The Web - Web 2.0
Benedict Anthony
October 15th 2024Web 2.0 ?
Whereas Web 1.0 was called "the read-only Web," Web 2.0 is referred to as "the participative social Web." Web 2.0 is an enhanced and expanded version of Web 1.0 because to the integration of web browser technologies like JavaScript frameworks. It includes dynamic content that reacts to user input, it uses developed application programming interfaces (API), it encourages self-use and allows forms of interaction like podcasting, social media, tagging, blogging, commenting, curating with RSS, social networking, and web content voting, it offers free information sorting, allowing users to retrieve and classify data collectively, it employs developed application programming interfaces (API), it uses developed information, and it is used by society as a whole and is not just specific communities.
User Generated Content
The primary goals of this Internet form are User-Generated Content (UGC), usability, engagement, and improved communication with other systems and devices. The user's experience is paramount in Web 2.0. Thus, the task of creating social media, partnerships, and communities fell to this Web form. For the majority of users in the modern world, Web 2.0 is consequently considered to be the predominant mode of web interaction.