Web 3.0 signifies a transformative shift in web usage and interaction. It entails converting the web into dynamic databases, transitioning from frontend to backend innovation after a decade of emphasizing user experience enhancements in Web 2.0. This growing buzz around Web 3.0, despite its nebulous nomenclature, hints at its enduring relevance. Building upon Tim Berners-Lee’s concept, Web 3.0 will usher in a ‘read-write-execute’ network.
Web 3.0 is essentially a realm of premium content and services, leveraging Web 2.0 technologies as its foundation. It encompasses a range of advancements in web interaction, including database integration, multi-platform content access, AI utilization, semantic web integration, geospatial technology, and 3D web innovation.
Gartner emphasizes the distinction between incremental Web 2.0 changes and the paradigm shift of Web 3.0. Tim Berners-Lee’s introduction of the Giant Global Graph (GGG) is yet another facet of this new era of the web.
Web 3.0 is reshaping the landscape of future networks. In this dynamic realm, traditional websites fade into the background, data transforms into a communal resource, and services illuminate various facets of interconnected information. These services, spanning applications (such as browsers and virtual worlds), devices, and contextual personalization, frequently utilize vertical search. The early partnership between Google and Sun Microsystems, exemplified by the development of a web-based operating system for tasks like word processing and spreadsheets, serves as a harbinger of the emerging Web 3.0 paradigm.
Source: https://www.pixelcrayons.com/blog/web-3-0/
Literature :
http://ir.inflibnet.ac.in/handle/1944/1285