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Topic: What is Web 3.0 and Why it is being called next generation internet? (Read 71 times)

legendary
Activity: 2310
Merit: 4085
Farewell o_e_l_e_o
It is great from the idea but in the end, I don't know how it will reach to and how it will be.

From the core idea to build up a third generation of Web with aim to be decentralized. Along a growth process, there will be more things that can be in plans or out of plans so that from decentralized, it might end as centralized in hands of giant corporations. It is what Jack Dorsey warned weeks ago which triggered a massive discussion in community.

I hope that Web 3.0 will become really decentralized and give us more freedom. Anyway, I can not exclude a future in which Web 3.0 will be centralized with some dramatic improvements than Web 2.0
newbie
Activity: 21
Merit: 3
While I'm browsing the internet, especially TikTok, I saw this trend about Web 3.0 and what its future of it is. I'm very interested in this topic since I'm a WEB Designer and Developer as myself and how can I adapt to these new and innovative ideas. So I've researched a lot about this, and I want to share my thoughts about this.

First, What is Web 3.0?


Web 3.0 is the definition of a new stage in the development of the Internet, which is evolving for maximum user comfort and convenience. This means that Web 3.0 is a new stage in the development of the entire Webspace. The technological changes that are gradually entering the Internet are raising it to a whole new level of quality. Computer scientists, programmers, and analysts believe these changes will make life easier for Internet users by integrating various digital concepts.

https://i.ibb.co/WFrPprv/Web-3-0-img.png




How the Internet appeared:

The first prototype of the Internet was the ARPANET, which provided communication between computing devices. The developer of ARPANET is the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency called DARPA. This agency was founded in 1957 to research computer technology. On October 4, 1957, the USSR successfully launched the first piece Earth satellite. After that, the US Department of Defense instructed the DARPA agency to create a system for transferring information between military computers in case of war with the USSR. The first application of the technology occurred on October 29, 1969, when the developers connected two computers from the University of California and Stanford, which were 600 kilometers away. On January 1, 1983, ARPANET became the world's first network which switched to routing data packets using the IP protocol. This protocol remains the key operating model of the entire Internet to this day.

https://i.ibb.co/cTWnCWy/Downloader-la-61da6ac38060a.jpg



Web 1.0:
With the development of the Internet, people have applied the classification based on the stage of its development. Before the advent of search engines, social networking, and streaming video, there was a version of the Internet called Web 1.0. Web 1.0 dates back to the 90s. At that time, the Internet existed only as business card sites for companies to advertise them. These websites are meant to be read, with minimal design and functionality. Today, most e-commerce websites are still Web 1.0 because they are the fastest. But in this case, the level of user interaction remains minimal.

Web 2.0:
The next generation of the Internet is called Web 2.0 because it is meant to read, write, and watch streaming video. In addition, users weren't just visitors, they could create their own content and upload it to the website. The transition to this concept took place in the early 2000s. The term "Web 2.0" was coined by Dale Dougherty, Vice President of O'Reilly Media, in 2003. This period saw the formation of the largest Internet companies, which, as a result, monopolized Internet services.

Web 3.0:
The transition to a new version of the Internet is a process in which evolution and the emergence of new technologies take place. And so it happened with the Internet, which moved to a new stage, which was called Web 3.0. This version of the Web allows web resources to provide information to users based on their actions. This manifests itself in the delivery of content that is as close as possible to the user's requests of interest. Thus, Web 3.0 learns and understands user behavior, returning what suits their desires. This is the philosophy of this generation of the Internet.

What is Web 3.0 for:
Advances in technology, computing devices and access to the Internet will make Web 3.0 accessible to everyone. After all, the Internet will no longer be just on the desktop, like with Web 1.0, or listening to music and watching movies, like Web 2.0. It will be the prototype of the smart grid of the future, which will become the semantic network for people and devices, realizing the concept of the Internet of Things. Services that use separate distributed networks of the blockchain type will be responsible for the analysis and processing of data in such a network.and artificial intelligence. In such an Internet, human interaction with Internet services will change, and all visited resources will correspond to the user's requests. Also, in this version of the Web, old devices will not be able to fully work on the Internet, and Web 1.0 resources will turn out to be dinosaurs that cannot compete with new sites.

https://i.ibb.co/HTG3cT8/Downloader-la-61da6afc0d374.jpg


Conclusion:
The concept of Web 3.0 implies the transition of the Internet we are used to into a new stage of development. Thanks to this, users will be able to navigate the smart Internet, which adapts to the interests of the user. Despite the great interest in this concept, we need more practical examples of its use. Thus, Web 3.0 is only a concept that takes time to implement. In addition, there are opponents to this concept who consider the smart internet to be a huge mistake. There is also truth in this, because humanity has never skillfully used revolutionary inventions only for its own well-being.


How about you? What are your thoughts about these?

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