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moyalynne
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The theme of this year’s Web 2.0 Summit 2011   officially was "The Data Frame" (SAP take note!). But take it from me -- the unofficially real themes are these five   unstoppable trends that, were they a person (taking a cue from Genevieve Bell's talk "The secret life   of data" -- "who is data and if it were a person what would it be like?") would look exactly like: "You, as a Platform,   Friending Your Social Car and its Music, and Thereby Completely Transforming How We Buy Things." I will explain ... in this   fully subjective list of five of the top tech trends that are unstoppable disruptions at the Web 2.0 Summit   2011.

 

facebook business

facebook business by Sean MacEntee, on Flickr

FACEBOOK

Trend One.  It's nothing new.  But Facebook continues to be a top trend at the Web 2.0 Summit. Chatter about being "friends"   with Facebook was in the background of many of the sessions - and *everybody* - except maybe Google - is friends with Facebook   (and now Facebook doesn't even have to friend you back). 

This is not a surprise -- as KPCB's Mary   Meeker put it in her always fabulous Internet Trends   report, "There are as many people using social networking sites now as there were Internet users in 2006." From what I   could tell from my seat in the third row back at the Palace Hotel, at least in the US, Facebook is still winning the social   game -- despite Google taking pains to talk about how great Google+ is doing and even trotting Sergey Brin out in a surprise   appearance together with Vic Gundotra to say so.

The balance of power in social seems to be between the "caution to the wind" nature of existing social tell-alls, and   Google -- which is taking a specifically cautious approach to social -- contending that this is what people want. Google is   not only trying to win on these more conservative terms ("There's a reason why every thought in your head does not come out of   your mouth," said Vic Gundotra, and maintaining somewhat vehemently that Google is "taking a cautious approach to releasing an   API") but also could be preparing to bet the farm on tying Google's offerings together with Google+, at least by later in the   year, if I caught the hints.

But the Facebook party is full-swing. Everyone from Microsoft ("Facebook defines the word social and we work with them   closely -- combined with Bing" -- Steve Ballmer) to eBay ("We're bringing the open graph into the eBay experience, and bring   the eBay experience into the Facebook environment" -- John Donahoe) to Salesforce ("Facebook is eating the Web. People are   spending much more time on Facebook than on the Internet.  It's a social revolution" -- Benioff at Web 2.0 Summit: Social is the most exciting opportunity for enterprise software) to beyond reports that   Facebook is hot.

For Facebook's part, Bret Taylor, Chief Technology Officer, didn't just rest there: "Google+ to me is validating to   what we at Facebook have convinced the world of: Products are better when they're social," he said.

It continues to be a virtual Facebook lovefest.

 

Saving the world one email at a   time

Saving the world one email at a time by Ryan Vaarsi,   on Flickr

PERSON AS PLATFORM

But "the problem is that my data is somewhere else..." was a common refrain during the data frame discussions, and Facebook   and Google got no free pass here.  "When are you guys and Google gonna get over it and start sharing," sparred John Battelle to Bret Taylor, to audience   applause. "Why can't I use Facebook Connect to populate my circles or lists? Isn't that data that is ours and should be simple   to move?" 

Although Battelle meant this as a serious question, there was no serious response to be heard. The fact is,   data -- our data, data about us and from us -- is still what's worth the bank to social companies.

Many speakers however echoed a fresh refrain about data and your personal identity -- and whether your personal data   belongs to you or at a minimum can be portable to whatever (social) network you want.  Chris Poole of 4chan/Canvas kicked off   this identity crisis with an excellent talk, concluding that as far as online identity goes, "Facebook & Google do it   wrong; Twitter does it better; I want to think about a world that does it right."

Beyond straight social networking technology, personal identity took a stunning turn with Anne   Wojcicki's talk about 23andMe -- the "retail DNA testing service   providing information and tools for consumers to learn about and explore their DNA."

23andMe straddles biotech and Web   2.0 with the powers of a huge genetic dataset that can, in combination with its growing passionate community, go beyond   straight ancestry queries to help identify individuals that have variants and prevent disease or identify genes that look like   modifiers - just for a couple of examples. "The community has been so successful that in such a short time we found something   that could be a modifier that leads to a druggable target," said Wojcicki.

One big question this begs is whose data is this genetic information? Is this owned by the pharmaceutical companies?   The community itself? Individuals - in so far as you "own" pieces of yourself?

It was Mitchell Baker (Mozilla Foundation) that took the next step that started to put a finger on the actual idea of   person as platform:

We create data online but we have little control. We can turn privacy up and down but that's it. We have   essentially giant data factories -- it is at heart an industrial era process. The core process of my data footprint lives as   part of the data factory's process. The customization all lives within a single model. Let's think differently about data for   a moment - what could data be? In that world, I am the platform for my data, and you are the platform for your   data.

Baker's bottom line: "If I become the platform, that allows the big data providers to continue to operate at scale (provide   experiences we like with customization at edges but not core) and allows economic generation."  Do we have this yet? "We don't have all this infrastructure today but at Mozilla we're building blocks of where I can be the   center of my life."

Brilliant future, with Baker as our guide and person at the center.

 

Buy More Stuff, Black Friday 2009

Buy More Stuff, Black Friday 2009 by Michael Holden, on Flickr

HOW WE BUY

We're still buying.  People can log on to 23andme.com and start exploring their DNA today, for example. We keep buying more   and more stuff -- but the message was clear at the Summit: the way we buy is undergoing massive disruption.  Analogous to what   was happening outside a few blocks away with the Occupy Wall Street movement hitting San Francisco streets with #OccupySF, and   referenced obliquely by Benioff as the "Corporate Spring," I think it's the disruption of the way we buy, right down to the   very the payment itself.

During the conference, John Battelle made sure to ask most speakers what they thought of the Occupy movement. For their   part, Visa president John Partridge and American Express group president Dan Schulman echoed that there's "a concern for   what's transpired around the world economically... and significant pent-up anger about how did we end up in this situation" --   but seemed eager to allocate blame towards the federal government or elsewhere for the debt crisis, rather than, of course,   looking inward. And to John Battelle's question whether Visa and AMEX are afraid of eBay now that merchants, frustrated with   transaction fees, are is implementing direct payments, we of course heard non-answers.

But there were dramatic backdrops to that perspective, with not only eBay (and the demonstrations themselves), but with    Alex   Rampell's TrialPay -- which makes the excellent point that there is so much to be gained from the data in online payments   that it makes no sense whatsoever to charge consumers a transaction fee just to pay. "At TrialPay, we think payments should be   free" -- because the underlying data that happens in a transaction is worth more, is the disruptive point behind the service.

It makes it look like credit card companies, despite their protesting otherwise, have to be worried about going the way   of the record industry.

Mary Meeker also echoed an impression of Occupy that was equally affirming yet implicated:

I think people are angry -- everybody's angry and deserves to be angry. Finger-pointing is not good. I look at   it in a holistic way. Over last 40 years, government has been pretty loose with spending and interest rates have been at low-  level, so people were looking for places to invest and went to houses. Credit was easy.  Government sets up a situation where   it's easy to borrow. Wall Street was giving instruments to trade and they traded it like crazy.    ... The way out? We all   have a problem and we all have to sacrifice.

(Spending five minutes a day on (the hugely hyped) One Kings Lane five days a week, as Meeker admitted to doing, seems a bit   like a strange sacrifice.)

If you are making sacrifices, you can look forward to what can be known in the future as "Web 3.0” -- and we   don't mean the Semantic Web.   As Tim O'Reilly said in the conference introduction, "Now we know what Web 3 will be -- Web 3   will be whatever pulls us out of the economy now" (since Web 2.0 is what pulled us out before).

 

Tenha medo

Tenha medo by jampa, on Flickr

SOUND

This leads me to two more fairly unconventional top tech trends to personify. Did you know Sound is the Next Big Thing? "Sound   is going to be bigger than video. Record is bigger than QWERTY," said Mary Meeker, quoting Alexander Ljung from SoundCloud, and then she rattled off a number of sound technologies from   bluetooth devices, headsets, SoundCloud, Spotify ("which changed way I listen to music), connected car audio, sound   recognition -- all ready for and undergoing massive disruption.

Both Pandora and Spotify were there to speak at the Summit, though "Pandora doesn't compete with Spotify," Tim   Westergren insisted, "It competes with radio -- and radio is where people just want to turn it on and play."  Sound will be big not only on our devices but in our cars.  Says Westergren, "One half of radio listening happens in the car.   The smartphone is your modem, bringing it into car.  In the future, the car hijacks controls of Pandora into the   dashboard."

 

Driving into the Andes

Driving into the Andes by Stuck in Customs, on Flickr

CARS

Which leads me to the last big trend to notice.  Cars -- clean fuel cars, electric cars, social cars, apps for cars, connected   cars -- Google cars.  Cars are big.  On the apps side, from Waze -- with which 7 million users in Israel beat traffic -- to Pandora to many other apps, lots of   lonely commuters driving solo in cars aren't so much a plague for sustainability, but create in fact a huge whitespace.

Part of the reason cars are such a rich whitespace for applications right now is because of The Data Frame. We're realizing   that there is much data to be harvested from cars themselves in the Big Data Frame view.  From David   Hornik at August Capital:

We figured out about six years ago there lots of systems creating data exhaust. If we harness it, that's big   value... Cars are reporting a lot of things -- from how fast the car is going, to the temperature outside (is the road about   to ice over?), to exactly where they go (so maps can be way more accurate), to whether the windshield wipers are on - are they   high or low? This allows our cars of the future to say "here's the right driving route for you today based on all this factual   data.

It seems to me that one of the biggest future disruptors of the Data Frame just might be the coming of broadband in cars.

On the side of the cars as platforms themselves, we see a trend towards both social cars -- as Marc Benioff wants a car he can   friend -- to electric vehicles with ventures such as Fisker, Tesla, and GE building factories here in the US.

As if that's not enough going on, Sergey Brin said Google is building an "autonomous car" - a self-driving car that he   says will be cool. "There is a tremendous opportunity to improve the world with advanced research projects like this," said   Sir Google.

This led Battelle to say: "I'm going to start a conference about cars."  I believe it, too. And if he does, I hope to be there   to write way too much about it yet again.

Maybe I'll ride there in my all-electric Tesla while listening to Pandora, connecting with friends online, and talking   with my car (let's call her "Sira"), about the latest deals on One Kings Lane.

Or maybe, like the fact that we   predicted the flying car but not the Internet, the future will look a lot different than any of us know now.  Because trends may be unstoppable, but data is feral, says Genevieve Bell. "Data keeps it real -- physical objects resist   being digitized. There's something about data that will resist being incessantly digitized."

The wildcard is the person in the platform.

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