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The Future of the Real-Time Web – Part 1

This is the first part of a four part blog post series about the future of the real-time web.

The history of communications and information sharing has been overarched by an ever increasing acceleration towards real-time interaction. This shift is exemplified in the evolution of printing. Johannes Gutenberg’s 15th century breakthrough printing technology was used in the beginning to produce copies of the Bible (referred to as the Gutenberg Bible), one might say in order to share a collection of narratives, reflections and commentary on events set, at the very latest a millennium and a half before its production. The dissemination of printing technology led to the production of more and more current media from official government bulletins circulated in some centralized empires to the invention of daily newspapers, via printed periodicals, in the early 17th century. Emergent communications technologies such as telegraph, radio, television, computers, and the internet have since exponentially sped up the trend towards real-time diffusion of information as the time between emergence, or occurrence, of events and dissemination of the related information became shorter and shorter.

The advent of social networking websites, blogs and the availability of such media in a mobile context, enabled by increased miniaturization, sophistication and relative cost effectiveness of gadgets (such as mobile phones, cameras etc…), has allowed for images and information of important public or private events, including natural disasters like earthquakes, political events like election results, or the emergency landing of a commercial airliner in the Hudson River, to be published on the web before even traditional media houses can. As we venture into the future everything becomes faster, both our private day-to-day lives and business-related communication! We are moving to a real-time era, and here’s how the web supports this shift.

The Real-time Technology: Technology as an Enabler

As with the printing revolution in the 15th century, technology is a driver in the shift to the real-time paradigm. The development of the internet layed the foundation for the quick transfer of information of various formats: text, images, audio data, and even video files. Today the development of high bandwidth internet connections, mobile broadband, multiple-core processors and other technologies mean that users have not only faster access to data but can process even more of it more quickly (e.g. HD video). This has enables many of the modern applications that rely on almost instantaneous transmission of large amounts of data. Cloud computing, whereby technological capabilities are maintained off premises and delivered on demand via the internet, enables users to access supercomputing power via technologies such as the computational answer engine Wolfram Alpha to answer even the most convoluted equations within seconds using an active internet connection. An example of cloud-based applications is Spotify, a music streaming software-as-a-service that allows users to store music in the cloud, meaning online. Whereas in the past music collectors had to physically collect music through vinyl and CDs, the internet revolution allowed for a huge amount of music to be downloaded into the finite and relatively small dimensions of a hard-disk. The catch was always having to download and, oftentimes, document one’s collection. Now, the music is already ready for you to stream within seconds whenever you please – in real-time.

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