Web 2.0 is dead — long live the Web

by Mathew on November 24, 2006 · Comments

My friend and fellow mesh organizer — and all-around smart guy — Stuart MacDonald has a great blog post up today on the end of Web 2.0. But don’t get depressed, all you fans of blogs and podcasts and wikis and social media. All Stuart means is that Web 2.0 as a hot new concept (albeit one that tends to be poorly defined) is over, and what we’re seeing is the start of Web 2.0 as something that can really mean something to the general populace.

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In other words, instead of just being something cool that goes “ping,” all the things that we associate with Web 2.0 are becoming part of how people use the Web, whether they realize it or not. People are reading and commenting on blogs and using social media and those kinds of tools without knowing that they are doing something Web 2.0 — and that’s a good thing. That’s why mesh is called Canada’s Web conference, and not Canada’s Web 2.0 conference (no, it’s not because O’Reilly sent us a C&D letter).

Remember when every company sent out press releases to say that they had a website? Those days are gone (thankfully), and now the Internet is something millions of people use without ever really thinking about it. And it’s no wonder that Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the guy we have to thank for the Web, got a little testy in an interview awhile back when asked about Web 2.0. There is no Web 2.0, he said — there’s just the evolution of the Web. All that interactivity (and more) is something he envisioned in the first place. It’s just taken us awhile to get there.

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  • "Remember when every company sent out press releases to say that they had a website?"

    Now companies send out websites (OK, blog posts, but work with me) to say they have press releases.

    Heh.
  • Thanks for the post, 'thewie. And for saying what I meant waaaay better than I did. You'd make a great writer ;)

    - Stuie
  • Mathew Ingram
    Thanks. I'll keep that in mind :-)
  • If Rob is right, then I say thank god. For too long, Web 2.0 was hogged by elitist geeks that were bent on creating cool apps while looking down at the masses for trying to find real but boring applications of Web 2.0.

    Now that we're here (if we're here), we can finally take Web 2..0 out for a run and watch it proliferate for the benefit of everyone across all verticals. We're particularly excited about what we've been able to do for the small-cap world to date - and what we'll be releasing in Q1 07 that should really blow away the industry.

    Best,
    George
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