Rich Web

I’ve been spending some time thinking about the realms of the Internet as I’ve been developing my traffic promotion series. In doing so, I’ve also been thinking a lot about Web 2.0.

The Quite Web

The Quite Web is the era we are in right now. It began when the Internet began and it is the period of time dominated by text and image data (data that is quiet and stationary). Up until recently, rich media has been inaccessible to all but a wealthy few. However, now that bandwidth is becoming more widely available at cheaper costs combined with the fact that rich media input devices, such as cameras and microphones, are widely available at affordable costs; we’re seeing more and more rich media information on the web. Look at the explosion of YouTube, a video sharing community that would have been inconceivable 5 years ago. Becoming evermore common place, VoIP has greatly increased the usage of the Internet for transporting rich data.

So much so, that I’m going to say we are embarking on a new time for the Internet as significant as the addition of audio to movies. At the same time, I wouldn’t think of it as Web 3.0, because I don’t think that name accurately describes this new era. We are not witnessing the next version of the web as we did with 2.0, rather we are seeing new layers form that have radical implications on culture and technology, which I’m calling the Rich Web.

The Rich Web

Technologically, the Rich Web is the mass incorporation of motion and audio. Culturally, the Rich Web is the emergence of a new level of visual and audio communication. Video blogs, or vlogs, are one example of the cultural usage of the newly accessible audio/video data. VoIP is another example. Movies are starting to sell viewings online.

The Rich Web will continue to develop on top of Web 2.0. There is a translation layer forming between the Rich Web and Web 2.0. The translation layer will be a huge part of the success of the Rich Web as it will power search and findability. It includes technologies like facial recognition and speech to text conversion. Converting audio and video into text data will enable rich content to be a part of Web 2.0, which opens up that rich content to the power of the Quiet Web (search, feeds, social bookmarks, etc).

Future players

I think Skype is a company that is at the heart of the Rich Web. With their roots in VoIP, they are enabling a variety of rich media services. I think we’ll see a fusion of cell phones and VoIP. We’ll see cell phones continue to evolve into smart devices. These smart devices will begin to associate us with things like our blogs, MySpace profiles, social bookmark lists, etc. I’ve already seen software targeted at coffee shops that allows local Internet users to see the profiles of the other people in the cafe. Using Bonjour, everyone in my local network shows up on my IM buddy list.

I’m excited to see all of the new developments that are coming from the Rich Web. I think the Rich Web is the ultimate destiny of the Internet. I think it’s the beginning of the fusion of T.V., radio, telephones, and mail into one network. Don’t get me wrong, the Internet won’t fully supplant T.V. until it can deliver HD video and surround sound. I don’t think that time is far off. And, I think T.V. has already felt a deep cut in their viewership from people spending more and more time online, which I think is attributable in part to the proliferation of rich content. As the Rich Web grows, so will participation.

I am sure that I have barely scratched the surface of the depth the internet has to offer. As a consumer I am deterred by having to register or pay for anything that I can’t try out first. I like the web because I surf anywhere that interests me, if it doesn’t interest me I don’t have to go there.
Unfortunatly I am surrounded by people who don’t surf the web. Plus the things I find interesting are hard to describe and report. Most reactions are- that is interesting or funny in a “you are so strange” way. I can name 30 people I see every week who don’t know what youtube is. Although we had some 19 year old guys over and they each had suggestions of funny clips I had to check out.
As revolutionary as the internet is it seems that anyone over 30 around here don’t get into it. It takes a while to get comfortable “asking” the internet for help (i.e. directions, phone numbers, photos, random triva.) It took a year of having highspeed for me to get comfortable looking up stuff. My husband still complains that he forgets what he wanted to look up when he sits down to the computer. If he had a Palm Pilot he would have a place to take notes to remember… but my point is still there are many people who do not see the web as the next great thing. It seems redundant in their busy lives and certainly things like youtube are too trival to really draw them in. When it makes life easier, i.e. paying bills and ordering products they do it but beyond that they don’t indulge.

That said, it astounds me the speed that a joke can travel. It makes me very happy to see people sharing laughs.

I just had the privelage of seeing and hearing my parents talk through a web cam. Wonderful experience. They have one for me, and I am so excited to have a form of visual communication available to me. I can’t wait to use it! Between now and when the give it to me (Chirstmas) I will be developing eloquent lines of thought, without my clumsy spelling to hold me back- who knows?!

From sabrina on November 20th, 2006 at 11:30 pm MyAvatars 0.2

[…] This is a fantastic time to be involved in this conversation because these are the formative years of our practice as web developers. As an industry, we are in the middle creating the tools and methodology for rich interactive experiences. It is the lessons we’re learning right now that will guide future generations of web developers. Rich interactive experiences have been evolving for over a decade now. YouTube was just purchased for $1.65 billion. All of the major TV players are gearing up for a fight with YouTube. The only trump card TV has over YouTube and the other internet video is quality, which means YouTube and the Google crew are going to working hard on increasing quality (is this where Google’s large purchases of dark fiber come into play?). Those who solve the problems facing the standardization of rich interactive development practices will be to the Rich Web what the Jeffery Zeldmans and Molly Holzschlags were to the Web 2.0 movement. […]

From In search of a better way to design at Metafluence on January 13th, 2007 at 8:11 pm MyAvatars 0.2

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