This document discusses the concept of an "Internet operating system" and how various online applications and services are contributing to its emergence. Some key points include:
- Many popular websites and apps like Craigslist, Wikipedia, Google, and others are helping to build an Internet OS through their use of open source software and ability to aggregate user-generated data.
- This Internet OS will consist of various "subsystems" centered around data types like location, identity, time, products, etc. that will provide increasingly transparent services across devices.
- Three types of data sources that will feed this OS are namespaces (unique identifiers), primary data, and derived meanings extracted from user data.
- As more user
8. The Open Source Paradigm Shift
• How many of you use Linux?
7
9. The Open Source Paradigm Shift
• How many of you use Linux?
• How many of you use Google?
7
10. The Open Source Paradigm Shift
• How many of you use Linux?
• How many of you use Google?
• What’s being missed here?
7
11. What Do These Apps Have in Common?
CraigsList
Wikipedia
8
12. What Do These Apps Have in Common?
• The Internet, not the PC, is their platform
• Built on top of open source software, but not
themselves open source
• Services, not packaged applications
• Data aggregators, not just software
• Network effects from user contributions are
key to their market dominance
“The future is here. It’s just not evenly
distributed yet.”
9
15. Building on the
momentum and
excitement of the
O’Reilly Peer-to-Peer
& Web Services
Conferences
Building the Internet Operating System
MAY 13–16, 2002 • WESTIN SANTA CLARA , SANTA CLARA , CA
“Peer-to-peer and Web Services are only the first steps towards
the emergence of a distributed Internet operating system—
a new platform for next generation applications that are
device and location independent, and provide increasingly
transparent services.”
— TIM O’R EILLY, F OUNDER & P RESIDENT, O’R EILLY & A SSOCIATES , I NC.
12
16. The Internet Operating System
The subsystems will be data subsystems
– Location
– Identity
– Time
– Products
– Speech
– Translation
– Relationships
– Price
– Tags
– ???
13
40. How Ridiculous Is This?
• Dialed calls (last 10)
• Received calls (last 10)
• Missed calls (last 10)
My phone company’s call history database
knows everyone I’ve called and who’s called
me, how often and how recently. Why
doesn’t it share that with me?
37
41. MAKE: Magazine
“Martha Stewart
for Geeks”
-- Newsweek
38
48. For More Information
• What is Web 2.0?
http://www.oreillynet.com/go/web2
• http://tim.oreilly.com
• http://radar.oreilly.com
• http://www.makezine.com
45