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Surfing the real-time web

11 Jun 09

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It is now the middle of 2009 and the web landscape is already looking very different from the start of 2009. Twitter is primarily responsible for the surge into the real-time web. Seeing Twitter’s success in covering news before any main news site is remarkable. It is here. It is now.

Facebook saw the success of Twitter and subsequently changed their homepage (which I still think is a bad choice). Facebook also made the status update feed real-time: an inevitable change, considering they also opened the status API. What is this Facebook? Are you trying to become Twitter with photos and quizzes? C’mon now.

Seeing the real-time building, Google saw that they were losing search power and made options available to their search to make it more real-time.

The biggest surprise to the real-time venue is definitely Google’s Wave. Will it change the way we interact on the internet? Who knows. When you see a wave (a real one) approach, it might seem huge, but that might mean it might break before it’s of any use to the surfer. Meh, it’s a bad analogy, but you get my point. Will be really interesting to see what Google Wave can pull off!

So where to now?

I didn’t expect to see this surge into the real-time web. I’m wondering what web services will filter into the real-time environment. The implications are immense to me. It means that people are now even more connected, right now. Within 5 minutes of it happening, I knew about the hudson river plane crash.

What implications it has on our psyche, I don’t know. We are more and more, constantly aware of the world and its happenings…

Where do you think the real-time web will go? What do you think the psychological implications are for being constantly and instantly connected?

The individual web: A counter-argument

17 May 09

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After reading Bryan Appleyard’s article, “Break free of this world wide delusion“, I had to reply.

The article states that David Edgerton says, “The internet is rather passe… It’s just a means of communication, like television, radio or newspapers.” If you look at clinically. Yes, the internet is a form of communication. It allows countless amounts of people to connect around the globe without any form of restraint (speaking in terms of physical space and time). What David Edgerton don’t see is that television, radio and newspapers are predominantly 1-dimensional media. What do I see on my TV? The shows that the media execs think I might want to see. Radio? It’s the same. I tune in, to listen whatever is on. Newspapers are the same. They write the stories that they think their market wants to read. It is lobsided: a few people determine what thousands see and hear. As mentioned in a previous blog post. Because the new web is allowing everyone to become media creators, more and more forces are able to exact on the supply and demand of what people want to see, hear and read from the media. Fred, the 1st person to have 1 million subscribers on YouTube would never have come to fruitition if the internet didn’t exist. No media powerhouse could’ve predicted his success.

One great promise of web 2.0 was that it would lead to a post-industrial world in which everything was dematerialised into a shimmer of electrons. But last year’s oil price shock and this year’s recession, not to mention every year’s looming eco-catastrophe, show that we are still utterly dependent on the heavy things of the old economy.

Where are these promises written? Yes, ideally, that’s what the web could achieve. Yes, we are still dependent on the old economy, but that doesn’t take away the merits of the internet and what it is trying to achieve.

The first objection to this [empowering of the individual] is that it destroys institutions and structures that can do so much more than the individual. The liberty which the web offers to the individual voice is also a restriction on group effort.

What? Linux? Firefox? Wikipedia? What drives people to work collaboratively on these projects? It is by the desire that we all have. I want an OS to do what I want it to. I want a better web browser. I want instant knowledge. It is driven by individual need, but through the web, it makes it much easier create things bigger than individual need. It is rewarding to feel that when I contribute to an article on wikipedia, I’m passing down knowledge and contributing to a whole, greater than myself. The article states that wikipedia is plagued by inaccuracy… The inaccuracy is almost, always temporary. The information is more often than not more accurate than real encyclopaedias.

Even Twitter is already coming to be dominated by conventional, non-web-based celebrity — Oprah Winfrey in the US and Stephen Fry over here.

These are already powerful individuals. The web is an extension and accentuation. Why should the web not reflect this?

The slightly more sinister aspect of this is that excessive individualism leads with astonishing rapidity to slavish conformity. The banking crisis may not have been caused by the internet but it was certainly fuelled by the way connectivity and speed created a market in which everybody was gripped by the hysteria of the herd.

Yes, with this I have to agree. The web accentuates everything we do. A run on the banks would crash the market quicker than without the internet. Isn’t this better though if you think in the long-term? The banks would’ve crashed if the internet didn’t exist, but it would’ve taken a tad longer. Word of mouth spreads regardless… If it crashes quickly, isn’t it then true for the opposite? It stablises and grows out of the funk much quicker too. For those not easily gripped by hysteria of the herd could also have used the internet to gather more information on what is happening.

Or there is the weird phenomenon of flash mobs.

Cmon! Flash mobs are awesome. A beautiful side-effect of people being brought together without the limit of time and space. It’s like the 21st century mexican wave.

 I know that this article — it always happens — will be sneered at all over the web by people who cannot think for themselves because they are blindly faithful to the idea that the web is the future, all of it.

The Internet is a global network of interconnected computers, enabling users to share information along multiple channels (thanks wikipedia). Of course it is the future. The potential of what it can achieve is only at the beginning. The web can bring people together that have been seperated by time and space, enabling and empowering them.

It is the cultists who threaten the web. They are the ones encouraging dreams of a utopia of the self.

Threaten the web? In what way? What do you want it to be? If the web is being threatened there must be something you want to keep/protect… Baffles me.

 The web is human and fallen; it is bestial as much as it is angelic.

So is humanity. The web is an accentuation of our society. You’ll see ghastly things and read opinions that you thought no man could harbour. These are just things about who we are. With the internet it has only come to forefront of society. You’ll also see things like Wikipedia, stories of love through the net, meetings of long-lost friends, inspiring blogs and feel the connection with, not strangers, but humanity. A lot of human endeavours have been about connecting and trying to understand each other. It is driven by the need to have at least 1 other human being understand who you are. This is what the internet is doing: extending the individual.

Twitter: The new backbone of the web?

26 Feb 09

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Although I haven’t used Twitter for a long time, I can clearly see what is happening. Twitter is becoming the new backbone of the web (if not the world).

Twitter is becoming the place where data comes in and data goes out. For a better metaphor, it is beginning to act like a massive gate. Through the use of simple link posting and Twitter’s API, lots and lots of data comes into this gate. You are the owner of this gate and decide which information you read. The rest of the data just goes by.

What I’m trying to say is, is that Twitter has become a backbone for everything that is happening on the web: The proverbial Informational Highway. The web feeds straight into Twitter, where the users disseminate the information. There are loads of examples of this. The largest is obviously simply posting links and then after that, services like my Tweekly.fm. It takes the data that is already there, that is somewhere else, feeds it into the gate where the information promulgates around. It is interesting, because WE are the cogs of this machine. WE choose how the data is gathered and dispersed.

The power of Twitter as a means for attracting information and acting as a force for sharing information is becoming uparalalled. The more people that use Twitter, the more of the web’s data gets feeded into it. It creates a very interesting environment where, for example, news is heard before traditional media catches on.

It will really be interesting to see what happens in the future! Heck even @Google joined Twitter today. That must mean something. Kudos to Jack Dorsey and co.

Goals for 2009

24 Feb 09

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As I’m nearing the end of February, I decided to  think about some goals I have related to my web projects. Considering that I am studying full-time, I don’t really have the time or resources to invest in large-ish projects (2 or 3 in my head). So instead, I am going to focus on creating simple web services (will mostly be mashups) that *I* would like to use. I am working on the basis of “If I like it, then someone else would”. I don’t need to worry about money just yet. :)

Considering that I am going to create several small projects, I am going to try and start a proper “shotbeak” brand so that my services become easily recognisable. In other words all services will be hosted on shotbeak.com and will contain a logo to show it is a “shotbeak” project. Would be quite interesting to see if it gains traction.

I’ve made 2 projects this year so far:

Tweekly.fm - A service that gathers your weekly last.fm data and sends it as a tweet every week.

Muse Lyrics - If you are a fan of the band Muse and have Facebook, you can add this application to add any lyric/line from any Muse song onto your Facebook profile.

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I want make at LEAST 2 more mashups/web projects this year. I can see that one of them will include twitter integration. I love using twitter as part of a mashup because it serves as a great backbone to “disperse” data.

What is the web now?

27 Jan 09

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I saw this very interesting quote on Singularity Hub, trying to get some more information on Kevin Kelly’s “next 5000 days of the web” TED talk.

“We can say that the internet was first a database of computers, then a database of web pages, and now it is a database of individual pieces or granules of information.”

I agree completely.

A great example of the 3rd and current stage of the internet is the excistence of mashups. Using the “individual pieces or granules of information” that are scattered across the web, we collect them and organise it into something useful.

I just love the potential that exists with all these data. So much can be achieved!

I am going to start working on a new “personal” mashup soon. It is way more ambitious than something I’ve done before, so “personal” means it is a scaled-down version of the final idea. Hopefully it gets picked up and gets angel investing or something. :)