The Web Is Dead. Long Live the Internet

  • By Chris Anderson and Michael Wolff
  • August 17, 2010 9:00 am
  • c.c. by AdBan without permission from Wired September 2010
Sources: Cisco estimates based on CAIDA publications, Andrew Odlyzko

Sources: Cisco estimates based on CAIDA publications, Andrew Odlyzko


The Web Is Dead? A Debate

 

Two decades after its birth, the World Wide Web is in decline, as simpler, sleeker services "; think apps "; are less about the searching and more about the getting. Chris Anderson explains how this new paradigm reflects the inevitable course of capitalism. And Michael Wolff explains why the new breed of media titan is forsaking the Web for more promising (and profitable) pastures.



Who’s to Blame:
Us

As much as we love the open, unfettered Web, we’re abandoning it for simpler, sleeker services that just work.

by Chris Anderson

You wake up and check your email on your bedside iPad "; that’s one app. During breakfast you browse Facebook, Twitter, and The New York Times "; three more apps. On the way to the office, you listen to a podcast on your smartphone. Another app. At work, you scroll through RSS feeds in a reader and have Skype and IM conversations. More apps. At the end of the day, you come home, make dinner while listening to Pandora, play some games on Xbox Live, and watch a movie on Netflix’s streaming service.

You’ve spent the day on the Internet "; but not on the Web. And you are not alone.

This is not a trivial distinction. Over the past few years, one of the most important shifts in the digital world has been the move from the wide-open Web to semiclosed platforms that use the Internet for transport but not the browser for display. It’s driven primarily by the rise of the iPhone model of mobile computing, and it’s a world Google can’t crawl, one where HTML doesn’t rule. And it’s the world that consumers are increasingly choosing, not because they’re rejecting the idea of the Web but because these dedicated platforms often just work better or fit better into their lives (the screen comes to them, they don’t have to go to the screen). The fact that it’s easier for companies to make money on these platforms only cements the trend. Producers and consumers agree: The Web is not the culmination of the digital revolution.

A decade ago, the ascent of the Web browser as the center of the computing world appeared inevitable. It seemed just a matter of time before the Web replaced PC application software and reduced operating systems to a “poorly debugged set of device drivers,” as Netscape cofounder Marc Andreessen famously said. First Java, then Flash, then Ajax, then HTML5 "; increasingly interactive online code "; promised to put all apps in the cloud and replace the desktop with the webtop. Open, free, and out of control.

But there has always been an alternative path, one that saw the Web as a worthy tool but not the whole toolkit. In 1997, Wired published a now-infamous “Push!” cover story, which suggested that it was time to “kiss your browser goodbye.” The argument then was that “push” technologies such as PointCast and Microsoft’s Active Desktop would create a “radical future of media beyond the Web.”

“Sure, we’ll always have Web pages. We still have postcards and telegrams, don’t we? But the center of interactive media "; increasingly, the center of gravity of all media "; is moving to a post-HTML environment,” we promised nearly a decade and half ago. The examples of the time were a bit silly "; a “3-D furry-muckers VR space” and “headlines sent to a pager” "; but the point was altogether prescient: a glimpse of the machine-to-machine future that would be less about browsing and more about getting.

Who’s to Blame:
Them

Chaos isn’t a business model. A new breed of media moguls is bringing order "; and profits "; to the digital world.

by Michael Wolff

An amusing development in the past year or so "; if you regard post-Soviet finance as amusing "; is that Russian investor Yuri Milner has, bit by bit, amassed one of the most valuable stakes on the Internet: He’s got 10 percent of Facebook. He’s done this by undercutting traditional American VCs "; the Kleiners and the Sequoias who would, in days past, insist on a special status in return for their early investment. Milner not only offers better terms than VC firms, he sees the world differently. The traditional VC has a portfolio of Web sites, expecting a few of them to be successes "; a good metaphor for the Web itself, broad not deep, dependent on the connections between sites rather than any one, autonomous property. In an entirely different strategic model, the Russian is concentrating his bet on a unique power bloc. Not only is Facebook more than just another Web site, Milner says, but with 500 million users it’s “the largest Web site there has ever been, so large that it is not a Web site at all.”

According to Compete, a Web analytics company, the top 10 Web sites accounted for 31 percent of US pageviews in 2001, 40 percent in 2006, and about 75 percent in 2010. “Big sucks the traffic out of small,” Milner says. “In theory you can have a few very successful individuals controlling hundreds of millions of people. You can become big fast, and that favors the domination of strong people.”

Milner sounds more like a traditional media mogul than a Web entrepreneur. But that’s exactly the point. If we’re moving away from the open Web, it’s at least in part because of the rising dominance of businesspeople more inclined to think in the all-or-nothing terms of traditional media than in the come-one-come-all collectivist utopianism of the Web. This is not just natural maturation but in many ways the result of a competing idea "; one that rejects the Web’s ethic, technology, and business models. The control the Web took from the vertically integrated, top-down media world can, with a little rethinking of the nature and the use of the Internet, be taken back.

This development "; a familiar historical march, both feudal and corporate, in which the less powerful are sapped of their reason for being by the better resourced, organized, and efficient "; is perhaps the rudest shock possible to the leveled, porous, low-barrier-to-entry ethos of the Internet Age. After all, this is a battle that seemed fought and won "; not just toppling newspapers and music labels but also AOL and Prodigy and anyone who built a business on the idea that a curated experience would beat out the flexibility and freedom of the Web.



Illustration: Dirk Fowler


As it happened, PointCast, a glorified screensaver that could inadvertently bring your corporate network to its knees, quickly imploded, taking push with it. But just as Web 2.0 is simply Web 1.0 that works, the idea has come around again. Those push concepts have now reappeared as APIs, apps, and the smartphone. And this time we have Apple and the iPhone/iPad juggernaut leading the way, with tens of millions of consumers already voting with their wallets for an app-led experience. This post-Web future now looks a lot more convincing. Indeed, it’s already here.

The Web is, after all, just one of many applications that exist on the Internet, which uses the IP and TCP protocols to move packets around. This architecture "; not the specific applications built on top of it "; is the revolution. Today the content you see in your browser "; largely HTML data delivered via the http protocol on port 80 "; accounts for less than a quarter of the traffic on the Internet … and it’s shrinking. The applications that account for more of the Internet’s traffic include peer-to-peer file transfers, email, company VPNs, the machine-to-machine communications of APIs, Skype calls, World of Warcraft and other online games, Xbox Live, iTunes, voice-over-IP phones, iChat, and Netflix movie streaming. Many of the newer Net applications are closed, often proprietary, networks.

And the shift is only accelerating. Within five years, Morgan Stanley projects, the number of users accessing the Net from mobile devices will surpass the number who access it from PCs. Because the screens are smaller, such mobile traffic tends to be driven by specialty software, mostly apps, designed for a single purpose. For the sake of the optimized experience on mobile devices, users forgo the general-purpose browser. They use the Net, but not the Web. Fast beats flexible.

This was all inevitable. It is the cycle of capitalism. The story of industrial revolutions, after all, is a story of battles over control. A technology is invented, it spreads, a thousand flowers bloom, and then someone finds a way to own it, locking out others. It happens every time.

Take railroads. Uniform and open gauge standards helped the industry boom and created an explosion of competitors "; in 1920, there were 186 major railroads in the US. But eventually the strongest of them rolled up the others, and today there are just seven "; a regulated oligopoly. Or telephones. The invention of the switchboard was another open standard that allowed networks to interconnect. After telephone patents held by AT&T’s parent company expired in 1894, more than 6,000 independent phone companies sprouted up. But by 1939, AT&T controlled nearly all of the US’s long-distance lines and some four-fifths of its telephones. Or electricity. In the early 1900s, after the standardization to alternating current distribution, hundreds of small electric utilities were consolidated into huge holding companies. By the late 1920s, the 16 largest of those commanded more than 75 percent of the electricity generated in the US.

Indeed, there has hardly ever been a fortune created without a monopoly of some sort, or at least an oligopoly. This is the natural path of industrialization: invention, propagation, adoption, control.

Now it’s the Web’s turn to face the pressure for profits and the walled gardens that bring them. Openness is a wonderful thing in the nonmonetary economy of peer production. But eventually our tolerance for the delirious chaos of infinite competition finds its limits. Much as we love freedom and choice, we also love things that just work, reliably and seamlessly. And if we have to pay for what we love, well, that increasingly seems OK. Have you looked at your cell phone or cable bill lately?

As Jonathan L. Zittrain puts it in The Future of the Internet "; And How to Stop It, “It is a mistake to think of the Web browser as the apex of the PC’s evolution.” Today the Internet hosts countless closed gardens; in a sense, the Web is an exception, not the rule.

The truth is that the Web has always had two faces. On the one hand, the Internet has meant the breakdown of incumbent businesses and traditional power structures. On the other, it’s been a constant power struggle, with many companies banking their strategy on controlling all or large chunks of the TCP/IP-fueled universe. Netscape tried to own the homepage; Amazon.com tried to dominate retail; Yahoo, the navigation of the Web.

Google was the endpoint of this process: It may represent open systems and leveled architecture, but with superb irony and strategic brilliance it came to almost completely control that openness. It’s difficult to imagine another industry so thoroughly subservient to one player. In the Google model, there is one distributor of movies, which also owns all the theaters. Google, by managing both traffic and sales (advertising), created a condition in which it was impossible for anyone else doing business in the traditional Web to be bigger than or even competitive with Google. It was the imperial master over the world’s most distributed systems. A kind of Rome.

In an analysis that sees the Web, in the description of Interactive Advertising Bureau president Randall Rothenberg, as driven by “a bunch of megalomaniacs who want to own the entirety of the world,” it is perhaps inevitable that some of those megalomaniacs began to see replicating Google’s achievement as their fundamental business challenge. And because Google so dominated the Web, that meant building an alternative to the Web.

People

Enter Facebook. The site began as a free but closed system. It required not just registration but an acceptable email address (from a university, or later, from any school). Google was forbidden to search through its servers. By the time it opened to the general public in 2006, its clublike, ritualistic, highly regulated foundation was already in place. Its very attraction was that it was a closed system. Indeed, Facebook’s organization of information and relationships became, in a remarkably short period of time, a redoubt from the Web "; a simpler, more habit-forming place. The company invited developers to create games and applications specifically for use on Facebook, turning the site into a full-fledged platform. And then, at some critical-mass point, not just in terms of registration numbers but of sheer time spent, of habituation and loyalty, Facebook became a parallel world to the Web, an experience that was vastly different and arguably more fulfilling and compelling and that consumed the time previously spent idly drifting from site to site. Even more to the point, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg possessed a clear vision of empire: one in which the developers who built applications on top of the platform that his company owned and controlled would always be subservient to the platform itself. It was, all of a sudden, not just a radical displacement but also an extraordinary concentration of power. The Web of countless entrepreneurs was being overshadowed by the single entrepreneur-mogul-visionary model, a ruthless paragon of everything the Web was not: rigid standards, high design, centralized control.

Striving megalomaniacs like Zuckerberg weren’t the only ones eager to topple Google’s model of the open Web. Content companies, which depend on advertising to fund the creation and promulgation of their wares, appeared to be losing faith in their ability to do so online. The Web was built by engineers, not editors. So nobody paid much attention to the fact that HTML-constructed Web sites "; the most advanced form of online media and design "; turned out to be a pretty piss-poor advertising medium.

For quite a while this was masked by the growth of the audience share, followed by an ever-growing ad-dollar share, until, about two years ago, things started to slow down. The audience continued to grow at a ferocious rate "; about 35 percent of all our media time is now spent on the Web "; but ad dollars weren’t keeping pace. Online ads had risen to some 14 percent of consumer advertising spending but had begun to level off. (In contrast, TV "; which also accounts for 35 percent of our media time, gets nearly 40 percent of ad dollars.)



Monopolies are actually even more likely in highly networked markets like the online world. The dark side of network effects is that rich nodes get richer. Metcalfe’s law, which states that the value of a network increases in proportion to the square of connections, creates winner-take-all markets, where the gap between the number one and number two players is typically large and growing.

Platforms

So what took so long? Why wasn’t the Web colonized by monopolists a decade ago? Because it was in its adolescence then, still innovating quickly with a fresh and growing population of users always looking for something new. Network-driven domination was short-lived. Friendster got huge while social networking was in its infancy, and fickle consumers were still keen to experiment with the next new thing. They found another shiny service and moved on, just as they had abandoned SixDegrees.com before it. In the expanding universe of the early Web, AOL’s walled garden couldn’t compete with what was outside the walls, and so the walls fell.

But the Web is now 18 years old. It has reached adulthood. An entire generation has grown up in front of a browser. The exploration of a new world has turned into business as usual. We get the Web. It’s part of our life. And we just want to use the services that make our life better. Our appetite for discovery slows as our familiarity with the status quo grows.

Blame human nature. As much as we intellectually appreciate openness, at the end of the day we favor the easiest path. We’ll pay for convenience and reliability, which is why iTunes can sell songs for 99 cents despite the fact that they are out there, somewhere, in some form, for free. When you are young, you have more time than money, and LimeWire is worth the hassle. As you get older, you have more money than time. The iTunes toll is a small price to pay for the simplicity of just getting what you want. The more Facebook becomes part of your life, the more locked in you become. Artificial scarcity is the natural goal of the profit-seeking.

What’s more, there was the additionally sobering and confounding fact that an online consumer continued to be worth significantly less than an offline one. For a while, this was seen as inevitable right-sizing: Because everything online could be tracked, advertisers no longer had to pay to reach readers who never saw their ads. You paid for what you got.

Unfortunately, what you got wasn’t much. Consumers weren’t motivated by display ads, as evidenced by the share of the online audience that bothered to click on them. (According to a 2009 comScore study, only 16 percent of users ever click on an ad, and 8 percent of users accounted for 85 percent of all clicks.) The Web might generate some clicks here and there, but you had to aggregate millions and millions of them to make any money (which is what Google, and basically nobody else, was able to do). And the Web almost perversely discouraged the kind of systematized, coordinated, focused attention upon which brands are built "; the prime, or at least most lucrative, function of media.

What’s more, this medium rendered powerless the marketers and agencies that might have been able to turn this chaotic mess into an effective selling tool "; the same marketers and professional salespeople who created the formats (the variety shows, the 30- second spots, the soap operas) that worked so well in television and radio. Advertising powerhouse WPP, for instance, with its colossal network of marketing firms "; the same firms that had shaped traditional media by matching content with ads that moved the nation "; may still represent a large share of Google’s revenue, but it pales next to the greater population of individual sellers that use Google’s AdWords and AdSense programs.



There is an analogy to the current Web in the first era of the Internet. In the 1990s, as it became clear that digital networks were the future, there were two warring camps. One was the traditional telcos, on whose wires these feral bits of the young Internet were being sent. The telcos argued that the messy protocols of TCP/IP "; all this unpredictable routing and those lost packets requiring resending "; were a cry for help. What consumers wanted were “intelligent” networks that could (for a price) find the right path and provision the right bandwidth so that transmissions would flow uninterrupted. Only the owners of the networks could put the intelligence in place at the right spots, and thus the Internet would become a value-added service provided by the AT&Ts of the world, much like ISDN before it. The rallying cry was “quality of service” (QoS). Only telcos could offer it, and as soon as consumers demanded it, the telcos would win.

The opposing camp argued for “dumb” networks. Rather than cede control to the telcos to manage the path that bits took, argued its proponents, just treat the networks as dumb pipes and let TCP/IP figure out the routing. So what if you have to resend a few times, or the latency is all over the place. Just keep building more capacity "; “overprovision bandwidth” "; and it will be Good Enough.

On the underlying Internet itself, Good Enough has won. We stare at the spinning buffering disks on our YouTube videos rather than accept the Faustian bargain of some Comcast/Google QoS bandwidth deal that we would invariably end up paying more for. Aside from some corporate networks, dumb pipes are what the world wants from telcos. The innovation advantages of an open marketplace outweigh the limited performance advantages of a closed system.

But the Web is a different matter. The marketplace has spoken: When it comes to the applications that run on top of the Net, people are starting to choose quality of service. We want TweetDeck to organize our Twitter feeds because it’s more convenient than the Twitter Web page. The Google Maps mobile app on our phone works better in the car than the Google Maps Web site on our laptop. And we’d rather lean back to read books with our Kindle or iPad app than lean forward to peer at our desktop browser.

At the application layer, the open Internet has always been a fiction. It was only because we confused the Web with the Net that we didn’t see it. The rise of machine-to-machine communications "; iPhone apps talking to Twitter APIs "; is all about control. Every API comes with terms of service, and Twitter, Amazon.com, Google, or any other company can control the use as they will. We are choosing a new form of QoS: custom applications that just work, thanks to cached content and local code. Every time you pick an iPhone app instead of a Web site, you are voting with your finger: A better experience is worth paying for, either in cash or in implicit acceptance of a non-Web standard.

One result of the relative lack of influence of professional salespeople and hucksters "; the democratization of marketing, if you will "; is that advertising on the Web has not developed in the subtle and crafty and controlling ways it did in other mediums. The ineffectual banner ad, created (indeed by the founders of this magazine) in 1994 "; and never much liked by anyone in the marketing world "; still remains the foundation of display advertising on the Web.

And then there’s the audience.

At some never-quite-admitted level, the Web audience, however measurable, is nevertheless a fraud. Nearly 60 percent of people find Web sites from search engines, much of which may be driven by SEO, or “search engine optimization” "; a new-economy acronym that refers to gaming Google’s algorithm to land top results for hot search terms. In other words, many of these people have been essentially corralled into clicking a random link and may have no idea why they are visiting a particular site "; or, indeed, what site they are visiting. They are the exact opposite of a loyal audience, the kind that you might expect, over time, to inculcate with your message.

Web audiences have grown ever larger even as the quality of those audiences has shriveled, leading advertisers to pay less and less to reach them. That, in turn, has meant the rise of junk-shop content providers "; like Demand Media "; which have determined that the only way to make money online is to spend even less on content than advertisers are willing to pay to advertise against it. This further cheapens online content, makes visitors even less valuable, and continues to diminish the credibility of the medium.

Even in the face of this downward spiral, the despairing have hoped. But then came the recession, and the panic button got pushed. Finally, after years of experimentation, content companies came to a disturbing conclusion: The Web did not work. It would never bring in the bucks. And so they began looking for a new model, one that leveraged the power of the Internet without the value-destroying side effects of the Web. And they found Steve Jobs, who "; rumor had it "; was working on a new tablet device.

Now, on the technology side, what the Web has lacked in its determination to turn itself into a full-fledged media format is anybody who knew anything about media. Likewise, on the media side, there wasn’t anybody who knew anything about technology. This has been a fundamental and aching disconnect: There was no sublime integration of content and systems, of experience and functionality "; no clever, subtle, Machiavellian overarching design able to create that codependent relationship between audience, producer, and marketer.



In the media world, this has taken the form of a shift from ad-supported free content to freemium "; free samples as marketing for paid services "; with an emphasis on the “premium” part. On the Web, average CPMs (the price of ads per thousand impressions) in key content categories such as news are falling, not rising, because user-generated pages are flooding Facebook and other sites. The assumption had been that once the market matured, big companies would be able to reverse the hollowing-out trend of analog dollars turning into digital pennies. Sadly that hasn’t been the case for most on the Web, and by the looks of it there’s no light at the end of that tunnel. Thus the shift to the app model on rich media platforms like the iPad, where limited free content drives subscription revenue (check out Wired’s cool new iPad app!).

The Web won’t take the sequestering of its commercial space easily. The defenders of the unfettered Web have their hopes set on HTML5 "; the latest version of Web-building code that offers applike flexibility "; as an open way to satisfy the desire for quality of service. If a standard Web browser can act like an app, offering the sort of clean interface and seamless interactivity that iPad users want, perhaps users will resist the trend to the paid, closed, and proprietary. But the business forces lining up behind closed platforms are big and getting bigger. This is seen by many as a battle for the soul of the digital frontier.

Zittrain argues that the demise of the all-encompassing, wide-open Web is a dangerous thing, a loss of open standards and services that are “generative” "; that allow people to find new uses for them. “The prospect of tethered appliances and software as service,” he warns, “permits major regulatory intrusions to be implemented as minor technical adjustments to code or requests to service providers.”

But what is actually emerging is not quite the bleak future of the Internet that Zittrain envisioned. It is only the future of the commercial content side of the digital economy. Ecommerce continues to thrive on the Web, and no company is going to shut its Web site as an information resource. More important, the great virtue of today’s Web is that so much of it is noncommercial. The wide-open Web of peer production, the so-called generative Web where everyone is free to create what they want, continues to thrive, driven by the nonmonetary incentives of expression, attention, reputation, and the like. But the notion of the Web as the ultimate marketplace for digital delivery is now in doubt.

The Internet is the real revolution, as important as electricity; what we do with it is still evolving. As it moved from your desktop to your pocket, the nature of the Net changed. The delirious chaos of the open Web was an adolescent phase subsidized by industrial giants groping their way in a new world. Now they’re doing what industrialists do best "; finding choke points. And by the looks of it, we’re loving it.

Editor in chief Chris Anderson (canderson@wired.com) wrote about the new industrial revolution in issue 18.02.

Jobs perfectly fills that void. Other technologists have steered clear of actual media businesses, seeing themselves as renters of systems and third-party facilitators, often deeply wary of any involvement with content. (See, for instance, Google CEO Eric Schmidt’s insistence that his company is not in the content business.) Jobs, on the other hand, built two of the most successful media businesses of the past generation: iTunes, a content distributor, and Pixar, a movie studio. Then, in 2006, with the sale of Pixar to Disney, Jobs becomes the biggest individual shareholder in one of the world’s biggest traditional media conglomerates "; indeed much of Jobs’ personal wealth lies in his traditional media holdings.

In fact, Jobs had, through iTunes, aligned himself with traditional media in a way that Google has always resisted. In Google’s open and distributed model, almost anybody can advertise on nearly any site and Google gets a cut "; its interests are with the mob. Apple, on the other hand, gets a cut any time anybody buys a movie or song "; its interests are aligned with the traditional content providers. (This is, of course, a complicated alignment, because in each deal, Apple has quickly come to dominate the relationship.)

So it’s not shocking that Jobs’ iPad-enabled vision of media’s future looks more like media’s past. In this scenario, Jobs is a mogul straight out of the studio system. While Google may have controlled traffic and sales, Apple controls the content itself. Indeed, it retains absolute approval rights over all third-party applications. Apple controls the look and feel and experience. And, what’s more, it controls both the content-delivery system (iTunes) and the devices (iPods, iPhones, and iPads) through which that content is consumed.

Since the dawn of the commercial Web, technology has eclipsed content. The new business model is to try to let the content "; the product, as it were "; eclipse the technology. Jobs and Zuckerberg are trying to do this like old-media moguls, fine-tuning all aspects of their product, providing a more designed, directed, and polished experience. The rising breed of exciting Internet services "; like Spotify, the hotly anticipated streaming music service; and Netflix, which lets users stream movies directly to their computer screens, Blu-ray players, or Xbox 360s "; also pull us back from the Web. We are returning to a world that already exists "; one in which we chase the transformative effects of music and film instead of our brief (relatively speaking) flirtation with the transformative effects of the Web.

After a long trip, we may be coming home.

Michael Wolff (michael@burnrate.com) is a new contributing editor for Wired. He is also a columnist for Vanity Fair and the founder of Newser, a news-aggregation site.



An earlier version of the chart at the beginning of this article incorrectly listed the time span from 1995 to 2005. The correct time span is 1990 to 2010. The correct version appears in the print magazine.

 

The Web Is Dead? A Debate
  • samunj

    “Application.”

  • klemczak

    The web cannot be spit among the various parts which then die off individually. The whole idea is evolving and with technology we get different services. The web has always been about access to information, the current trends only allow us to deliver it, segregate it, and consume it. But the notion of access is still the same, this will remain for as long as its ‘information is the main course’.

  • jeffsconsult

    I guess all those web 2.0 applications and facebook and flash games are dead too. Facebook on a small 5×3 screen is fine but most still want the web 2.0 experience. Still a lot of tech coming from the browser model.

  • gx5000

    Dude…get the order right…
    MilNet, Internet, Evil Web, Apple Crap…

    Besides, your overview stinks of corporate profit think tanks.

  • knightmt

    I think you are building castles in the air.

  • knightmt

    +1 to gx5000.

  • kgsbca

    1) That’s a five year old graph. Using the ipad to illustrate that dedicated apps are displacing the browser makes no sense, as it didn’t exist five years ago, and even today, it is probably responsible for less than 1% of internet traffic.

    2) A facebook or twitter app is still connecting to a web server somewhere. It’s still using the web.

    3) Using bits transferred as a measure of how the internet is being used is not accurate, as “apps” like video (which are accessed through web browsers) consume far more badnwidth than html, yet for each video watched, it is possible that 100 web pages are accessed. Last time I checked, Youtube is a website that uses static web servers (web 1.0 technology) to present all those videos that consume all that bandwidth.

    This article is just another example of Chris Anderson desperately trying to be like Malcolm Gladwell – a guy who gets media attention by abusing statistics to make inferences that just aren’t true. I’m guessing if he wasn’t the editor, articles like this would never get published.

  • kme

    oh come on… just because at this present time no one uses gopher, telnet and geocities? The only thing that has changed in the last 15 years is the quality of the technology, information, entertainment and services. And I am sorry, but what else where people doing on the web in 2000 that wasn’t entertainment, social, convenient shopping and information/media sharing?

    Email now facilitates much of what newsgroups and FTP had to offer. Also, it is quite easy to share programs, document files and media over HTTP. Email is probably accessed most over mobile devices rather than the traditional web. This is hardly a decline in its use.

    I don’t miss much of the 1995-2004 web. 2000 was the year ridiculous and ludicrous services jumped their proverbial sharks. But not every start up was a bad idea destined to certain doom. Much of which was being innovated during the boom has been synthesized and reinvented by today’s internet giants. IUMA, Geocities, dorm-room created web sites on college domains… all those forms have been re-imagined. I do miss some of the really cool stuff of those early razorfish web sites, bullseye… Pandora is so much cooler than Napster.

    “The Web is, after all, just one of many applications that exist on the Internet, which uses the IP and TCP protocols to move packets around.”

    I cannot disagree with this more. This abstraction makes no sense. One of many? If anything, the Web is the sum of content, information and experiences people share over the Internet. The Web is culture, art, human experience, information and service. It has evolved and matured and reinvented itself many times over. It is alive and well. Frankly, I would think Wired would know that better than anyone.

  • siege911

    Sorry but I just had to look at that graph to realize this article was a bit off.

    This is obviously a measure of bandwidth. If you spend 5 minutes watching a video on Youtube, you will use significantly more bandwidth than spending 5 minutes reading Facebook updates or even reading this Wired article. Additionally, with Peer to Peer downloads, you may not even be at your computer while you are using bandwidth.

    So while the graph looks like the end of the internet, if you measured it in time rather than bandwidth (obviously a much harder metric to measure), you’d have a more accurate understanding of how the web is used. That graph is only useful to ISPs who are trying to manage bandwidth.

  • mokalpoa

    Nope. The web is far far away from being dead. And contrary to the post in which it says that Apple and Google are killing it. In reality, they are building it. This is not about that google-neutrality deception nor, about how iDevices are striking a problem to the web. But rather, to the subjective opinion of this post. Much like that much ado we’ve heard from ‘prince’ a couple of months ago.

  • johnnyrock70

    Mr Anderson: I’m a fan of The Long Tail, I actually built a business around that valid concept. I am also a fan of Free — although the book could have been 1/2 as long as it was, I still took some useful ideas away from it. So thanks for that, too.

    This “Web is dead” meme, however, is a reach, a conclusion you must have considered yourself if you went back to a wildly off-the-mark article on Push in order to claim it as “prescient”.

    You have done some great work when you think. In this case, I think you have thought too much and back-filled a premise that you knew would generate some hype. I hope, if this is the next step on a downward trajectory of your relevance following the success of The Long Tail and somewhat lesser response to Free, that you go away and come back with something new and redemptive.

    Good luck.

  • FriedZombie

    Your future of the internet just flat out sucks Chris, although I do agree that “walled gardens” have appeared more lately (the most prevalent being Facebook and iTunes) the notion that free content like P2P will disappear if flat out ludicrous. The fact is that some people fuel their egos by not stuffing their pockets with bills, but by “jailbreaking” something or releasing some sort of data prematurely as long as there is a demand for it. As long as those type of people exist they will always need a way to distribute their content.

  • Maximus

    This article is built around a provocative headline based on a misleading chart. You show percentages of the total volume of data broken down by different types. What you don’t show is 1) the vast increase in the total amount of data transmitted over the internet over time, or 2) the value that individuals place on different types of data.

    Just because web traffic makes up a smaller percentage of the whole than it used to doesn’t mean that there is less of it, or that it is less important. In fact, the total amount of web data, like the total number of web sites, the total amount of web content in different languages, etc., continues to grow by leaps and bounds.

    Just because there’s more video data moving over the net now, thanks to bigger and faster pipes, more streaming services, etc., doesn’t mean the web is in decline.

  • ericlr

    This is about the 1,000th time that Wired has proclaimed the death of the Web since the mid-90’s, and yet here it still is, alive and kicking.

  • mikeguy3086

    I got one paragraph in before I started writing this. I think a better headline would read “The web is evolving; constantly.”

  • JohnGoode

    A week ago I wrote this: http://johngoode.posterous.com/the-interweb-is-changing-at-a-pace and have subsequently linked to this excellent article.

  • fuzzynormal

    I don’t know. If the series-of-tubes indeed become that app-oriented superhighway (remember that metaphor) for a majority of folks, then I’ll be rather content cruising around the backroads.

    I’m the type that motorbikes on state roads rather then the big-I’s, so maybe it’s just my nature.

  • WhoAmI

    Just because someone uses a Wikipedia or Facebook app doesn’t mean that they’re not using the web. If you have a Wikipedia app and someone uses the web to modify wikipedia, you’re still getting that information that is recorded exclusively on the web.

    Apps are simply tools that generally streamline the most useful parts of the web. Apps aren’t killing the web: they’re making the web better.

    And that graph is old. It’s also a BS graph. The web is still growing. Video just takes up a larger amount of information over a shorter period of time. Same with peer to peer. The web isn’t dead: it’s stronger than ever thanks to these applications.

  • Sebben

    Let’s do some reality check:

    http://www.canalys.com/pr/2010/r2010081.html

    iPhone/iPad may be big and cool in US, but they are by far not the dominant platform worldwide. And Android is growing much faster.

    So here’s the deal: it’s a PAIN to maintain an app on an assortiment of hardware and software platforms. Web appeared to address exactly that. Onse American “app fad” is gone (most likely – by the virtue of Apple screwing another OS update and adding another device or two to the assortiment), Web will become fashionable again.

  • m3kw9

    Wow, can anyone say attention whoring in the front page?

  • horse

    “You wake up and check your email on your bedside iPad”

    Jesus Christ!

  • m3kw9

    Dude here is likening the amount of raw data traffic to the actual online content. It’s totally wrong, you can have a 10k html page with more info than 1 megs of 1080p video. The web is not dead. If it was, we would not have options to choose what we want to see, this is what the WEB is about. Things linking to each other.

  • pyrosktrrlw0788

    Here are some facts about this article:
    “Apple” is used 5 times.
    “iTunes” is used 6 times.
    “iPhone” is used 5 times.
    “iPad” is used 8 times.
    “iPod” is used 1 time.
    .
    So what you are trying to say is, if i suck apple’s dong then I’m killing the internet? Sorry but this article is trash, I agree with just about every comment above mine. Not everyone buys apple toys on launch day and only facebook sheep play ‘farmville’ and ‘mafia wars’.

  • zeroexcelcior

    +1 to gx5000.

  • reamon

    The web is more than HTML.

    The browser is not the web.

    Push was never “push”–it was poll regularly, which is what overran local networks which in turn caused local networks to ban it.

    Email traditionally wasn’t on the web–SMTP, POP2, IMAP, et al. are other “applications” on the ‘net. But Gmail, Hotmail and others have made email….a web app.

    RSS is a “web feed.”

    I listen to Pandora–from a web page.

    I manage my Netflix queue–using a web page.

    The “day in the life” example probably has web use all over it–it’s just hidden under the covers for the most part.

    Unless one peers into the details of mobile apps, you’ve no idea if it uses the web or not.

  • wired200905271901

    That graph is misleading because it claims to be showing proportions, and reads left-to-right with an implicit vertical evolving measure, but the rhs vertical axis should be approximately ten times as high as the lhs to show the total quantity of data being transported. New services are rarely replacing older services in absolute terms – they are adding to them.

  • tylendel

    aaand i’m done with wired. they are apple’s dancing monkey now, and no better than the other propaganda outlets. going on bandwidth? please. sounds like fuzzy math to push an agenda to me.

  • reamon

    RT @ Web: “The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated”

  • rfsully

    The percentage of total traffic is interesting, but I’d also like to see the absolute volume of traffic by category. The total bandwidth is growing at a good clip, when you factor that in, the picture will look radically different.

  • RamoneC

    It looks like the chart Wired used is a little…off, shall we say?

    http://www.boingboing.net/2010/08/17/is-the-web-really-de.html

  • http://www.wired.com Joanna Pearlstein

    @kgsbca: There was an error in an earlier version of the graphic. The data shows 1990 to 2010, not 1995 to 2005 as indicated earlier. It’s not five-year-old data.

    -Joanna Pearlstein
    Senior Editor, Research
    WIRED Magazine

  • Bassman

    The key issue will be freedom of information. Yes, movies, songs, files and applications increasingly consume the bulk of the bandwidth. Still, people still use very simple HTML to get their news these days, forgoing newspapers and “talking heads” shows.

    The vital issue will be the freedom with which views counter to the sterile “politically correct” pablum can continue to be presented. Everyone should fear a “1984″ or “Brave New World” future, where information reaching the masses is *completely* controlled.

  • samagon

    what’s interesting is that the different internet protocols died.
    .
    ‘web’ as you have described it, is hypertext transfer protocol. very much alive.
    .
    The real question is, is the ‘traffic’ a comparison of number of hits, or a percentage of overall bandwidth, or is it maybe a percentage of how much time someone spends watching movies online vs reading wired?
    .
    of course ‘web’ bandwidth is going to be lower than ‘video’ bandwidth (which for a large part is still transferred through a web browser via http).
    .
    did MUDs back in the day fit into the ‘other’ category? And today do games like WoW fit into the ‘peer to peer’ category?
    .
    at the end of the day, a web browser is and always has been one tool to access online content, firefox, IE, safari, netscape. there have always been tools capable of connecting to content, FTP clients (some web browsers have been capable of doing this, IE is one), email clients (some web browsers have been capable of doing this, Netscape is one). There are now other tools that are capable of accessing online content, and they are much more specialized. A netflix app for my xbox that connects specifically to that content and doesn’t use some plugin in the browser.
    .
    ‘web’ content is very much alive, I think the real question of this article is:
    .
    where is the place of the web browser in the next decade?

  • winnipegger

    I wonder if AT&T Interchange would have built itself with the same model as Facebook and less a cable TV network could they have done this years ago? They had the newer platform to replace Compuserve but not the marketting power of AOL but they were trying the same old thing. Ironic that now years later we are going back to the same types of things that made AOL a success that left Interchange and Compuserve fighting to get a piece.

  • samagon

    @myself
    .
    where I said ‘different protocols died’
    .
    I should have said ‘different protocols were enveloped and overshadowed.’
    .
    FTP is as alive today as it was yesterday, just because there isn’t as much percentage of the BW being used doesn’t mean it isn’t being used.
    .
    I guess that is what I was saying overall for everything though.

  • Xylenz

    Actually, we dont have telegrams anymore. The last one got sent a few years ago then Western Union canned it.

    Also, this graph, while interesting shows percentage not quantity. Just because the web portion is decreasing does not mean that the quantity of web users are diminishing, only the percentage. The graph shows nothing about the increase in the quantity of people using the internet. 50% of 10,000 is less than 25% of 1,000,000.

  • marvelous

    Like many other people who posted comments, I want to echo my disappointment with the “death of the web” premise. I think of it first of all like an add-on, all these new applications such as Pandora and NetFlix. They’re not displacing technologies, they’re augmenting technologies. They don’t make you use the web any less, they just enhance the user experience for their particular role, i.e., watching movies or listening to music. As far as all the Apple fawning, the last time I actually touched an Apple product was sometime around 1994. Nothing against Apple, I understand they are doing very well. I just haven’t had a need for anything Apple sells. Keep in mind, folks, 21% of Americans still don’t use the Internet at all (recent Pew study). These vast generalizations or predictions only go so far. Zero sum graphics like the lead graphic can cloud the total picture of technology and how we use or don’t use it in our daily lives.

  • careydw

    The web isn’t dead, I doubt it’ll ever die. What am I reading right now? Where am I typing this comment? Where do I read my news? What do I use to file my taxes? How do I pay my credit cards? How do I find real estate?
    .
    Apps and closed systems are great for small screens and limited bandwidth, but for a large screen and unlimited* bandwidth you can’t beat the browser, even if the browser is only used to access lots of closed applications.

  • technophile

    +1 kgsbca
    –>So tired of these idiotic shock journalism, ripleys-believe-it-or-not premises and speculative fiction masquerading as science. Gladwell comparison spot on.
    +1 Xylenz
    –>^^^^^^THE MOST prescient point. I can add a couple of hi-def movies to bittorrent and then use my browser *all day,* and according to your silly metrics, I’m 90% P2P user, and only 10% web user. The volume of traffic on each protocol has little to no bearing on the what parts of the ‘net are most important or valuable to me.

    This journalistic quality of this article is just so… sad. Well you got me to comment, so, mission accomplished, I guess. :p

  • DWright

    I wonder how different that graph would look if, instead of proportion of US internet traffic, it displayed amount of internet traffic (in terms of bandwidth, time spent, or other metrics)?

    I believe we might see that it is less of a case where web traffic is loosing it’s market to other protocols, and more the case that the market is expanding as other protocol are joining the team.

    I’m not sure why it’s such a big deal, anyway. I really don’t remember anybody writing gloom and doom articles when Gopher was replaced by the Web.

  • technophile

    “You wake up and check your email on your bedside iPad — that’s one app.”
    ‘we don’t use email anymore, we use APPS!!’ :facepalm:

    Where, in your graph, is all this “app” traffic, by the way? I see lots of video, p2p, web, and 3% other.

  • halms

    you mean no more wired.com? oh well, i always prefer the print anyway.

  • toddself

    This is a ludicrous concept. The “web” is not dead — being that the web is defined by a protocol: http.

    How are RSS feeds delivered? HTTP. The RSS information powers that NY Times app, your RSS reader and your Facebook app.

    With some older phones/devices, video and audio are streamed via progressive HTTP download. (RTSP is the other major protocol involved, but is losing out.)

    What you’re actually trying to say is that HTML is dead. The web is not dead at all, just specializing itself.

  • wired200905271901

    More useful graph with actual vertical scale included:
    http://www.boingboing.net/images/3.jpg

  • jojo99

    “You wake up and check your email on your bedside iPad — that’s one app. During breakfast you browse Facebook, Twitter, and The New York Times — three more apps. On the way to the office, you listen to a podcast on your smartphone. Another app. At work, you scroll through RSS feeds in a reader and have Skype and IM conversations. More apps. At the end of the day, you come home, make dinner while listening to Pandora, play some games on Xbox Live, and watch a movie on Netflix’s streaming service. ”
    —-
    No I don’t! The only app I use out that morass you list above Chris is RSS. I don’t have, use or need any of the others. I guess you can call me a Luddite.

  • Mick_McMullan

    What might help would be for the author to add an addendum that gives his particular definition of what he is calling ‘The Web’. My own feeling is that how someone defines it determines whether the article’s premise is even remotely plausible or not. If, for a simple example, one defines the Web as merely a collection of websites with open, hyperlinked content, then the article starts to make a bit more sense, though I’m not sure myself that I would define the Web that way.

    Secondly, perhaps the author could, ironically, define what he means by ‘dead’. The Web, even as narrowly defined above, is unlikely to completely die in the foreseeable future; indeed, the number of accessible websites might continue to grow for a long time. However, their relevance as a proportion of all Internet-channeled activities and content likely will decline.

    To assert, though, that websites will truly go away, is almost akin to someone having said ages ago that the invention and spread of the automobile and the telephone will lead people to stop having home addresses; in other words, websites will still be needed as home addresses for a lot of the content that we consume and the applications we run.

    Nobody can say with any reasonable degree of accuracy what the shared equilibrium will be, though, among the various Internet platforms. Online social networks are growing rapidly today, yet a kind of Facebook fatigue may arrive within the next decade where many people abandon such networks as they tire of inane updates from friends and as they start to understand the damage done to their privacy. Apple, too, is having its day (or decade) in the sun now, but how many others will increasingly come to think, as I do already, that all the people hanging out in front of Apple stores before they open are just dorks and that Apple’s cool factor has disappeared. Both these factors and more could lead to a resurgence of the Web, narrowly defined.

    Cheers,

    Mick [at] VelvetTalkManagement.com
    http://www.VelvetTalkManagment.com

  • OneTrueScott

    Looks like this stalking horse article isn’t going to support a book deal. SO close.

  • Maarek

    Many of these apps need Web access to create and customize the account. Static Web pages are dead, or dead links, people want to see something different each day or by the hour on web sites. That’s more informative then someone’s monthly blog.

  • Murple

    I love how this guy says the web is dead, then goes on to “prove” it by talking about how people are using various web sites instead of the web. Uhh… Wired? You aren’t actually PAYING this author, are you? This some kind of late April Fool joke? Good grief.

  • Count_Zero_Interrupt

    I’m gonna go ahead and admit i don’t understand alot of the concepts in the article. But I especially don’t understand the points about Facebook. 90% of the activity I see on there is people sharing, commenting on and “liking” links to content elsewhere on the web, most of which is found and viewed in good ol’ fashioned browsers. A huge chunk of the Facebook experience depends on open web content that as many users as possible can access and share with each other.
    .
    It doesn’t replace the web browsing experience at all, it merely augments it (and is augmented by it).

  • sM10sM20

    Great article, wish Wired had more worth-while content like this. You don’t have to agree with all of the text, just reflect on the idea.

  • eliatic

    For natives, it was a good thing when the gold-mining moved away from the Klondike to Nome.

    I’m ecstatic that the gold-miners have moved away from the web. Because the only best part of the Web was always the -individual human natives- who populated it with their artwork, their music, their music, their stories, their fresh ideas ad experiments. For a decade they were largely invisible thanks to the spew and wreckage generated by the gold-diggers.

    Thank you iPhone, Jobs and Zuckerberg for conning away the madding crowd, and returning the human, intelligent, lively and uncommercialized communitas which is the only, highly significant value the Web has created for humanity. Because, at last, like minds could find one another in the barrenness the miners have left behind.

  • Bahlkris

    Awesome, so if the web is dead can wired cut back on their plethora of ads?

  • Charles

    Isn’t it the case that Rapidshare has just the second-most traffic of all internet-pages besides Google? How on earth could Apple or any legitimate App of the Internet substitute that? I’m not saying this is a good thing, but that’s just the way it is.

  • joehobot

    I hope you didn’t pull this data off the sites like comscore or compete or even alexa.

    What are the measurements? 10 people at age 60?

    Disagree. But I guess it’s a good post I mean you have 50 comments you probably are going to get even more by tonight. I see this post as intentionally posted for people to argue and debate

  • Charles

    Isn’t it the case that P2P-sites, sharing-sites like Rapidshare, etc., account for very much of the traffic? I once read that RS alone has the second-most webtraffic of all pages after Google. That’s not necessarily a good thing, but that’s what people use the web for. How could any legit app substitute for that?

  • joehobot

    And just to add: Boing Boing took same traffic just put it in different graph and see what they came up with!

    http://www.boingboing.net/2010/08/17/is-the-web-really-de.html

    Which I far more agree with “visual graph” yet the polls and these sites that do graphs based on few hundred people do not make any impact on me at all.

  • nonapooi

    Nope. The web is far far away from being dead. And contrary to the post in which it says that Apple and Google are killing it. In reality, they are building it. This is not about that google-neutrality deception nor, about how iDevices are striking a problem to the web. But rather, to the subjective opinion of this post. Much like that much ado we’ve heard from ‘prince’ a couple of months ago.

    A normal person would automatically believe that Google and Verizon are planning to make their own internet: A paid one (for them) and a free one (the one that we’re using today)

    Certainly, this would be shrudded with a lot of controversies. But the question is, won’t this be an inevitable path for a company, like Google? I mean, perhaps this won’t happen next year. But one way or another, in the future, this will be pursued. Certainly. Review to Google Neutrality: http://bit.ly/alTWFT

  • Idler

    Good God. What a load of nonsense.

    What the hell is an HTML page if not a little app?

    I remember when you had to download each packet one at a time, then decode them and read them out loud.
    You tell that to kids today, they won’t believe you.

  • cranstone

    Chris,

    Provocative article – allow me to throw a couple more items into the mix. Let’s start with asking why mobile apps? One of the reasons you cite is because they work and the interface is so much better than the browser. That’s because they have access to the devices operating system API’s (and the browser doesn’t).

    But what if the browser did – have access to the devices api’s? This is the focus of HTML5 – it’s clear to everyone that Mobile apps don’t scale from device to device the way the browser does. So the reasoning goes if HTML5 could provide some access to the devices native capability then you the developer could provide a richer customer experience.

    In techie terms this is known as the DEVCAP problem – how do I determine in REAL TIME the devices native capabilities? Up until now the problem has not been solved. HTML5 attempts to do it, but is already heavily fragmented. In addition HTML5 doesn’t really solve the customers privacy problem (easy to access data without he/she being aware that it’s happening).

    So it appears that we’re stuck with mobile apps or are we?

    What if someone solved the DEVCAP problem? What if they came up with a way to store all of the devices context in a simple (encrypted) easy to use database? What if this database was available (at the owners discretion) to the browser? What if the browser could send this data (encrypted of course) up to a web server as a CGI environment variable.?

    Well now the web server would be able to know in real time Who’s at the other end, what’s device is at the other end and where said device is. All before you had to send a web page down to the device.

    With real time context comes the ability to personalize (the holy grail for advertisers). Customers don’t mind because they can now ask for only information that is of interest – imagine that.

    Well the DEVCAP problem has been solved and is the next logical step to overcome the “death matrix” of trying to support multiple OS’s, App Servers, Web Servers, Databases.

    Mobile apps are an interim step. They still send their data via TCP/IP – but ignore the presentation layer of the OSI model for a local home grown interface. It doesn’t scale – but the browser does. All you need to do is overcome the DEVCAP problem.

    And as I mentioned that’s already been solved and it doesn’t require a single change to your current infrastructure or even require you to learn a new programming language.

    If you want to learn more and see how it all works just do a search for 5o9 Inc. Everything is there.

    Cheers,

    Peter

  • cored

    “This is not a trivial distinction.”

    Sure seems trivial. Am I missing something?

    And that chart shows volume, not instances. One streaming video is more data than dozens of regular page hits. This just shows the most obvious trend that people are watching tv and movies on the web more and more. It won’t be long before tv’s are pretty much all wired and your content, other than live stuff like sports, is delivered on demand. So that “video” number is going to get a lot bigger.

    But anyway, what’s the problem?

  • MikeCraig

    Interesting chart, however it is a percentage chart, not a volume chart. So perhaps the overall volume has increased 300% in that time frame which would mean that the web portion has actually increased while decreasing as a portion of the total.

  • willcj

    Trying to push this “Conde Nast will be saved via PAID APPS!!!!111One” drivel is nonsense. Stop stomping your feet in the corner – the genie can’t be placed back in the bottle. There will always be people who respond to fascist-type choiceless environments – ie, ipad/ipod users – but they’re the exception, thank God.

  • samagon

    I wonder if there is a chart somewhere that shows unique hits?
    .
    Count 1 viewing of a movie on netflix as 1 unique hit.
    .
    Count 1 viewing of this article as 1 unique hit.
    .
    I bet that the web is still huge, just because the web uses less bandwidth, all that means is it is more efficient at transmitting data.
    .
    Another intriguing fact would be what are the numbers of unique hits using web browsers (any web browser) to access content on the Internet, vs the numbers of unique hits using apps that are tailored for specific content (facebook app on a phone, netflix app on a xbox) on the Internet?
    .
    As a followup to the last question, how many of those specialized apps are using HTTP to access/display their content?

  • TedETGbiz

    It is now legal to jailbreak the iPhone– your article didn’t mention that. This means that everything the Apple King makes will be jailbroken in some form. How can the app garden walls hold when the hardware can’t keep the wild flowers out?

    You also left the biggest and most important category out of the coming avalanche of net traffic – machine to machine. I don’t mean APIs that serve Facebook, I mean SNMP type of traffic between billion and billion of machines everywhere, recording, controlling or measuring everything that is, and only sending aggregated reports or graphs to humans. THAT is the future of the net– humans traffic will be like an oil slick on a vast ocean.

    What do you think?

    Ted T.

  • samagon

    what are the numbers of unique page views paired against unique videos watched?
    .
    what are the numbers of unique page views with web browsers vs apps designed to show specific content?
    .
    of those apps designed to show specific content what percentage use HTTP?
    .
    All this article proves is that ‘the web’ is more efficient at transmitting data, not that it is dying, more bandwidth is being hogged by other stuff.
    .
    I had more written, but it didn’t post it, so here’s attempt number 2.

  • JT7

    My favorite part of this poorly articulated promotional for Apple is the brief time-out the author takes to shill Wired’s “cool new iPad app!” (exclamation point his). Because nothing sells paid subscriptions better than weak content and sloppy writing *from an editor of the magazine*. Yeah. I’m running out to pay for that.

    Otherwise, bang-up job supporting the argument that the web killed quality editorial writing. That wasn’t the argument being made? Oh. (uncomfortable silence)

  • pelmerdewiitt

    Where have we heard this before? Oh yes. In Wired Issue 4.04 April 1996

    “It’s nothing less than the death of the Web.”

    http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/4.04/wipeout.html

  • TheLandShark

    I’d like to see how long Wired lasts if it goes from web to app.

  • wen1454

    Chris Anderson puts too much faith in the market. Network externalities are a big problem in the computer technology sector. Furthermore customers and companies often do not know (or do) what is best for them.

  • mandeep_ghuman

    My 2 cents. I am not sure if we are framing the debate the right way. I think the only relevant debate is over net neutrality. As long as the pipes that channel the bits are neutral, new/ground-breaking/creative web ventures will continue to have a low entry barrier and thus higher chances of success. In my view, if net neutrality is assured, it doesnt matter if browsing experience is through an app or a browser. The choice of revenue, between advertisement and subscription, will be a choice that an application will make. On neutral pipes, it will be darn hard for app stations to monopolize themselves as entry points. A device maker like Apple will be pushed to the wayside when the oompth factor associated with its devices subsides. However, if the pipes become biased, we will revert to monopolistic ethos of the twentieth century. New ventures will have a high entry barrier and creativity/nimbleness/usefulness will go the route of the Detroit Big Three.

  • Swift2

    I am profoundly untroubled by the death or transformation of ftp or one protocol or other. Things come into being and vanish quickly on this vast network. The World Wide Web is just one protocol that has proven longer-lasting than others. It is now evolved enough to deliver apps to handheld devices in specialized containers called apps.

    This diagram doesn’t plot the overall explosion in usage of the network by all levels of society in all countries. Whether it happens with HTML, 1 through 5 and beyond, or some protocol not even dreamed of yet, none of us can see. Is e-mail “dead”? No. It is a small bundle in the overall traffic now, but there are still oceans of people who forward corny jokes to their friends, and a good part of the organization of right-wingers is done with forwarded e-mail.

    You can look at one thing through a number of wrappers. If I go to the web from my office, or on an iPad from the beach, I’m still looking at the New York Times. If I click an app and get a Netflix movie on my iPhone, or on my home HDTV, it’s still my Netflix account.

    An awful lot of Googlenauts regard the web as fixed somehow, an ideal Platonic object. They are confusing the container with the massive, planet-wide idea market.

  • keeneye

    This article is equal parts stupid and ridiculous. “Proportion of total Internet traffic” isn’t the same thing as “proportion of time spent actively using Internet services”. If you look at it that way – which is the intelligent way to look at it – you’d realize the peer-to-peer fraction goes WAY down since most people just start a download and ignore it til it’s done. Also, the video listing is deceptive, because it doesn’t differentiate between WEB video (embedded videos on the WEB) and actual video streaming services, which again would be a much smaller fraction. Additionally, many of the apps you refer to transfer web data, not their own enigmatic content protocol that’s slowly bleeding the web to death. That said, the web is very, very far from being dead.

  • dano

    I thought that Youtube was a part of the web.

  • timmaeus

    Superb article, but too long to read in my iPhone.

    Thank heavens for the old web browser!

  • CSilver

    Like they felt compelled to say about rock ‘n’ roll, I think the WWB is here to stay, with new beats and variations, of course. Not that all the new advances in the Internet and tech are marvy. One irritation is change for change’s sake. I’ve devised a glossary of terms to describe the latest causes of techno rage. Read: The Culture Mulcher at http://blogs.forbes.com/craigsilver/

  • OmegaFactor

    Good article.. note, I read it via a brower while at work.. WORK DESKTOPS will keep the Browser alive!

  • LeftButRightcom

    The iPhone has an app called “Safari”…it is a web browser!

  • Druyx

    This is why you are wrong:

    1)Apps need to be downloaded every time new functionality is added or needs to be updated. Web app functionality updates on the fly.

    2)Apps (specifically mobile apps) offer very little additional functionality over web apps as they also have access to limited hardware. Seriously, what hardware access does smartphones offer additionally? Accelerometers? Web cams? GPS? Besides, much of this can be accessed by web apps through plugins, which only need to be installed once. Oh, and the security risks stay essentially the same. Downloading a dodgy app for your smartphone puts you at the same risk(s) as installing a dodgy plugin.

    3)Apps providing web app content for users are filtered (usually by the user). I used to also stick to my personally set up RSS feeds pod casts etc, then I realized how much information I am missing out on topics I didn’t know I would be interested in when setting up my feeds. When browsing unfiltered news sites I am offered much wider collection of information, and no, some sites actually provide all of this in an uncluttered easy to use interface. Wired’ web site for instance, has always been a favorite, your app not so much (this is off course a biased opinion as I hate using an iPad).

    4) When I get a new smartphone, I have to reinstall all my apps. You don’t have this problem with web apps.

    Lets face it, the only real reason this article exists is to continue Wired’ unashamed and biased promotion of Apple and Apple products. It took all of Apple’s overhyping and mass media lying to make smartphone apps the big deal it is today, despite the fact that mobile apps has been around long before the iPhone came around. Get real people, the web is not dying. If anything, its growing more and more dominant. Apps on the other hand, is most likely just another fad. One Wired will undoubtedly become bored with as soon as Apple tell them to.

  • tauri_alcyone

    Firstly, great article. I guess this is the sort of stuff we? come for, thanks Wired.

    Secondly, could you post at the top how it’s suppose to be read? Am I the only who had trouble figuring out how to read it when on full view.

    Thirdly, my immediate thoughts are this: It seems the Web is going back being a place of mainly user-generated content whereas an app-driven internet relies on proprietary content generation. As such the Facebook analogy is somewhat flawed. Yes it makes a great App, but there is clearly space for another alternative (open or not) to replace its function, namely organising user generated content (the Web) into a more usable format. Whether this happens or not would obviously depend on whether a viable alternative sprouts up and if Facebook appears to overstep its boundaries.

    The same cannot be said for the proprietary app-driven content.

    Furthermore, it seems the two need each other, one to distribute (Apps), another to share (Web), and considering there’s a helluva lot of stuff Facebook does not allow their users to share means an open will continue to exist.

  • MadPutz

    “Who’s to Blame: Us” is the much bigger factor. Consumer demand is the long-term determinant of any content service, after it leaves the labs of techies and the wider population becomes acclimated to its potential. Also, the notion of blame is a bit negative – change is a good thing, especially since the internet’s change is akin to rough stone tools turning into sleek modern machinery.

  • simone

    mass audience has come, no, internet is not dead :)

  • kbrickley

    I think the analysis comparing the web to electricity, railroads, and phones might not be totally accurate since those items for the most part are not social media. Analysis of the web is more like looking at how humans socialize. When the web first opened up it was like the wild west, lots of unexplored territory and areas where you could stake your claim. However, as more people joined you started to see the communities forming (like Facebook, Myspace, etc) which became the equivalent of cities. Others didn’t like the restrictions of living in the city and were content living on the frontier (but foregoing the convenience offered by some of the city services). I think the web is more about the height of the walls in the gardens and how much time you want to spend in the wilderness than it is about apps vs webpages. I play games on Steam, Stardock, and Battlenet (all walled gardens to a certain extent). There are some people who will only play cracked software and are willing to put in the extra effort required to find and maintain those programs. I think the time vs money argument is the key one. Total internet freedom takes more time than the closed or semiclosed gardens that allow you to optimize your web experience to your own tastes. Just my take.

  • RoguePope

    Very interesting read. I don’t agree with the general direction based on the assumption that this measures data, not hits, but it does support some general human & business behavior.

    Under the assumption that this data is a representation of volume, not distinct hits, this just tells me that all of the newer “users” of the internet will remain at the same level, utilizing only what they can get easily. This is supported by how ubiquitous the internet as a whole has become. This is simply the transport.

    I was using Gopher, Archie, WAIS, FTP, newsgroups, etc. way before the WWWeb. I continue to use a number of these in addition to the web, and do in fact use some of the apps such as FB. I just use FB and such apps to touch base, but most of my time is spent on the web, even if I DOWNLOAD more through other vehicles.

    As more people are using the internet because “it just works” for them, as does their iPhone, force-feeding all of their processed data, I will continue to use the web as I have. I do have some apps on my Android phone for convenience, but invariably continue to use my DolphinHD BROWSER for most of my internet time.

    As some have already stated before, the WWW is much more efficient and communicates more with less bandwidth. This article just further supports the fact that more people are using the internet because it’s easier to get to now since they don’t have to go out and SEARCH for all this media – it can be spoon-fed to the sheep. Good for these people. This has proven to be a great way for corporations to monetize the Internet, great for them. I will continue to use it as I have while most others will go take what big business is feeding to the masses. I will continue to enjoy visiting creative and “boutique” content.

    Again, interesting article but it doesn’t surprise me that once the masses are on the Internet that previous behaviors of these don’t become apparent here.

  • PeterMeyer

    An incredibly insightful piece that spurs rethinking how media companies will thrive in the digital space – thanks.

  • Nym

    This seems like a lot of fancy crap surrounding an ‘imminent death of the internet’ piece.

  • rackers123

    Really good read from Wired. I agree with sM10sM20. Good content, well written, thought out and different sides of the arguement. Would love to see more like this.

    Really got me thinking about how the internet is progressing. I for one find my bookmarks to be an ever expanding mess on my browser with links i will never return to and websites i want to keep up-to-date with but never have the time because of the wealth of options out their. Controlled choice is not really a bad thing as long as what you want is always available.

    It’s when it’s blocked or edited i oppose. If you don’t like apples ordering of things you are free to choose something else. That’s the best thing about the internet.

    The fact is that Facebook and apple work well which is why they are popular. If they didn’t then they would have gone the way of Myspace and Bebo.

    In the end the consumer will stick dictate what is produced and we are not stupid.

  • atoh

    I respectfully disagree. I reject the notion that for one thing to rise, the other must disappear, instead, what we are seeing is the sprouting of new access formats, that for a user, just means new ways to ‘do digital things’. To say that the rise of APPs will kill the web, is akin to proclaiming when the microwave oven was invented that it will replace the oven – the utility is different and hence they co-exist. Isn’t TV still alive and well?

    Each access medium/format will have its own set of “affordances” to which specific purposes and functions can be manifested. Humans are able to experience their digital lives in many forms, and we demand different utilities depending on what we are hoping to achieve, and hence the co-existence of different utilities that serve us differently.

    It’s an eco-system, not a page to be turned each time something new comes into it. With very new access format, we’ll only see the rest of the eco-system adjust accordingly.

    As our industry matures, we really need to stop making these grand zero sum game proclamations and begin to make far more mature assessments of these new additions from an ecological standpoint. There will be paid content as there will remain free content. Some parts of our digital lives will be more amenable to be experienced on our mobile apps than the web, and the reverse will be just as true. “A New Day” is cool but it does not have to mean “out with the old completely”. Things get introduced, yes, sometimes they replace parts of the system, but most times they settle into their optimal place and co-exist with others…

  • olliepurkiss

    I’d like to see that graph with the vertical axis based on actual usage rather than percentage, I think you wouldn’t see that rather dramatic downward red line in that case.
    In addition that shows traffic and not usage. Clearly traffic generated from video and peer-to-peer will be many times that from web usage. How about we see the graph based on users’ time? It might tell a different story then.
    I’m not discounting the whole article – I think there are interesting thoughts in it, but that headline image reeks of statistical massaging, and there’s no need for that.

  • samagon

    @pelmerdewiitt
    .
    ~~~~~~
    Where have we heard this before? Oh yes. In Wired Issue 4.04 April 1996
    .
    “It’s nothing less than the death of the Web.”
    ~~~~~~
    .
    HAHAHA! Issue 404, death of web not found!

  • sp4i6

    The web is dead, along with quality control.

  • iatw

    What a wonderful and enlightening article. However, I feel like some of the passion and urgency in Mr. Anderson’s piece seems to be slightly exaggerated. The app-using, iPad-having, mobile-surfing crowd is still a minority, and will remain so for some time. Perhaps in some states in the USA, or perhaps in some countries Mr. Anderson’s vision of the world is accurate, but for us living in the third world, the browser and the web remain king.

    The simple reason of course is money. As Mr. Anderson said, a lot of people shifted to closed but convenient systems because they have more money than time, and that is not the case with us.Not everyone can afford an iPad or smartphone, plus the cost of the apps, and the cost of the service that goes with it.

    Even if by some miracle poverty was greatly reduced and our people suddenly became able to afford all these things, there’s no infrastructure to support these closed services. Here in the Philippines our mobile networks are crippled during Christmas and New Years’ Eve just by the calls and text messages being transmitted. Imagine what would happen if people here were consuming large amounts of data on a daily basis.

    Just to be clear, I’m quite certain that Mr. Anderson had no intention of inflating the speed at which the Web is being abandoned just to have a sensational piece. I am merely sharing another equally significant reality, that the Web is not turning into a virtual ghost town simply because the economics leave a large number of people with no choice.

    It is because of this same reason that I hope that the Web persists, and just like eliatic’s comment below, I hope that the closed and convenient version of the Internet does not result in the death of the free Web.

    Let the people who can afford move on to their apps and online gaming and media on demand, it’s their money to spend. But for people without a lot of spending power, as well as people who have come to rely on the Web for sharing, collaborating and learning and the freedom and diversity with which these things are accomplished, the Web will remain our home, trolls and all.

  • jpp

    Interesting article – however it’s based on a flawed premise. Traffic volume does not equal usage. For example this page, compressed, is about 60KB a single youtube video is 100 times that but takes the same amount of time to digest. If you want to understand usage you need to look at how much time a users spend on each activity not on how many bytes gets sent.

  • Hilbert

    I wish I didn’t agree with this article but reluctantly I do.

    The early Web/Internet can be likened to the old village commons which is where many once met and socialized. Now this space has evolved into a busy High Street lined with shops and commerce–there’s little point being there unless you have money and intend to buy something.

    We now meet and socialize in clubs and societies and are entertained by stuff we buy from the shops.

    It’s all becoming too depressingly familiar.

  • SunSword

    Wrong. Fail. Two reasons.
    1st reason — traffic volume does not correlate one to one with usage. A single youtube video has a much higher packet traffic volume than visiting blogs or articles like this one. But I might spend 95% of my time going to blogs and articles, 5% of my time at youtube — but the videos will overwhelm my other usage based on traffic volume.
    2nd reason — the way you are defining “apps”. Facebook as an app? The NYT as an app? Yet I access both via my browser. Sorry — that’s Web. I access blogs on my cell phone via a mobile browser (Bolt). That’s also Web.

  • sahidul

    Guys , when the whole world will start using IP Version 6 , one object can have bilion and billion IP address , every living animal on earth can have IP address. After a few century later , when someone will meet his or her friend or family , they will not ask for email address , they will ask for IP address . Human body itself will be communication hub for internet based devices like phone , laptop, webtop, TV, music , video , messaging , just name it. who said Internet is dead , its chaning flavor and shapes like car every year.

  • ElectricWojo

    I don’t understand how video is separate from the web. Are videos played through mobile device video players accounted separately from videos watched THROUGH the web. Also, does one video, viewed once, which takes up 60 MB count more than a web page, taking up 500kb, watched 120 times?

  • drbayer

    Just because I feel like being tangential…

    “We still have postcards and telegrams, don’t we?” – Um, I don’t think we still have telegrams. Western Union has stopped sending them, and I don’t know of any other vendors that held out as long as they did.

  • fixxxer3456

    Ok, first off, good article, second, why havent I gotten the new issue yet? Kinda weird. I need my Wired fix. lol

  • cobalt60

    Based on your picture, DNS is much more dead than the web. And yet somehow, when I type http://www.wired.com/ into my browser this site still comes up… bizarre!

    Best of luck convincing people to enter your walled garden.

  • lpress

    What is the definition of a Web application? One watches a YouTube video by visiting their Web site using a Web browser. Do you consider that non-Web because it uses Flash?

  • nonapooi

    Nope. The web is far far away from being dead. And contrary to the post in which it says that Apple and Google are killing it. In reality, they are building it. This is not about that google-neutrality deception nor, about how iDevices are striking a problem to the web. But rather, to the subjective opinion of this post. Much like that much ado we’ve heard from ‘prince’ a couple of months ago.

    A normal person would automatically believe that Google and Verizon are planning to make their own internet: A paid one (for them) and a free one (the one that we’re using today) …

  • MatsSvensson

    So according to this writer, the more people use the WEB-site youtube.com the less used the WEB will be?

    Excuse me, but this guy appears to be retarded.

  • Smurfdaddy

    As long as people like THIS author are able to publish drivel like this, the web is definatley NOT dead. Evidently “Yellow Journalism” isn’t dead either

  • tycahill

    That pretty chart at the top of the article sure is deceptive. It’s showing proportions, but it doesn’t look that way. How do we know that web use is on the decline? All we know is that video has a higher proportion than web, but web USE may actually be growing. How about some hard numbers for us to look at instead of fancy chart that blurs meaning?

  • recoveringtechie

    The graph is very misleading, it tries to correlate usage with importance which is just plain wrong. If importance were factored then DNS would have the largest slice of all because none of the other stuff would work without it. Of course video and p2p are larger, that content takes more bandwidth. Duh. While some of the other points are valid, the use of this sort of illustration turns me off from the overall message.

  • wanderlost

    The look and usability of the Web is evolving, dead it is not

    what kgbsc said earlier on:

    2) A facebook or twitter app is still connecting to a web server somewhere. It’s still using the web.

    3) Using bits transferred as a measure of how the internet is being used is not accurate, as “apps” like video (which are accessed through web browsers) consume far more badnwidth than html, yet for each video watched, it is possible that 100 web pages are accessed. Last time I checked, Youtube is a website that uses static web servers (web 1.0 technology) to present all those videos that consume all that bandwidth.

  • angelux

    I think you are right, but in a very centralized way, this is just for certain places. Here in México is just not true. It is true that it went down but it is not dying. There are still a lot of sites that capture all the audiences and the only thing happening here is that the web is becoming just for certain amount of people; like everything it had a boom in the year 2000 because it was the “new” toy, but the usability didn’t ended. And just so you know, not every person in the world has a smartphone, ipad or gadgets like that, would like to have one, but don’t. I’m just typing this so everybody knows that there are more people in the internet that aren’t familiar with this kind of life you are suggesting. In the end you have a point, just not as big as you made me think it is.

  • awnpromo

    I think the author is making a rather clear distintion between the web and the internet. People are turning more to mobile devices and apps to search, but the more traditional methods of typing in a url or doing a search still apply.

  • adoo

    It’s all evolution. Dial-up used to be the greatest thing since slice bread. Now it rarely used or promoted. These fads such as Blackberry, G3 and G4 will come and go but it all comes down to one thing. An exchange of information. The tremendous progress this technology has achieved can be difficult to keep up with. Prince stated a few weeks ago that the internet is over. Myself, I don’t even own a cell phone. I’ll stick with a desk-top for now.

  • o1iver

    @wanderlost: the author distinguishes between the web and the net. What he means is that the twitter app is using the net (to communicate with the server). but the user is not actually using the web (in the traditional sense).

    @lpress: I think many people use applications to use YouTube these days (ex: YouTube for iPhone) and in that sense are not using the web, but the net (^^). Anyway it doesn’t matter. Watching YouTube is not using the web in the sense that you are surfing from site to site. Is Facebook a website or an application. I am not sure the distinction is clear these days…Yes it uses HTML, but it feels more like an application than a traditional website.

    I must say that I agree with the author in this case. I am a power user, yet still find myself accessing the same few sites 90% of the time. Maybe Facebook, Gmail and YouTube are websites (in port 80 sense), but to me they are no longer websites but rather application.

  • cameleo_salamander

    Can’t say anything really now, what I wanted to express have already been said by others. I don’t agree with the author.

  • saritascarlett

    I do have a problem with the basic argument of this theory, you cannot compare the traffic generated by videos with that produced by pages, which is by far insignificant. This comparison cannot be made by using traffic statistics which deep down use “bytes” as measure. I am not taking sides here, but please use something relevant.

  • jav1231

    That should ensure people pontificate for awhile.

  • aaronfield

    Well…It is not dead and I don’t think it will going to dead anytime. I don’t know the future of it.But it’s become a part of our life.

    Bankruptcy

  • silnan

    A counter example to this debate
    The web is dead?

  • mesoameric

    We are going to have to fight to retain open standards and peer-to-peer performance without penalization (i.e. network neutrality), given the hierarchy/vertical-monopoly-building forces at work. Ironically, it was these very open standards and peer/edge dominated architecture that allowed the now-monopolies to forge their new business models in the first place. Now they will want to make deals with pipe-providers to prioritize their traffic. We need to keep the ability to

    ride a horse across the open range and camp there, even as the
    climate-controlled pneumatic pod-train tubes start to dominate the net landscape.

  • cduwel

    I would have liked to read the article about “The Web is Dead” but due to the fancy formatting I was unable to make a copy in Word and print it out. Let me know when it’s available in a more reader friendly format.
    Thanks

  • Angryrider

    I say the web is dead because it represents both a treasure trove and maybe a garbage dump of information. It is something that we can use to learn more about the world we live in. With all these apps and programs designed to mostly entertain us and connect us through trivial things, the web is being pushed down into soft peat.

  • remko232

    Perhaps it will take some time before I fully realize the importance of this article but for now understanding that “the notion of the Web as the ultimate marketplace for digital delivery is now in doubt.” is an open door as this is an continuous daily life situation. Things change due to different views or insight. That’s normal. And so it is equally normal with the internet. Perhaps now we see that for specific information people are willing to pay (as in apps) and the web will be used for other things like reading very long articles in two rows like the above and/or companies will use it as one way of servicing their customers (helpdesk, selling stuff, beholding reputation and gain profit from that and so many other things. New thoughts, new principles. Some could call it evolution. Again, perhaps the article will give a backwards insight in some time. For now I wish everyone the best of luck and use whatever suits you. The business people will get to you anyway. And that’s OK.

  • josephrot

    Why all this fuss ?

    The Web is the vehicle or backbone transport system, and the apps are amongst the varying digital items that are transported. In the past, current and future, it has, does and will “do” or be even more, which is exactly what’s expected.

    So what of it ?

  • wroadd

    What is the measurement unit of y-axis on the first diagram? Numbers of started download per year, data size, percentage of used bandwidth?

  • turnip

    Facebook is not an app. It’s a web site. There is an (ch)iphone app. 45m (ch)iphones != 500m facebook users! There is an (ch)ipad app. 5m (ch)ipads != 500m facebook users! etc. etc. Might have been an interesting article if not so overstated.

  • Blackjack

    Just got my Wired mag in the mail yesterday 8/22. This was the cover article and the cover graphic and it was posted on the web about a week before my mag came. It used to be that paying subscribers would get additional articles. Then it went to the point that we would at least get the articles first. Now we get the articles after everyone else gets them for free. So, now what am i paying for? It doesn’t seem like the Web is dead, it seems like my subscription to WIRED will soon be dead.

  • jammele

    I totally agree with Chris Anderson. I wrote on the same subject on my blog in April immediately after I got my iPad. The post “iPad is the Google Killer” has many of the same themes. Once you get over your fear of the Web being on of many ways we’ll access the internet, you’ll see the truth. http://melesmusings.com/2010/04/06/ipad-is-the-google-killer/

  • rgrossi

    Looking at traffic doesn’t show the whole picture though. A 15 minute video I just watched could use 100mb of data, but the 15 minutes I spent reading this HTML article was probably only 1k of data. But looking at a chart of where the traffic is going it would seem that people spend much more time watching videos than reading some text which takes up much less space.

  • sabatizer

    Paging Edward Tufte…
    I would love to see a revised chart that shows the growth of total volume of internet traffic, broken down by percentage. I suspect web use is growing, just not in proportion to other internet uses.
    Even more, I’d like to see a chart that shows volume based on task. For example visiting twenty web pages might create as much traffic as watching one video. Is it fair to imply a video is more important than a webpage simply because the video moves more bits?

  • hansoloz

    did the cell phone “die” when the iphone hit the market? the title of the article really should be “rebirth of the web”…

  • incogito

    “Radio has no future.” – Lord Kelvin, 1897.

  • deannalawrence

    Thank you Wired…Simply Thank you!

  • RogerWilson

    The Web Ain’t Dead http://bit.ly/aintdead but we should prepare for another long tale!

  • john_titor

    I think I’m going to start using the word “web” exclusively when referring to the aethersphere, just to be a dick.

  • tinacart

    Okay, Wired.com…if you’re so convinced the Web is dead, then put your money where your mouth is: shut down your website permanently. I triple-dog-dare ya.

  • stiemark

    Why does Chris Anderson keep using phrases like “open web” vs “closed platform” and “free” vs “paid services” to try and differentiate the web and apps? Whether I use the built in Mail app or Google Mobile on my iPhone or use gmail.com in a browser, I’m still hitting the same closed system that is Gmail. The same exact server farm will deliver a video from YouTube whether it’s being requested by a YouTube app or a Flash widget in my browser. Ditto for Facebook statuses. Ditto for eBay auctions. Ditto for FarmVille crops. Ditto for Twitter tweets. They’re all free however I access them. If anything, i would argue that these apps have given us freedom. I can now sit in front of my computer and bid on an eBay auction, walk away and continue to monitor it from my phone whether I’m on the couch or the beach. I’m not shackled to my desk any more. Now THAT’S open.

  • michaeldaehn

    “Wired declares the Web is dead – people are using applications instead.”
    @Poet_Tweets on Twitter

  • BrianSmith

    If you play this podcast backwards it sounds like Chris is saying “Paul is Dead”….

  • 1sai

    Seems like John Chambers had his hands on that chart, showing video traffic! Besides that, I personally think the article is true from a blind users point of view. The web will always be there – rather pushed into background as a distributed vault.

  • fbagirov

    As the front end role of the mobile becomes bigger than PC, the role of mobile apps does grow. However, there are few factors:
    1) adoption – according to the various polls, users and companies prefer mobile sites to mobile applications, at least for now.
    2) costs – it is cheaper to build a mobile website that is browsable by iPhone, Android and other platforms, rather than application for each of them, especially the non-open ones like iPhoneOS. Companies already made huge investments into their websites, and some would not even exist (online businesses) if there wouldn’t be a web.
    3) The web is a layer that makes easier to navigate the internet, and will not go away .

    Of course, user adoption will decide how fast, if at all, the web will go away.

  • njsmyth

    I disagree with many of those commenting in that I think this is an important trend and that we will lose opportunities for shared/open spaces as Internet use becomes more and more fragmented. Thanks to the authors in writing an article that has generated a lot of thought (and responses!). I’ve written more about my reactions here: If The Web is Really Dead, What Have We Lost?: http://njsmyth.wordpress.com/2010/08/23/if-the-web-is-really-dead-what-have-we%C2%A0lost/

  • heyitsminic

    @howardlindzon and @cdixon on The Web is Dead http://stk.ly/cFoA7o

  • thedeterminator

    come on… this article is bogus. I mean, yes iphones and apps are getting more and more popular. It doesn’t take a research analyst to figure that out. So web designers like me are going to be on the streets in five years? I doubt it. The web will never go away. It is here to stay. Since when is html, php and flash ever going to go away? I better email fullsail.edu and tell them they are teaching out of date products. This article is making a bold claim.

  • RogerWilson

    Curious how most of the commentary seems to be about Anderson’s side of the peice not Wolff’s This is all pretty good biz-entertainment even if it is not reliable information http://bit.ly/aintdeadyet

  • JuanPerez

    I think part of the confusion is that the article seems to be discussing Web 1.0 and Web 2.0 as it relates to Personal Information Management and Personal Information Managers. I don’t believe the Web is actually dead but morphing into something new. To navigate and interact in the new environment the requirement will be a comprehensive Personal Interactive Information Management Site (PIIMS)which uses both the internet and applications.

  • erickmott

    This cover story certainly got my attention and helps to sell magazines off the rack.

    I first saw this as a Facebook post from either a friend or Mashable; can’t remember who but it really doesn’t matter. Scanned the article via social media and then a few days later I saw it in the San Francisco Airport (SFO) on my way to a Sitecore Summit in Copenhagen. Bought the magazine and took a picture of the cover via my iPhone — emailed it to our CMO to indicate I would touch on this point of view during an executive presentation regarding traditional and digital media integration.

    Read the article on the plane, updated my PPT to highlight how the Web has evolved with iterations (i.e. orginal Web, Web 2.0, social Web, mobile Web and real-time Web) and to make the distinction between Web (presentation/interaction/commerce) and Internet (IP/TCP).

    Absolutely true that “apps” on smartphones and elsewhere are growing in popularity and consumption. But let’s remember that people, businesses and organizations will always rely on public websites and digital experiences that are intended to communicate, engage, support transactions, and help grow and serve communities online and off.

    By the way, the experience I descibed above with this Wired article and point of view could only have happened with relevant/great content and the Web as a primary enabler.

  • hannibal64

    I wonder if that graph above is based on users or bandwidth usage. I suspect it is the latter.

    That said: since the Internet is dragging everyone in, it shouldn’t surprise us that groups of users with different priorities are now being served with a variety of applications and ways of accessing the resources of the web. It has become a globalized extension of our impulse to form communities.

  • luispeaze

    Chris Anderson and Michael Wolff you two are on the too fast lane trying to grab the trees half body out the window downhill aimslessly. Have you tried to enjoy the ride instead? This is Luís Peazê who came all the way down up from the late 1970´s where computers had about 12k of memory and I used to write love letters in alphanumeric and hexadecimal.

  • mgerring

    Yeah. I’ll bet Conde Nast really, really wishes all of this were true, especially that self-indulgent bit about how the media empires of yesteryear can come back and crush those barbarians at the gates.

    I can almost hear your editors and owners gloating from behind that graf, salivating at the possibility that anyone is going to take it seriously, and for a return to the days of top-down media control that nobody except for them wants to return to.

    This article is staggering for the number of times it says something that is simply not true, most jarringly in the opening paragraph, a barrage of things I do from my web browser that you insist I do not do from my web browser. I get the impression that for as much as you are explaining something, you are also trying to conjure it into being. And some of us just aren’t stupid enough to fall for that.

    You give two small mentions to HTML5 in this whole article, and you don’t explain what it is or what it can do. You talk about the age of web applications as if it had already come and gone, when in reality it’s only just started. I don’t think this is an accident, as Conde Nast would much rather have the Web disappear entirely than be forced to actually innovate.

    You will be proven wrong, just like Wired was in 1997. And you can take that iPad app and stick it up your ass.

  • Newtonizer

    I’m all for it. Replace the browser, bring on the apps. Whatever, let’s just move forward, always.

  • iPathSolutions

    Finally, someone who gets it. Websites were commercialized over 15 years ago. Yes, a website for brand presence but functionality must move to Apps. Apple has even made the keyboard an App. What will die next: Email (we use it to do everything…like using Excel to do everything), BlackBerry (along with middle management), Cable companies (they will no longer program you and fill your day with bad shows…you will be in charge of what, when and where you get your video content), Poor Productivity (corporations will finally spend dollars on computers that work – Macs)

  • spacecat

    You guys are SUCH drama queens. Anyone would think that a call had gone out to boost newsstand sales by plonking a large, alarming proclamation in stark black letters on a vivid red cover ..

  • idiganalytics

    “The “WorldWideWeb” is a “web” of “hypertext documents” viewed by “browsers” using a client–server architecture.” (ref 1990, Berners-Lee, Cailliau – http://www.w3.org/Proposal.html). As such, Facebook, Youtube, Google et al *are* the Web. None would work without hypertext transfer protocol (http)!

    The article is misleading, and the graphic grossly so – comparing apples to oranges: FTP, eMail, newsgroups? None of those employ http!!

    None of us can get to anything on the internet without addressable points (URIs, URLs) and a way to view content, whether words or video (HTML). “The Web is Dead” is a sensationalist headline that I find deeply offensive – insulting to my intelligence and that of the millions of others who do digital deeds.

    The article did offer interesting discourse – but at what price? Ignoble sir, retract! Unless you do, we will all believe you really are the idiot this article makes you seem.

  • samuelrealtalk

    Kinda far out there if you ask me!

  • ReaM

    Well, let’s not forget, that VIDEO takes a LOT more traffic compared to web. Which means, the traffic is higher for the same time a user spends on web. In the end it means, the 51% of traffic used by video is FAR LESS user activities than the 23% of web browsing.

    Peer to Peer means video games?

  • mdobbs

    Great read and food for thought. Take it with a grain of salt yes!

    - per JPP’s comment: “Interesting article – however it’s based on a flawed premise. Traffic volume does not equal usage. For example this page, compressed, is about 60KB a single youtube video is 100 times that but takes the same amount of time to digest. If you want to understand usage you need to look at how much time a users spend on each activity not on how many bytes gets sent.”h

    Regardless, gets the brain moving about what opportunities are coming beyond HTTP/web.

  • eforblue

    “The web is dead!” I use that sentence in my cover letter when I am looking for a new job lately….

  • unplu

    I couldn’t find a direct link for the sources behind your graph by following your reference to ‘Cisco estimates based on CAIDA publications, Andrew Odlyzko’. Could you provide a direct link to the numbers? Many thanks.

  • Hank

    This article is a lengthy exploration of an improperly framed argument. The web is dead because more bits are moved via BitTorrent and Skype Calls? Judging the business significance of the web by volume of bits moved is like measuring the importance of a new technology by its physical weight. It’s not how many bits move through each protocol that matters it’s which bits. You cite Skype, Pandora and Netflix as examples of this “post-web” trend, but each one of these companies has a website which is used for some of the company’s most important features (like payment). The app/web difference is only a means to an end. You are confusing a short-term shift in delivery mechanism with a long-term shift in business model. How un-Wired of you.

  • tomreavey

    This article reads like an Apple advertisement (typical Wired to ass kiss Apple). As others mentioned apps are just tools to access web content. This article was by far the worst, most disillusioned I’ve read from Wired.

  • swagval

    Weak. Really weak logic. If apps and their monetization were everything, we’d still be using desktop software to do everything. Companies like Peoplesoft would have never survived.

    The only reason apps are popular is because, like the desktop Web browser of 1998, the interface controls suck and are completely limiting. Once that improves, there’s going to be no idiotic sense to making a custom application for each mobile platform for each Web site a user visits. That’s just ridiculous, and we’re in a ridiculous transitional moment in time because of it.

    You confused the means for the ends here.

  • riyadsoft

    good

  • MarcOliver

    When the web is dead – when did the website died?

  • olinhyde

    Brilliant assessment. I think the article failed to address the larger issues of how “Big Data” and 15+ years of noise pollution from SEO have created evolutionary pressure for a semantic Web 3.0 to evolve.

  • markbrown4

    That graph is completely ridiculous. Your distinction is moot. The chief web standards will exist in some form for longer than I will.

  • tattoobox

    The “web” as a term was always there to describe the truth behind the internet. a single line that goes to a junction then connects to three lines that meet their junctions then connects to nine lines and their junctions, and so on into infinity. However in the 90’s there really was no infinity. There literally was an end of the internet. In the early days, you could see all the site there was to see. it just would have taken you until now to have done so with your dial up connection. Now we have far more advanced coding, search algorithms, and juiced up boxes to connect/upload/download at speeds unfathomable 30 years ago. Not to mention the peripherals, webcam, messaging devices, mobile devices, web reactive everything. nothing that plugs into the wall now does so without a counterpart somewhere doing it in wireless. Forgot to turn off your TV, do it by Iphone App while you’re digging into that chicken bucket at KFC.

    If the web of the late 80s early 90s was like a spiders web, then the web we have today is like nothing we can describe in those terms. It should be that the “Web” is dead because it is obsolete in context. what we have now is more like a chrysalis of a butterfly, just if that “chrysalis” was surrounding 6,889,129,025(world population) people and made from 6,845,609,960(internet population) threads of silk.
    Yoshi ~ http://www.tattooboxmontreal.com/blog

  • Meditation Walk 55 minutes ago - The article & comments are much needed and if you mean the "Web is Dead" it probably has never lived yet ..as in free speech drowning in shit, you are right ...as surviving media activists "for open and free public access to public media " that created / originated the prototypes for what are now called web pages, we were predicting and warning of the inevitable military industrial dis-ease establishment media monopoly control of The Matrix back in '72 ...the points about bandwidth vs. usage that many of the commentators keep reiterating is base on the mistaken assumption that "the web" is the "internet" ...like "intercourse" is the same as "procreation" ...it is not. Simply put ...you have to pay extra for commercial bandwidth and that means you lose free speech because the bandwidth hogs clog your channels with info noise and info overload..."THEY" and "THEM" vampire suck our intellectual property then "marginalize,quarantine,homogenize then clone it" and sell it back to us at $60 - $80 per month ...the brave new world ...entertaining us to death ...this is not a living Web but a cesspool...so sink or swim you gotta pay ... http://GeorgeKasey.com

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