Excerpts:
"In a little over a decade, according to the engineers building the internet of tomorrow, the web will be able to connect every aspect of our digital lives - be it a website, an e-mail, or a file on our PC - to every other aspect. It will know, for instance, when you are typing an e-mail, what the subject of the e-mail is, and be able to suggest websites and books as well as documents, photos and videos you have saved that may be relevant to that topic.
It will be achieve this by virtue of the inherent 'intelligence' in the underlying architecture of the internet, they say. In other words, the web is becoming smart."
Alex: The Internet, and the world, is becoming more and more useful. Utilitarian. What the typical person is capable of nowadays (flying around the world, and web searches around the world, as two quick examples), would be unthought of hundreds of years ago. Because the entire curve is shifting up, and all are gaining (collectively, but not equally) it may not appear that we are growing more powerful all the time if we think in comparative terms, because our comparative influence on and with others, may still increase, decrease, or stay the same. When everyone is becoming more powerful, you can still be pretty vulnerable when you are less powerful than most.
and
"Broadly speaking, Mr Spivack says, Web 3.0 refers to the attempt by technologists to overhaul radically the basic platform of the internet so that it 'understands' the near infinite pieces of information that reside on it and draws connections between them.
If Web 2.0 was all about harnessing the collective intelligence of crowds to give information a value - lots of people liked this story so you might too (Digg.com), people who like Madonna also like this artist (last.fm), lots of people linked to this site so that makes it the most relevant (Google's basic PageRank algorithm) - then Web 3.0 is about giving the internet itself a brain."
Alex: Nova Spivack is a smart, smart, smart guy. Like him, I try not to be not where the Internet has been, but where it is going. And he's helping to drive it there.
and
"Some of the world's largest technology companies - Nokia, Apple and MySpace - all made announcements embracing the idea of open platforms, suggesting that the web will become a place where much more mixing and matching of different services will be permitted.
Alongside this will come tmore mature virtual worlds, or what Silicon Valley's faithful - perhaps to get away from connotations of the computer game - have started referring to as 'immersive environments'.
"The web is going to be a much more immersive, a much more multi-dimensional environment," said John Doerr, one of the founding board members at Google and a partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, which invests heavily in the tech sector.
Mr Doerr's presentation touched on a range of areas that would be affected by the web, in particular green technologies and the energy sector, as well as disease therapy, and he gave stark warning to any firm that was not willing to embrace emerging trends. "In any real revolution there are winners and losers. The internet wasn't some kind of 'kum ba ya' thing," he said."
Alex: John Doerr is (of course) also a genius. There are alot of elements here. For one, I am also focusing on immersive and green elements (some of my Internet endeavors). I believe that thus far the Internet has largely served to inform or sell us. Increasingly, it will also be used as an experience (social networks one precursor) including entertainment (music sites a precursor).
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