail economy
- Thomas Malone predicts in his book "The future of work" that the technologies of cooperation available today will change the way we do business and manage organizations
- Michel Bauwens talks about Peer to Peer as the emergence of a new civilization
The online community is vibrant with creativity, and a lot of options/revenue models are being explored or are emerging:
- Virtual worlds are getting real (2nd life, everquest, etc...) with items sold on eBay and credit cards to cash money out at ATMs (gold farming)
- Online videos uploads and dowloads, IPTV and P2P are trying to offer an alternative to regular video content distribution. I have mentioned in my previous post that it is clearly a very good way to produce reality TV
- Social Networks are still the thing of the day, and to me another form (but only 2 dimensional) of virtual worlds
Meanwhile Interruption marketing is dying: for example I have read in "Communities dominate brands" that a study had shown that 71% of car buyers got influenced by word of mouth vs. 17% influenced by TV ads.
With all these changes come new challenges
The opportunity is for companies, large or small to make sense of what is happening. But overall, more than a technology evolution, web2.0 is really an expression of sociological changes that has been enabled by technology, and it goes far beyond just technology. Web2.0 is not really about Ajax or the latest cool free service, it is not about cool phones or IPTV, it is about how people relate to each other, how they learn to trust each other, and how they learn to live and work with their neighbors.
And since we are talking humans and not technology, we'd better be ready for this changes to take a long time. The Internet bubble happened because people though the world would change in one day, the web2.0 bubble is another sign of impatience from the techies community, we should already be looking at web3.0 and beyond...
What's next - coming in 3.0
- The future is the network: http://www.readership.org/blog2/2007/04/build-network-not-destination.html
- Ajax for Mobile: finally a user friendly interface will emerge
- More connected interaction human to human and human to machines will allow access to more data in real time, to improve processes in every aspects of our life
- The spread of P2P: people will learn to interact in a much level manner, and manage information overflow through collaborative filtering. This will include financing business ventures
- Direct economy: more involvement of users in the value chain everywhere will create opportunities for hyper-productive companies
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