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« Not the first sale, the second | Blog Home | What should Digg do? »

When the web comes apart

The web used to be a collection of sites, loosely linked. Domain was king.

Google blew up the web. The web became a collection of pages, more tightly linked, and you could find any page you needed.

Reddit and Digg and Delicious atomize the web. No need to read blogs any more. Instead, let others do it for you, and these (and the many other) social news services surface the most interesting, the hottest, the most controversial posts for you.

This satisfies a basic human need... to do what others are doing, to read what others are reading. It reorganizes the scattered threads of discourse, creating a few (instead of a million or a billion) reading lists.

Of course, there will be a million imitators and improvers. And then another generation to synthesize them (a la popurls). It's not the end, just another beginning.

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Listed below are links to weblogs that reference When the web comes apart:

» Classification from Knowledge and Uncertainty
Seth Godin identifies a basic human need... to do what others are doing, to read what others are reading. But as A.A. Milne wrote, it is the third-class mind that is only happy when it is thinking with the majority. Surely Seth and his readers would no... [Read More]

» Seth Says Google Blew The Web Apart from iScatterlings
I think the web exists much as it did before Google googled it. The only difference these days is the Top of The Blogarade and the attention most bloggers give to the Blogebrities (the A B C lists). Commercial sites still remain as they were. Bl... [Read More]

« Not the first sale, the second | Blog Home | What should Digg do? »