Web 2.0 — mirage, distraction or gimmick?

by Mathew on June 5, 2007 · Comments

Plenty of people have taken a run at the whole Web 2.0 thing — the question of whether the term is a load of bollocks, a useful concept or just marketing hype — but if anyone should have some perspective on it, it’s Marc Andreesen. After all, he’s the guy who gave us the first browser when he was still a university student (I can still remember when I first used Mosaic), and then went on to form Netscape, arguably the first Web company.

snipshot_e41ktrokekm9.jpgThe only other guy who might have even more perspective on the whole Web 2.0 mess is Sir Tim Berners-Lee, who invented the Web in the first place, and who has made his thoughts known in a couple of different places, including a podcast with IBM (transcript here) — and in an interview with yours truly from the W3 symposium in Banff recently. In effect, Tim (he says that anyone who uses the Sir has to buy a round of drinks) and Marc both agree that what we call Web 2.0 is really just the Web as it was meant to be. In other words, all of that interactivity and so on is just the way things were supposed to work in the first place. It’s just easier now.

As Marc points out, it’s telling that even Tim O’Reilly — the guy who came up with the term in the first place, in order to sell the idea of a conference on the topic (which he famously trademarked, causing a minor blog storm) — has a lot of trouble defining exactly what Web 2.0 means. Dave “Mc500 Hats” McClure takes his own run at doing it in a comment on Andreesen’s blog, but doesn’t really fare much better (although it’s shorter).

Does Web 2.0 refer to tools like Ajax? Is it just a term that means interactivity? Is it an approach to design? Does it mean community? Is it a load of bollocks, a useful concept, or marketing hype? That answer to all of those questions — and more — is “Yes.” Web 2.0 means everything, and nothing.

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  • Alex Beamish
    Web 2.0 is really just another way of saying client/server or thin client/fat client.

    The first interactive computer systems were the ultimate thin client -- the computer did all of the work, and all the client did was display output and accept keystrokes. (Anyone remember the Lear-Seigler ADM-3A, marketed as the Dumb Terminal?)

    Early web sites were static pages only, followed by dynamic pages -- but apart from a few browser widgets like dropdown lists, entry fields and pushbuttons, the client was still thin and dumb. (No hotel heiress jokes, please.)

    We've now progressed along the continuum where the client's fatter and smarter -- and the web experience is much better for it. I bet Tim and Marc are happy to see the web the way it is now -- it was pretty geeky to begin with.

    Yep -- Web 2.0 is here to stay, and that's a Good Thing.
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