Web1 vs 2 vs 3



Web 1
Web 2
Web 3
• connect to internet through dial up at 50 kbps.

• techniques that rely on the sites are Http, HTML, Hyperlink, browser

• Services available are catalog, E-mail
• reason for the expansion of the web 1 is the use of the Internet in e-commerce
•connect to internet through Broadband speed of an average 1 MB

• techniques that rely on the sites are Web XML, Rsel, web services, Ajax

• connect easily between different applications.

• Services available: Social networks and applications.

• reason for the expansion of the web 2 is the orientation towards entertainment.
• Mobile access as a way to quickly connect to the internet average of 10 MB and the entry of mobile Internet environment because of the approach to be of a personal nature.

• techniques that rely on the sites are artificial intelligence technique for approaching human behavior.

• Services available to applications dealing with meanings, not words.

• Assessment of the Catalog of any evidence and guidance to reach for things and not random access.

• Web 3 guide  may be suitable for applications with the concerns of every person in the sense that it provides the information needed by the person or preferences




Web 1.0 - That Geocities & Hotmail era was all about read-only content and static HTML websites. People preferred navigating the web through link directories of Yahoo! and dmoz.

Web 2.0 - This is about user-generated content and the read-write web. People are consuming as well as contributing information through blogs or sites like Flickr, YouTube, Digg, etc. The line dividing a consumer and content publisher is increasingly getting blurred in the Web 2.0 era.

Web 3.0 - This will be about semantic web (or the meaning of data), personalization (e.g. iGoogle), intelligent search and behavioral advertising among other things.
If that sounds confusing, check out some of these excellent presentations that help you understand Web 3.0 in simple English. Each takes a different approach to explain Web 3.0 and the last presentation uses an example of a "postage stamp" to explain the "semantic web".