Thursday, May 22, 2008

I'm thinking some more about the distinction between Web 1.0 and Web 2.0. In fact, long before there was the Web, people have been congregating in groups online, sharing ideas, thoughts, feelings, whatever the central theme of the group was. Of course, early on, it was a little clunky to get to your destination (love those spatial metaphors!) but people did it. One of your readings later in the course is about the WELL which was established in the late 80s and became a supportive community. Howard Rheingold, once of the first social scientists to take online communities seriously, wrote about this community and its dynamics; you'll read a portion of that.

But Web. 2.0 takes advantage of the audio visual and graphic dynamics of the Web to create additional value for groups (now usually called social networks) online. For example, the creator of the operating system called LINUX started out by creating a beta version of the system and then putting everything he'd done online and sent out a general message for people to come to the site and improve the system. Thousands of people responded. This was the beginning of what is called the "Open Source" movement, i.e., making source codes public so that any one can access them. This "value added" approach has lead to many, many other ventures. Goldcorp was a company with a mining operation and the in-house geologists were stumped about finding additional gold in the field. They decided to put all their formerly proprietary information online and sent out a message to geologists to help out. Any one who gave information that led to additional gold being found got a cut of the profits. Hundreds of geologists responded and numerous new sources of gold were found, saving the company. Any social networking tool is Web 2.0, since it links together individuals who then can create additional value for themselves. Web 2.0 users are prosumers (they both use and produce content) instead of consumers (which is what you are when you surf around the net to find products to buy, for instance).

So elements of Web 1.0 and 2.0 share this in common: they are less hierarchical, more "flat", more collaborative, more creative and less competitive. Perhaps we should think about these terms, Web 1.0 and 2.0, as points on a continuum with consumers on one end and prosumers on the other. Someone who knows how to use social networking tools is Barack Obama. If you subscribe to Facebook (I assume you all do), check out his page. Any thoughts you have along these lines, please share them.

Dr. Bob

2 comments:

Nicole L Barry said...

http://identity20.com/media/OSCON2005/

Dr. Bob-

Thought you might get a kick out of this. Piggybacking on the idea of web 2.0, we have Identity 2.0, and though I primarily reference this for the powerpoint, I think it's relevant to the discussion.

Xiaoli Zhao said...

I remember when I encountered blogs, wikis and still couldn't get the idea of web 2.0. Then one day I stumbled upon (literally, see later) this site: http://www.tartanmaker.com/. It's nothing more than a graphic design tool that enables you to create patterns and share with others. But what's web 2.0 about this is: within a mouse click, you can edit patterns submitted by other users. I'm used to seeing resources uploaded by users but I never expect I could interact with the resources in such a way. That was the time when I first get to feel the power of web 2.0.

On a later thought, the way I found the site above was web 2.0, too: it was through StumbleUpon, my favorite Firefox extension. StumbleUpon lets you discover websites based on your interest, such as astronomy or photography. Basically, when a user find a interesting website, s/he feeds it to StumbleUpon, so that other users get the opportunities to be directed to this website. This is in fact a very social network type of browsing.