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Welcome to the Statusverse

14. Apr, 2010

With the ascendancy of Twitter, people’s daily preoccupation with Facebook, Obama’s use of the netroots movement to win the last election we see that the web is very different now than it was 5 years ago when blogs were first emerging.

But where is the web going? In order to answer this, Thomas Baekdal produced the following diagram:

marketflow1

This graph accompanies an excellent article on Baekdal’s blog entitled “Where is Everyone?” It shows that over time all methods of information exchange have a natural lifespan: they’re born, they enjoy explosive growth and then they wane and eventually they are supplanted by the next innovation. What’s interesting to notes is how many more innovations there are and how much shorter their lifespans are.

marketflow101

If we focus on the portion of the graph that relates to the present we see that magazines and newspapers are dying of and the influence of television is declining.

Baekdal sees blogs and websites going into decline. This is an idea echoed by Steve Rubel who argues that creating blog posts is too time consuming for most people. Instead platforms like Twitter and Facebook offer the ability to create snippets of information and opinion that are long enough to be useful but not time consuming to create. The web of tomorrow is a ‘statusverse’ that includes links, opinions and images – all hacked into bite-sized chunks that can be rapidly digested as ‘streams’.

A good example of this is Flickr. Photos can be uploaded, tagged, shared, commented on and even syndicated for us on blogs or as stock photography. A photograph in a Flickr photostream is a lot more versatile and widely seen than the ones gathering dust in our parent’s attics.

Streams of information can be organized by interest, by people or by topic and are constantly changing and growing (unlike the static web sites of yesterday). What’s interesting here is that the streams can be viewed via a browser but they don’t have to be. iPhone apps that communicate directly with Facebook or desktop apps like TweetDeck bypass the browser all together. Increasingly we will see more of this type of interactions as Adobe AIR matures and more of these activities enter the mainstream behind Twitter.

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