The Next-Generation Web--You ain't seen nothing yet.
The Web is still in its infancy. It sounds like an absurd claim, except that the person making it is Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the guy who invented the Web in the first place. I happen to agree with him.
The first incarnation of the Web changed the world, and what we call "Web 2.0" was only an incremental improvement on that. It made the baby-Web usable for normal people.
I've had the pleasure of speaking with Tim on a few occasions and he is patiently waiting for everyone to get over the love-fest with what they currently know as the Web so we can focus on moving things forward and innovating again.
The end-game here, and what Tim has had in mind from the beginning, amounts to a completely new paradigm in software. It's about creating an Internet-wide mesh of data which a given software application can use as easily as its own database.
Fortunately, the Web is hurtling towards adolescence. SPARQL is the glue that makes this global data mesh usable, and it was just ratified this year. The Web's voice just cracked.
While advances like service-oriented architecture were steps in the right direction, they were still just an incremental improvement over client-server based architectures. And as useful as that is, I think an unfortunate side-effect is that an entire generation of programmers was raised with their thinking firmly locked in the old paradigm. I've tried to evangelize the new paradigm myself, and I can attest that it's like trying to convince people that man can actually fly using airplanes while they turn around and go back to work on pimping out their horse and buggy.
Tim's vision of the Web is the ultimate logical evolution of Web technology. Fortunately there are some recent developments that indicate that the Web has hit a growth spurt and we may soon see another explosion of innovation based on the Next-Generation Web.


Hi Jason,
This is Jana from the Semantic Web Company in Vienna - you probably already have your conference pass, but if not: I just wanted to invite you to participate in our Linking Open Data Vision Competition. Prize is a conference pass for LinkedData Planet in New York - we can't fund travel expenses, but the prize itself is worth $1095 (oh, and TBL is giving a keynote:-)
Link to the competition is behind my name.
Best wishes
Posted by: Jana Herwig | May 05, 2008 at 07:13 AM