Web 1.0 was an early stage of the conceptual evolution of the World Wide Web, centered around a top-down approach to the use of the web and its user interface. Socially, users could only view webpages but not contribute to the content of the webpages.
The hyperlinks between webpages began with the release of the world wide web to the public in 1993, and describe the Web before the "bursting of the dot-com bubble" in 2001.
According to Cormode, G. and Krishnamurthy, B. (2008): "content creators were few in Web 1.0 with the vast majority of users simply acting as consumers of content."
Technically, Web 1.0 webpage's information is closed to external editing. Thus, information is not dynamic, being updated only by the webmaster. Economically, revenue generated from the web was made by concentrating on the most visited webpages.Web 1.0 concentrated on presenting, not creating so that user-generated content was not available.
Web 1.0 trends included worries over privacy concerns resulting in a one-way flow of information, through websites which contained "read-only" material.
Web 1.0 was dial-up, 50K average bandwidth, Web 2.0 is an average 1 megabit of bandwidth and Web 3.0 will be 10 megabits of bandwidth all the time, which will be the full video Web, and that will feel like Web 3.0.
The hyperlinks between webpages began with the release of the world wide web to the public in 1993, and describe the Web before the "bursting of the dot-com bubble" in 2001.
According to Cormode, G. and Krishnamurthy, B. (2008): "content creators were few in Web 1.0 with the vast majority of users simply acting as consumers of content."
Technically, Web 1.0 webpage's information is closed to external editing. Thus, information is not dynamic, being updated only by the webmaster. Economically, revenue generated from the web was made by concentrating on the most visited webpages.Web 1.0 concentrated on presenting, not creating so that user-generated content was not available.
Web 1.0 trends included worries over privacy concerns resulting in a one-way flow of information, through websites which contained "read-only" material.
Web 1.0 was dial-up, 50K average bandwidth, Web 2.0 is an average 1 megabit of bandwidth and Web 3.0 will be 10 megabits of bandwidth all the time, which will be the full video Web, and that will feel like Web 3.0.
No comments:
Post a Comment