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Why Web 3.0? A Look at Where the Web Is Headed
 
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Why Web 3.0? A Look at Where the Web Is Headed


The Internet is an amazing accomplishment in several respects. It contains an enormous amount of information; it has revolutionized business, education, and everyday life; and it's still running on a widely outdated infrastructure.


The Internet, these days, is caught in an interesting cycle. The more widespread the adoption of the Internet is, the more information gets added to it. The more information it holds, the more useful it is and the more people use it. The trouble with the growing usage of the Internet and the growing amount of information it allows access to is that the structure of the Internet isn’t keeping up. In other words it’s not much easier to gain access to the information the web holds now then it was when it first started. Sure, the web has undergone some helpful changes such as starting to standardize the way pages are coded and rendered. And, there are some promising changes on the horizon. For example, the implementation of HTML 5 will make it easier to code and—by extension—parse information semantically. Similarly, Google is in constant development of projects (FriendConnect, OpenSocial, Google Webmaster Tools, etc.) designed to standardize the way information is stored and used on the Internet. There is also a small but growing trend among sites to open up systematic access to their data by way of an API, and there’s an ongoing movement to implement semantic technologies such as RDF and OWL.


The tricky thing about each of these strategies is that they are fairly costly to actually put into production. For example, the ideas behind HTML 5 were generated in 2004 and it’s taken four years to publish a working draft of the specification. Once a specification for HTML 5 has been agreed upon it will still take countless hours of development to get browsers to properly render the syntax, countless hours of research by website designers and programmers to learn and adopt the new syntax, and countless years before all the websites available in the public domain are using HTML 5. Even the adoption of an API technology like OpenSocial can require months or years of changes to a site's data infrastructure before they can be rolled out; and that's after Google invested their own time and money to develop and market the API in the first place. So, it would seem that—in order for the semantic web to happen—there needs to be one or more technologies that allow companies to expose their data in a systematic way, at a low cost, and without a lot of implementation work; and there are a couple of companies that are working towards filling these sorts of requirements.


Mashery


Mashery provides on-demand API infrastructures. By offering a full–service solution—one that includes documentation and maintenance—Mashery allows companies to quickly implement an API for a monthly fee instead of hiring one or more engineers to build an API from the ground up. As Mashery, and companies like it, gain popularity it will allow other website owners to systematically expose their data through APIs at a lower cost. The lower cost of creating an API will encourage more companies to hop on board and will, hopefully, bring about significant changes in how data can be interacted with.


Mozenda


Mozenda is a data management platform that allows users to combine and use data from multiple sources. With Mozenda, users can set up agents that routinely extract data from nearly any website. The information, once collected, is stored on one of Mozenda's secure servers and can be exported in a number of file formats or systematically accessed through Mozenda's API. By allowing users to both gather data and access it through a call, Mozenda has essentially created the ability create an API for nearly any website.


Spinn3r


Spinn3r is a service that indexes blog posts in real time and provides access to the data via an API. This allows users to have on-demand access to data from thousands of websites for a fraction of the cost of setting up and maintaining a blog crawler.


Conclusion


There are likely to be dozens--if not hundreds--of new companies emerging as the web continues to move towards being more organized and semantic. As more sites take steps to make their information available in meaningful ways, there will be even more we can do on the Internet and more that the Internet can do for us.

Source: http://www.ArticlePros.com/author.php?Nate Graves

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    About the author

    Nate Graves works for a <a href="http://www.mozenda.com">web data extraction </a>company that helps users more easily gather the information they need.

    www.mozenda.com

     
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    This article has been accessed 15 times since 2008-09-04.

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