Having discussed the evolution of the Web into a new fabric of cyberspace, with new sets of behaviors and new laws, in my last post, I'm drawn back to the subject of mine being in Tasmania, at this time.
I'm here to contribute, even if only in a small and peripheral way, to the release of Morfik AppsBuilder 1.0. Why would I come half-way around the globe for that? Because these people, here at Morfik, get it. They really understand the fundamental changes the Web has undergone and have a clear vision of what the future holds in store.
If you have not understood what I'm talking about, you might think that continuing to use traditional Web development tools that help you creat markup files and hand coding Ajax is the way to go. If you've understood at least a portion of what I said in my post about "The Evolving Web", then you should really take a look at Morfik.
Thursday, October 19, 2006
Morfik and the Mash
The Evolving Web
Over the years the Web has continuously evolved, in many ways that we could not even have imagined went it all started. A long way have we come, since the days when Amazon was just a bookstore and you would just type in company names into the browser and be amazed that company “A” already had a website.
The Web now has its own power centers. You don’t really think about this in your day to day life, but when we looked to see if company “A” had a website, that was a “normal”, brick and mortar company. Now, the Web has made its own powerhouses such as Google, Yahoo and Amazon. These companies exist because of the Web.
As these Web centric companies evolve and grow, they start to attract people who start to implement new ideas which complement or build on services offered by these giants. In this way, by their own huge “mass” these companies start to attract satellite businesses. Since these are 100% Web companies we could conceivably abstract them into being massive on-line systems, which interact with users, and today, directly with other systems.
Let’s imagine the Web of today, with its millions of servers, interacting with each other, to create mashups, to exchange business data in ways not previously possible, as this mash of lines weaved into a fabric. You could call it the fabric of cyberspace, if you wish. Imagine that this fabric is tightly stretched and offers a level field for all those who wish to come onto it. Well, that is not how the world is, or the Web for that matter. To get a more accurate picture lets go back to imagining that tightly stretched fabric and then imagine that we lay onto that fabric billiards of different sizes and weights. These will cause depressions in the fabric, around them. Smaller billiards placed onto the fabric, will tend to be attracted towards the larger ones, falling into their areas of influence.
That is exactly what happens on the Web, today. Successful Web companies such as Google and eBay, with huge on-line systems, tend to attract groups of smaller companies into their orbits, creating ecosystems composed of clients, suppliers and partners.
Even these large, massive, objects that bend the fabric of the Web around them are sometimes attracted by other larger ones. One example of this could be said to be the recent acquisition of YouTube by Google.
This new Web, has evolved so far from its humble HyperText beginnings that I submit that it is now a whole new fabric; and to set it really apart from its former self, let’s give it a new name, one that seems more in tune with its current form and myriad connections and interactions: The Mash. With its own unique set of behaviors and laws, the Mash is not only an evolution of the Web, but it is fabric in constant state of evolution with new attractors (mashsites!?) continuously coming into being. Some of these will grow; some will be attracted into larger attractors and still others will simply die out.
To not only survive, but to thrive in this new Mash, one must understand its dynamics. The dynamics of a new and fantastic world that is continuously evolving around us and which will continue to do so, in ways and directions which we still cannot fathom. To succeed in this new space, it is imperative that we embrace it and understand its behaviors. It is essential that we be aware that the very fabric of cyberspace has changed and that it will continue to do so.
Anyone who believes that going onto the Web, today, is about creating websites that this is done by coding HTML, XML or whatever other markup languages people wish to think of next, is sadly mistaken. Only by understanding that the Mash is the new Web, where systems interact with one another, where information is continuously available, on-line, all the time and that people everyday rely and depend more and more on this new underlying fabric of our global society will one be ready to meet the challenges ahead.
So, do not despair. Open your eyes and look onto this magic, virtual world of the Mash. Observe and see how the elements interact. Once you start to recognize the patterns, you can start to explore a whole new universe of possibilities. Please, enjoy it while it lasts for, no doubt, a new even more fantastic fabric will be waiting for us, a few years down this path.
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
Google Docs and Spreadsheets - a.k.a. Office
Interestingly enough, one of the last posts I did publish in this blog was about the suite of services Google has been putting together recently. I'm now a user of just about every service they offer, from email to spreadsheets, passing on online documents and photo publishing and I have to say that even though not one of the applications is incredible, all of them are quite useful and you realy can't beat the price. :-)
Several Google services seem to be following the same path of Powerpoint. It wasn't that you really needed it or that it was the very best software for presentations, but it came with Excel and Word and it worked ok, so why not use it.
Apart from Google Earth and Picasa 2, oddly enough two non-web applications, most of Google's services receive a passing mark, but no special stars from me. They work ok, they do what they propose efficiently and not much more.
Google Docs and Spreadsheets may be a long way from replacing Microsoft Office, but it does help to solve the problem of having access to information from just about anywhere.
Now, if only I could get a decent Internet connection in Tasmania... You'd think that the Aussies would understand that life spins around the net and stop wanting to limit your traffic to a couple of gigs.
Half-way around the globe
Ok, I'm back. Its been some time since I last posted anything but I plan to revert that trend now. A lot has changed in my life, over the past few months, not the least bit of it being that I left my position as the person globaly in charge of infrastructure at Webb, to come spend some time in Tasmania.
So, from sunny Rio to wind swept Tasmania (a bit on the cool side) and from the leader in B2B in Latin America to a small start up company, half-way around the globe, things couldn't have been more radically changed than they are now.
Why all this? Well, I run into this guy from the Neatherlands, in Prague, and he introduced me to this other guy, from Australia, Tasmania, no less... One thing led to another and I discovered that there was this whole bunch of crazy people down here, inventing a whole new way of developing Web applications. Not only that, but they were doing it much in the way I always imagined it should be done.
I've been down here for just over a month now and I have to say that it has been an amazing experience (apart from the 37 hours travel time). Soon I'll be in other places. In Prague, for the Firebird Conference, back in Rio with my family, in other places I've not gone to, yet. One thing is sure, though: wherever I travel, and with whomever I meet, I'm sure to discuss Morfik.
