Offshore Software Development India

Offshore Software Development India

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Web Applications Trends 2008

What major steps web applications and trends are going to take that may revolutionize the web? RWW (Read Write Web) authors ponder on the current trends in Web technology and look forward to what 2008 might bring us. Semantic web, Google, recommendation systems, online advertising, recommendation systems, digg, Facebook, open standards, Mobile Web, search engines, and much more are topics covered.
So check out predictions for '08 and please contribute your own in the comments. Also you may want to read other website development and open source development topics.
Richard MacManus, Editor, ReadWriteWeb:
  • Better data connectivity and better content result will make semantic web more popular in 2008. Think search engines like Hakia and Powerset, wikipedia-like efforts like Twine and Freebase, and apps that use semantic technologies under the hood (such as AdaptiveBlue and Snap).

  • In connection with pint one above, Google will experiment more with Semantic Apps in '08. The Knols project, is indication of this.

  • A really tough battle to win, ‘Web OS’ web services platform will be 2008 battleground with Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Mozilla. Unfortunately this may spell the end of a number of startups in this space.

  • Zoho and/or ThinkFree will be acquired by big companies wanting to leapfrog into the Web Office space.

  • The online advertising market will consolidate, after the spate of acquisitions in 2007. CPM will continue to dominate for media brands and CPC for niche sites, although there will be experimentation in VRM and other forms of highly specific targeting of ads. Privacy issues will prevent the latter from becoming mainstream though. The much-hyped CPA (Cost per Action) will continue to be a pipe dream, because publishers simply don't want it.

  • In attempt to compete with each other internet companies will the big Internet companies will clinch to open instead of data lock-in.

  • This time, Asia (China, Japan, Korea) is going to be the hub for most interesting innovations. Twitter success from China will bombard in the market, and mobile web application will rock the web ground.

Marshall Kirkpatrick, Lead Writer, ReadWriteWeb:
  • Twitter will be acquired.

  • Most ad networks will start producing their own content to advertise against; and some content companies today will get acquired by ad networks.

  • Online video will become so ubiquitous, including live and mobile, that everyone will wonder how the internet existed without it. It won't feel like a big deal, though.

  • A handful of big companies will let you start logging in with an OpenID associated with your account.

  • The value of recommendation engines will become all the more clear; the era of data will be celebrated.

  • Many will look beyond Google, and others will have many questions to put; niche study of Google strategies and algorithm will be initiated.

  • People engaged in the new web will do some really awesome stuff that we'll all be in awe of.

Josh Catone, Lead Writer, ReadWriteWeb:
  • Tumblr will be acquired.

  • Privacy will be a growing concern in the mainstream, but ultimately people won't really take any action and for the most part, things won't change. Some companies and groups (think Mozilla) will push for better privacy controls for users, while others (think Facebook) will continue to push the envelope and continue down a slippery slope. Users will eventually push back, but I am hesitant to say that proverbial "straw that breaks the camel's back" will come in 2008.

  • OpenID will be adopted by more startups and larger web companies, but most people (mainstream users) still won't use it - that's a couple of years off.

  • Facebook will continue to grow and their platform will be adopted by other large social networks. Google will sweat.

  • Mobile web usage will be a big story in 2008. It's already big in many parts of the world; and Westerners are about to get hooked. With new mobile devices that makes web surfing less painful, people will be more and more connected away from their computers.

  • Mainstream media coverage will be a catalyst for the adoption of Web Office apps by consumers; and Microsoft will eventually be forced to change their Web Office strategy and offer a fully online office suite (but that latter won't happen in 2008). Offline mode (Gears, AIR, Silverlight, etc.) will be what really tips the scales and causes mainstream users to to embrace the as-of-yet unfamiliar world of Web Office applications.

Alex Iskold, Feature Writer, ReadWriteWeb:
  • 2008 will be slow and cautious, with the first half dominated by recession or fear of recession.

  • Facebook is going to see the same kind of decline in popularity in 2008 that MySpace saw in 2007.

  • Digg is going to be acquired by one of the mainstream media conglomerates.

  • Implicit applications, which monitor our habits and automatically infer our likes, will rise.

Emre Sokullu, Feature Writer, ReadWriteWeb
  • Facebook will acquire companies that do the following, in order to strengthen their advertising unit: personalization, behavior tracking, image recognition (Riya?)

  • Facebook will release a browser.

  • However, despite all that... Facebook will decline.

  • Google OpenSocial will be a failure; Google will try to create its own social networking empire by making acquisitions in this space.

  • Microsoft will become more aggresive and buy many popular companies at once (remember Ballmer's quote). Candidates include SixApart, Technorati.

Sean Ammirati, Editor, ReadWriteTalk (our podcast show):
  • Google will really start looking vulnerable in 2008. While the 'one trick pony' comment by Steve Ballmer drew sarcastic responses, this will begin to look prophetic. While they'll maintain market share in the search industry, the lack of traction in any other of their other initiatives will start to cause frustration. Plus, they will increasingly be perceived as the 'evil' company in many of these new initiatives.

  • Closely related, Yahoo's Hack strategy (see ReadWriteTalk's podcast with Bradley Horowitz) will start to bear fruit and things will look much more optimistic in Sunnyvale this year.

  • Facebook will start to feel pressure from two trends that will emerge on the web: distributed social networks and distributed commerce systems. For distributed commerce systems, look to see a first proof of concept from the VRM project. Chris Messina's diso project with Wordpress will be a great proof of concept for distributed social neworks.

  • Non-search advertising on the web will increase in value significantly. This will be done through a lot of innovation in the ad targeting systems (both behavioral and contextual) and new metrics being adopted by Madison Ave beyond CPC and CPM.

  • There will be a lot of innovation in the hyper-local space, putting the final nail in the newspaper industry's coffin. This will include companies like Outside.in and Yelp moving toward widespread use and new web properties (from both startups and big Internet Cos) emerging.

  • Finally, a 3G iPhone! OK, I don't know if this is a prediction, but I really really want it to be true :)

Charles Knight, Editor, AltSearchEngines (RWW network blog)
  • In the 1st Q 2008, the true "Google Killer" in search will be in Stealth Mode. In 2nd Q 2008 the first prototype will begin in closed Alpha mode. In 3rd Q 2008 it will be ready for the final closed Beta testing. In 4th Q 2008 it will launch and "Rock and Shock" the world!

  • The classic Vertical Search Engines (Job Search, Health, Consumer Electronics, Shopping, Video, People, more...) will continue their dominance over all other Search Engines in their various niches.

  • The Alternative Search Engines will pick up the pace of partnerships and cooperation, for their solid mutual benefit.

  • Mainstream Media interest in the Alts will increase until it begins to rival coverage of the five major search engines.

  • The trend towards 'widgetization' of the Alts will continue. Approximately 2 in 10 Alternative Search Engines (20%) have widgets now, and that number will double in 2008 to 4 in 10 or 40%.

Conclusion
Now it's time for you to tell us your Web predictions for 2008. Please leave a comment
Source: Read Write Web

10 comments:

Unknown said...

Great post! It always interesting to read the opinions of analysts on what trends will prevail next year and you;ve gathered them all! I do agree that Facebook will decline, people are starting to get tired of it. I think that we'll hear a couple of names louder. On of them will be Wrike, a solution for project management. It is being developed in a very rapid pace and gains popularity each month.

Anonymous said...

thanks for a nice post - it was definitelly worth reading

Anonymous said...

its really good

Anonymous said...

Outsourcing software development has made it convenient for the gigantic organizations based in the developed nations to get their software needs fulfilled from the best companies and that too at a moderate rate. Luckily for them the best software companies located in cheap countries like India, also have their presence in their very own country.

Arjun said...

Outsourcing and offshoring are used interchangeably in public discourse despite important technical differences. Outsourcing involves contracting with a supplier, which may or may not involve some degree of offshoring. Offshoring is the transfer of an organizational function to another country, regardless of whether the work is outsourced or stays within the same corporation/company
Outsourcing

Anonymous said...

High quality writing....

Regards,
SBL - BPO Services

Anonymous said...

Nice post on Web Applications Trends... cool information...

Anonymous said...

It's really a nice blog. I like it. It's really informative blog. Keep it up nice blogging.


Regards,
Jeff Kent
Yahoo Store Design

Ray Creations said...

Thanks for this nice article. Web Designer | Web Hosting

Harkirat Singh Bedi said...

I thing that the comments here are by people still looking forward to what 2008 might bring us. As what the blog is really about: Applications of 2008.

Its the end of 2009, Readers should outsource software development to companies looking forward to 2010. Open source has gone through major changes since Oracle bought Java.