Web 3.0 and the WebBee contribution

This shift to Web-based applications has generated two powerful waves so far. Now, we are seeing a third wave—one that we are calling Web 3.0—and it may prove to be the most significant and disruptive yet to the traditional software industry. Emerging generation of entrepreneurs and developers, as well as traditional software ISVs, need to grasp the enormity of Web 3.0 and its potential to create change, disruption, and opportunity. Web 3.0 is about replacing existing software platforms with a new generation of platforms as a service.

Web 3.0 is all about innovation. It changes all of this by completely redefining the technology and economics of the traditional software industry. The USP of Web 3.0 is that anyone can innovate, anywhere. Code is written, collaborated on, debugged, tested, deployed, and run in the cloud computing. When innovation has the freedom of time and capital constraints of infrastructure, it can truly flourish.

For enterprises, Web 3.0 means that SaaS applications can be developed, deployed, and evolved far more quickly and cost-effectively than traditional software of the client-server era. The dramatic change in economic capacity planning should help the decision makers to finally eliminate the innovation backlog created by the cost and complexity of maintaining client-server apps. For developers, Web 3.0 means that all they need to create their dream application or a browser or some enterprise platform. Because every can access the same powerful cloud infrastructures, Web 3.0 is a force for global economic empowerment. For ISVs, Web 3.0 means that they can spend more time focusing on the core value they want to offer to customers, not the infrastructure to support it. Because code lives in the cloud, global talent pools can contribute to it. Because it runs in the cloud, a truly global market can subscribe to it as a service. Web 3.0 is a truly agile method of workload management.

The biggest advantage of Web 3.0 over Web 2.0 is the semantics on which it is conceptualized. Because of its semantic nature, Web 3.0 can organize huge volumes of information in a more structured and logical manner, than most search engines do. This is especially true from the point of view of machine comprehension as opposed to human comprehension. The Semantic Web requires the use of a declarative ontological language like OWL (Web Ontology Language) and RDF (Resource Description Framework) to produce domain-specific ontologies that machines can use to reason about information and make new conclusions, not simply match keywords.

Web 3.0 is definitely the future of tomorrow’s web technologies. Web 3.0 would be more open and collaborative. Our developers and analysts at WebBee eSolutions are right on top of this movement and we have already started incorporating semantic principles on our web designing services. Our SEO experts are experts in semantic indexing of keywords and it is our imperative to reduce redundancy and increase efficiency and interaction among various communities.

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