Beyond Web 2.0
Posted by Vincent at 10:00 - Views: 12
On the desktop there are a lot of interesting things going on: resolution independent UI’s, better web services integration, branded applications instead of HIG compliance and the evolutionary process of using the GPU (Graphical Processing Unit) for the desktop (3D user interfaces, audio and AI) transforming the GPU in a MPU (Media Processing Unit).
The future development of the Web is a whole other story, even though there’s a lot of interesting stuff going on: from misused and misunderstanded buzz words like Web 2.0 and AJAX to using Second Life as a marketing tool. The evolutionary progress of the Web is a whole lot slower, dare I say almost none!? When we get decent platform independent web applications (RIA’s), business as we know it will change!
The Web User Experience hasn’t changed that much over the past years! At Bright Alley, the company I’m currently working for, we’re currently developing a new breed of User Experience: loosely based on SiSoMo (Sight, Sound, Motion), from Saatchi & Saatchi, filling in the blanks and missing pieces.
On the Web a lot of challenges have to be overcome first: resolution and platform independent interfaces by using Flash or SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics), the latter, Adobe has decided to discontinue support for Adobe SVG Viewer starting from January 1, 2008 (End of Life). They even plan to remove Adobe SVG Viewer from the Adobe.com download area on January 1, 2009, and redistribution by third parties is not allowed by the license. This development is not surprising after their acquisition of Macromedia, and there is hope that by the time Adobe SVG Viewer is discontinued there will be mature alternatives for all the Internet Explorer users. Dumb move Adobe!
The weird part is that all browser developers (except one) are beginning to support SVG. SVG is a far more flexible and intuitive format then proprietary Adobe Flash binaries. SVG Basic and SVG Tiny are even part of 3GPP. So why jabber so much about SVG instead of Flash? First of all SVG is XML based, it’s not owned by one company and it’s an open standard (no licenses and plugins). SMIL (pronounced smile) also XML based is already part of MPEG-7, so it’s no effort to include SVG as default Vector Graphic layer in MPEG-21.
For the Web SVG RCC (Rendering Custom Content) + XForms could be the secret ingredient “X” for creating wider adaption. Who knows? As Alan Kay so elegantly puts it: “The best way to predict the future is to invent it”!







