Not surprisingly, the Page Mill Road location is enabling "Nokia's new research relationship with Stanford University." (The normal translation: Nokia is putting up money to support Stanford research or access to that research). In 2006-2007, the two jointly hosted a series of research talks at Stanford.
Most of this was the customary “foreign MNC comes to Silicon Valley” story (to access talent, partners, etc.) But the title was provocative if not silly:
WEB 3.0’s CENTER
Phone giant Nokia navigates Internet’s third wave from Silicon Valley base
Nokia's efforts, Iannucci said, are aimed at maintaining the company's market lead as handsets equipped with robust Web capabilities - communications, search, video and more - become the third great wave of commercial opportunity.The term “Web 3.0” shows up frequently on the Web (2.0? 1.0?). Right now it’s a meaningless buzzword that means “new and improved,” right up there with “4G.”
The first wave, Iannucci said, represented "the democratization of consumption of information. Web 2.0 is about the democratization of information production. Web 3.0 - the next step - takes Web 2.0 and makes it mobile."
Apparently I know a little more than the credulous Merc reporter about the mobile Web 2.0, having studied it for the past 5 months while supervising the forthcoming master’s project by Eduardo Sanchez and German Benitez. The short answer is that some Web 2.0 is desktop based, some is mobile, and some is both. So it’s ludicrous to suggest that adding things like ubiquity or mobility to existing Web 2.0 plans is going to transform this into Web 3.0, even though it will make Web 2.0 more widely available and more powerful.
A better definition of Web 3.0 is the semantic web — one where we are finding information based on meaning and not keywords. Interestingly, a Nokia researcher published an article promoting this definition in a peer-reviewed IEEE journal last June.
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