More than a Feeling?
Nick Carr comments today about the competing definitions for Web 2.0 and the use of jargon, concluding that at the heart of the matter is … well, nothing. Writing about Tim O’Reilly’s What is Web 2.0? essay, he states:
O’Reilly provided a series of observations and impressions, and, really, that’s the best way to approach any discussion of “Web 2.0.” You need to “walk around the subject,” because if you try to get to the center of it you’ll find there’s nothing there.
I’ve written about this at some length before. If no-one agrees about what Web 2.0 is - and believe me, they don’t - doesn’t that mean it’s the Emperor’s New Clothes? That there’s ‘nothing there’? I can understand Carr’s point and appreciate why he says it, but I think he’s wrong. Things that are quite big and complicated are very difficult to define and people disagree about them. Philosophers have spent at least 3000 years attempting to define ‘good’, ‘evil’, ‘beauty’, and ‘knowledge’. They are things that most of us would agree exist yet we can’t seem to get a handle on their precise meaning. The typical philosopher is pretty bright, but can they agree? Can they heck.
Look at the very beginning of O’Reilly’s essay recounting a discussion in early 2004:
The concept of “Web 2.0″ began with a conference brainstorming session between O’Reilly and MediaLive International. Dale Dougherty, web pioneer and O’Reilly VP, noted that far from having “crashed”, the web was more important than ever, with exciting new applications and sites popping up with surprising regularity.
At that point, when the discussion started, there was no talk of the web as platform, collective intelligence, AJAX or any of the other memes surrounding this subject. They all got added on afterwards. What Dougherty was talking about was economic regeneration and a fresh excitement about the Internet following the first wave that ended in the NASDAQ crash of 2001. That’s why it’s called 2.0, not because it’s got tags or ‘UGC’ or data as the new Intel Inside. Well, that, and the fact that it was a pretty buzzy name for a conference.
So where does that leave us now? Well, it means that Web 2.0 is quite an appropriate description for ‘exciting new applications and sites’ - that was how the expression was coined. It may well have tags, social media, networks and all those shenanigans, but it doesn’t need to. The main thing is that they are innovative. And the thing about innovative sites and services, if they really are innovative, is that they are a bit different to the things we had before they arrived. Web 2.0 is a moving target, sure, but that behaviour goes to the heart of its meaning.
Update: if more than five people link to this post, I will declare a moratorium on headlines involving lyrics from Boston.