What is Web2.0? + free guide to drive traffics to your sites!
The future of Internet IS here.
It takes a form of Web 2.0. It is called “the New Wave of Internet”
for good reasons.
So Web 2.0 is the future of Internet. The essence of Web 2.0
can be summarized in one word: long life the users!
NOW YOU TRULY THE KING!
With that said, it is THE users control the contents
and then the future of a site.
And the main ingredient of this is the communication.
Not one-way, nor even two-ways but multiple ways
in which a user can build a communication with others.
So anyone who wants to understand Web 2.0 must first be
familiar with what Web 2.0 means. The phrase stands for the
supposed second generation of the web that focuses on
collaboration and sharing of information among users as
stated above. What used to be one-way highways of the old web
is now replaced by a community-driven world of Web 2.0.
The term Web 2.0 was first used in 2004 during the O’Reilly
Media Web 2.0 conference. This suggested a change on how
developers and users use the web.
Some of the things related to Web 2.0 include blogs, RSS
(really simple syndication) feeds, social bookmarking
websites and the like.
All of them share the common factors of having
interactivity and communication between the website owner
and the visitors, as well as among the visitors themselves.
The so-called Web 2.0 encompasses the back and front end of
websites. However, to the average users, the changes are
most evident on what they actually see and use on the
websites that they visit.
For example, for Ajax-based applications, what they see are
the updating of data on the page without actually
refreshing the entire page, which was the technique before.
Web 2.0 has made it possible to create a desktop
environment to websites. For example, users of the past can
only type their documents on their computers and were only
able to share them to others by sending it through e-mail.
But with Web 2.0, users can now create their documents on
websites which offer that service and are able to share
them to others by merely adding the e-mail addresses of
their friends. Such is the case with Google Documents,
formerly known as Writely, until Google acquired the
company.
All in all, Web 2.0 has further enriched the internet by
letting people collaborate, making the web into a true
community.
If you want to know and then master the untapped and hidden
power of Web 2.0, I have a good news.
Right now I am preparing a free Web 2.0 book for you to help you.
The best part is that the book would deal with driving huge traffics
to your sites. Sounds good?
Stay tuned!


