This term Web 2.0 (
Google |
Wikipedia |
Technorati) gets bandied about a lot these days, and even though I've been using several Web 2.0 services for awhile (LJ, Wikipedia, Gmail et al, del.icio.us, digg, etc.), I didn't really know what the heck they were talking about until recently.
Mark Glaser, of PBS.org's excellent MediaShift blog, just posted an entry about
Defining Web 2.0. It goes a fair way to clear things up, plus links to some other good articles on the topic. From his entry:
Definitions:
1. Generally refers to a second generation of services available on the World Wide Web that let people collaborate, and share information online (Source:
Wikipedia
).
2. Web 2.0 is the network as platform, spanning all connected devices (Source:
Tim O’Reilly
of O’Reilly Publishing, who runs the
Web 2.0 conference
).
3. With its allusion to the version numbers that commonly designate software upgrades, Web 2.0 was a trendy way to indicate an improved form of the World Wide Web (also from Wikipedia).
4. Web 2.0 is the latest moniker in an endless effort to reignite the dot-com mania of the late 1990s (Source:
John Dvorak
of PC Magazine).
5. It’s a technology upgrade, one that finally does what they’d said version 1.0 would do (Source:
Paul Boutin
of Slate).
For the long-form definition, check out O’Reilly’s essay,
What is Web 2.0.