Re-examining basic assumptions about the Web

Bob Wyman has some thoughts on how the read/write web was lost :

The same dynamics of “concept editing” that occurred with TBL’s Web and in the reaction to my own Memex project is actually fairly common in the software business. (I will, however, spare you by not documenting other obvious examples.) Typically, those who first work on an idea or concept will see that it has a very wide scope of application, however, they are almost always forced to focus on one or another specific, limited scopes in order to present their idea in a relevant fashion to potential adopters who have specific issues addressed by the innovation. Often, in the process of this focused positioning to convince early-adopters to accept an idea or process, much of the full richness of the vision is lost or put aside. The cost of acceptance is thus often the loss of very important, even essential, elements of the vision. Sometimes, the loss is permanent and only the original thinker knows what paths were not traveled… Sometimes, the loss is temporary as others eventually re-discover the lost facets or the original visionaries are able to eventually find a means to get others to understand more of the full vision. This re-discovery of the original vision’s depth and breadth is hopefully what we see happening on the Web today as Blogging, Wikis and other read/write tools resurrect the original idea of the read/write Web.

It brings to mind how some librarians often assume that a library’s web site should conform to a certain structure, a form that simply was created in the mid-1990s. A form that now may even be outdated in terms of the Web services that people need from a library.

I’m also reminded of my own initial perspective of a “home page” back when I first starting using XMosaic in 1993. Then, I thought that a home page was simply each user’s own web page that he/she created for himself with links and other relevant information. Later, after seeing what most people and organizations were doing with their home pages, I came to realize that the accepted definition of a home page was something that was created for others and not for oneself. In many ways, the blogs of today with their journal entries and blogrolls are much more like the home page concept that I had imagined when I first started using the graphical web.

Leave a Comment

Please note: Comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.