The Future is NOW: Web3.0

The age of Web 2.0 has brought us many useful, enhancing, and life improving technologies and products that millions of people around the world use everyday. At the forefront of all this are the dynamic and responsive websites that have come to define Web2.0 in their transition onto other platforms such as mobile devices. The internet had gotten a whole lot more social with the advent of sites such as Facebook, Instagram and Twitter just to name a few. E-commerce has also seen great advancements that have allowed businesses to jump into the digital age and out of just brick and mortar shops. But what is next? Here I will discuss Web 3.0

How could be have it any better than we do now when it comes to all these advanced apps. From keeping in touch with friends, to shopping and banking, we are digital. Web 3.0 is probably already here.  The defining technology of Web2.0 is the way users communicate with a website which in turn talks to a database server and returns on the second requested information. Web 3.0 will be some kind of improvement to that. 

Web 3.0 can be the described as IoT, or, Internet of Things. Imagine a world where are things are connected to the web. It's already being done. We have smart phones, smart TVs, smart homes. Just about every other appliance is about to include some type of web app capability. In my opinion, one of the more interesting things to come out in the age of Web 3.0 are the autonomous vehicles. Tesla is truly launching society into the future (yes, that's suppose to be a SpaceX pun). Tesla's self driving cars are connected to the internet at all times. The AI uses the ongoing data processing to help it navigate the roads. That's just one example of how Web3.0 is evidently already here. As for the web, there are even far more possibilities. Can you imagine surfing the web through virtual reality? 

Web 3.0 is in it's infant form and we have yet to see its awe. While it doesn't even have a concrete definition, it can be said that AI will play a large role in its maturation. 

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