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Think Innovation Web2.0 Nimish Vohra | India Head, Regalix |  June 2, 2009 +91 98453 34981 | Bangalore
Before the Web  were competing computing technologies  some competing OS And then emerged Windows as a major Platform  with packaged software applications   with tightly coupled APIs  and frequent releases
Then came the Web  with Client-Server technology  and, hyper-linking This saw the emergence of sites such as   Rediff, Geocities, Britannica Online, Directories (Yahoo) And this was  One way web or read only web  Primitive interfaces (Netscape vs. IE)  Taxonomy (Yahoo directory)  Pull medium (sites needed to have stickiness to get users back)
Then happened Web2.0  Blogger (read + write, comment) Wikipedia (read + write, review, debate) Flickr (view, upload, tag) No directories: Tag content the way you want     Not taxonomy but folksonomy   view what others have liked   recommend to others, and view others recommendations A read-write, participatory web
How Web2.0 Got its Name The concept was born at a brainstorming session between OReilly and MediaLive International Dale Dougherty, VP OReilly Background: Dot-com bubble had just burst Companies that survived had something in common Could these be called the Web2.0?
Web2.0: An Overview Strategic Positioning The Web as a Platform User Positioning You control your own data Core Competencies Services, not packaged software Architecture of participation Harnessing collective intelligence Cost-effective scalability Re-mixable data sources and data transformations Software above the level of a single device
Web2.0: Web as a Platform Netscape vs. Google Netscape Desktop application Strategy: sell high-end servers running web applications Tried controlling standards for displaying content Google Web application Never packaged or sold Delivered as a service, with users paying for the service, directly or indirectly
Web2.0: Web as a Platform DoubleClick vs. Overture, AdSense DoubleClick Is a web service (like Google)   but is not participatory Advertisers call the shots, and not users Bulky, contractual placements of ads on large sites, for large advertisers Overture, AdSense Any small advertiser can place an ad in any small site They serviced the long-tail Leverage customer self service to reach out to the entire web, not just the head, but the long tail too
Web2.0: Harnessing Collective Intelligence Hyperlinking:  Sites are bound to the structure of the web by links Googles breakthrough in search   PageRank   uses link structure rather than type of content to provide search results Ebay  a  collective activity  of its users. Ebay grows as activity grows. Ebay, only provides a platform Amazon  sells the same products as its competitors. But they have higher  user participation   reviews, different ways of interacting, user activity produces better results
Web2.0: Harnessing Collective Intelligence Companies that have extended the above concepts Wikipedia   an online encyclopedia: Radical change in the dynamics of content creation. Trust. Del.icio.us, Flickr   pioneered folksonomy (in contrast to taxonomy)  collaborative categorization.  Cloudmark  spam filtering, by aggregation of individual decisions Linux, MySQL, Perl, PHP, on which most of the web runs, is relies on open-source  collective, net-enabled intelligence Blogging Usable technology (easy to publish own content, rather than using HTML or CMS) RSS  unique content delivery mechanism. Converts a pull medium to a push medium Bloggers, as the most prolific and timely linkers, have a major role in shaping search results
Web2.0: Rich User Experience Applet (1992) Java delivered Applet (1995) Macromedias Flash based Rich Internet Applications, many years ago Full scale applications happened only with Gmail Technology that Google used was termed AJAX, which is a collection of XHTML, CSS DOM XML, XSLT XMLHttpRequest Javascript, to bind everything together
Web2.0: Visual Design? Very user friendly Feature rich People are not shy to use color But lots of white More text than images Logos are rounded, colorful, playful? Again, very usable
Web2.0: Design Patterns  Long Tail : Small sites make up bulk of the internets content. Leverage customer self service and automatic data management Data is important:  Try and create a unique hard to replicate data Users add value:  In form of data (reviews, original content), behavior Self-learning apps:  Applications should be intelligent enough to gather user behavior (top 10 views, highest clicks, etc) Rights reserved?:  Benefits come from collective adoption and not restriction. Always a Beta?:  On the web one does not need to have software releases. Change as often, if you improving the experience
Web2.0: What is proprietary? What is the biz model? Desktop applications were, now they are open source.  Web applications were (advanced mail, etc), now they are not If for a news company, news is not copyrighted, and is freely distributable, how does the news company make money? For some companies, such as MapQuest, it would be data they can license. Companies like Google are already giving this data out freely. So in the end, it is not products, not services, not data. It is the amount of traffic you can garner. More traffic could mean more revenue opportunities in terms of ads.
Web2.0: Beyond the web, beyond the community: Web3? Making it  collaborative .  Making it a  web enabled  service.  Moving completely away from the  desktop storage Moving away from desktop applications. Web3  some thoughts: All pervasive, always on. For the businesses.
Web2.0: Implications for Media Publishers now no longer leverage all the content It is now easy to create content (Blogs) It is now easy to distribute content (RSS, feed-readers)
Web2.0: Are we going into a Bubble? Yes! There is a lot of frenzy to innovate. And lot of money to back it with. And some of the applications dont really make any sense! E.g., myLot. To me, even MySpace does not make much sense, when compared to Orkut! But again, innovation never goes waste Finally, you are safe if you are thinking about the user, have a clear reasoning of how this is useful. Dont be a part of the fad
Web2.0: Some creative Web2.0 applications? Zopa: Taking money lending to the masses Zimbra: Messaging and collaboration Tictrac: Online time tracking World66: A wiki on Travel NetworthIQ: Track your networth online OpenID: Single identity across all applications Foldershare: Keep your files online HousingMaps: Craigslist + GoogleMaps: A mashup
Thank You! A journey of a thousand miles  begins with a single step. Chinese Proverb Nimish Vohra India Head, Regalix +91 98453 34981 | Bangalore

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Web2.0 Basics

  • 1. Think Innovation Web2.0 Nimish Vohra | India Head, Regalix | June 2, 2009 +91 98453 34981 | Bangalore
  • 2. Before the Web were competing computing technologies some competing OS And then emerged Windows as a major Platform with packaged software applications with tightly coupled APIs and frequent releases
  • 3. Then came the Web with Client-Server technology and, hyper-linking This saw the emergence of sites such as Rediff, Geocities, Britannica Online, Directories (Yahoo) And this was One way web or read only web Primitive interfaces (Netscape vs. IE) Taxonomy (Yahoo directory) Pull medium (sites needed to have stickiness to get users back)
  • 4. Then happened Web2.0 Blogger (read + write, comment) Wikipedia (read + write, review, debate) Flickr (view, upload, tag) No directories: Tag content the way you want Not taxonomy but folksonomy view what others have liked recommend to others, and view others recommendations A read-write, participatory web
  • 5. How Web2.0 Got its Name The concept was born at a brainstorming session between OReilly and MediaLive International Dale Dougherty, VP OReilly Background: Dot-com bubble had just burst Companies that survived had something in common Could these be called the Web2.0?
  • 6. Web2.0: An Overview Strategic Positioning The Web as a Platform User Positioning You control your own data Core Competencies Services, not packaged software Architecture of participation Harnessing collective intelligence Cost-effective scalability Re-mixable data sources and data transformations Software above the level of a single device
  • 7. Web2.0: Web as a Platform Netscape vs. Google Netscape Desktop application Strategy: sell high-end servers running web applications Tried controlling standards for displaying content Google Web application Never packaged or sold Delivered as a service, with users paying for the service, directly or indirectly
  • 8. Web2.0: Web as a Platform DoubleClick vs. Overture, AdSense DoubleClick Is a web service (like Google) but is not participatory Advertisers call the shots, and not users Bulky, contractual placements of ads on large sites, for large advertisers Overture, AdSense Any small advertiser can place an ad in any small site They serviced the long-tail Leverage customer self service to reach out to the entire web, not just the head, but the long tail too
  • 9. Web2.0: Harnessing Collective Intelligence Hyperlinking: Sites are bound to the structure of the web by links Googles breakthrough in search PageRank uses link structure rather than type of content to provide search results Ebay a collective activity of its users. Ebay grows as activity grows. Ebay, only provides a platform Amazon sells the same products as its competitors. But they have higher user participation reviews, different ways of interacting, user activity produces better results
  • 10. Web2.0: Harnessing Collective Intelligence Companies that have extended the above concepts Wikipedia an online encyclopedia: Radical change in the dynamics of content creation. Trust. Del.icio.us, Flickr pioneered folksonomy (in contrast to taxonomy) collaborative categorization. Cloudmark spam filtering, by aggregation of individual decisions Linux, MySQL, Perl, PHP, on which most of the web runs, is relies on open-source collective, net-enabled intelligence Blogging Usable technology (easy to publish own content, rather than using HTML or CMS) RSS unique content delivery mechanism. Converts a pull medium to a push medium Bloggers, as the most prolific and timely linkers, have a major role in shaping search results
  • 11. Web2.0: Rich User Experience Applet (1992) Java delivered Applet (1995) Macromedias Flash based Rich Internet Applications, many years ago Full scale applications happened only with Gmail Technology that Google used was termed AJAX, which is a collection of XHTML, CSS DOM XML, XSLT XMLHttpRequest Javascript, to bind everything together
  • 12. Web2.0: Visual Design? Very user friendly Feature rich People are not shy to use color But lots of white More text than images Logos are rounded, colorful, playful? Again, very usable
  • 13. Web2.0: Design Patterns Long Tail : Small sites make up bulk of the internets content. Leverage customer self service and automatic data management Data is important: Try and create a unique hard to replicate data Users add value: In form of data (reviews, original content), behavior Self-learning apps: Applications should be intelligent enough to gather user behavior (top 10 views, highest clicks, etc) Rights reserved?: Benefits come from collective adoption and not restriction. Always a Beta?: On the web one does not need to have software releases. Change as often, if you improving the experience
  • 14. Web2.0: What is proprietary? What is the biz model? Desktop applications were, now they are open source. Web applications were (advanced mail, etc), now they are not If for a news company, news is not copyrighted, and is freely distributable, how does the news company make money? For some companies, such as MapQuest, it would be data they can license. Companies like Google are already giving this data out freely. So in the end, it is not products, not services, not data. It is the amount of traffic you can garner. More traffic could mean more revenue opportunities in terms of ads.
  • 15. Web2.0: Beyond the web, beyond the community: Web3? Making it collaborative . Making it a web enabled service. Moving completely away from the desktop storage Moving away from desktop applications. Web3 some thoughts: All pervasive, always on. For the businesses.
  • 16. Web2.0: Implications for Media Publishers now no longer leverage all the content It is now easy to create content (Blogs) It is now easy to distribute content (RSS, feed-readers)
  • 17. Web2.0: Are we going into a Bubble? Yes! There is a lot of frenzy to innovate. And lot of money to back it with. And some of the applications dont really make any sense! E.g., myLot. To me, even MySpace does not make much sense, when compared to Orkut! But again, innovation never goes waste Finally, you are safe if you are thinking about the user, have a clear reasoning of how this is useful. Dont be a part of the fad
  • 18. Web2.0: Some creative Web2.0 applications? Zopa: Taking money lending to the masses Zimbra: Messaging and collaboration Tictrac: Online time tracking World66: A wiki on Travel NetworthIQ: Track your networth online OpenID: Single identity across all applications Foldershare: Keep your files online HousingMaps: Craigslist + GoogleMaps: A mashup
  • 19. Thank You! A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. Chinese Proverb Nimish Vohra India Head, Regalix +91 98453 34981 | Bangalore