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Introduction to the Real-Time Web

Written by Marshall Kirkpatrick / May 12, 2009 3:14 PM / 10 Comments

realtimewebintro.jpgReal-time information delivery is fast emerging as one of the most important elements of our online experience. No more waiting for the Pony Express to deliver a parcel cross-country, no more waiting for web services to communicate from one polling instance to another. This is information being available to you at nearly the moment it's produced, whether you're watching for it or not.

Just this afternoon, Google declared real-time search to be one of the biggest unsolved challenges it faces. This morning the NYTimes put a link to a new real-time view of all its news stories on the front page of its site. Last night Facebook announced a new feature that will let users be notified instantly when their friends interact with media related to themselves on the site. This is big stuff, but what does it all mean? We offer below a collection of readings on the real-time web. Give these articles some time and you'll have a solid foundation to understand, discuss and act on this emerging paradigm.

"Instant Messaging" as the Foundation of the Future of the Web

Could Instant Messaging (XMPP) Power the Future of Online Communication?

In January of 2008 we looked at enterprise collaboration suite Jive Software and the company's belief that the Instant Messaging technology XMPP could serve as a foundation for the future of a real-time web. In that article we explained that just like AJAX has made web pages instantly responsive to clicks, without having to request a whole new web page from the server, an IM-style web could radically speed up collaboration online. If implemented well, it could make for a much more pleasing user experience, too: who would want to go back to a web without the responsive web pages that AJAX has enabled? Jive pointed to a number of examples of companies using the open-source real-time technology XMPP, including Tivo.

See also:
The Man Who Made Gmail Says Real-Time Conversation Is What's Next
Seesmic + Twhirl Is a Vision of the Web's Future
Sorry Google, You Missed the Real-Time Web

Experience it for Yourself

Make Google Real-Time With Twitter Search Add-on

The best way to understand the value of real-time information delivery may be to experience it yourself, and one of the easiest ways to do that is with Mark Carey's "Twitter on Google Search Results Pages" plugin. It's hot stuff and has honestly changed the way all of us here at ReadWriteWeb use Google more than anything else has in a long time.

See also:
Five Sites That Let You Experience the Real-Time Web Today
FriendFeed Opens the Floodgates with Real-Time Updates
TweetMeme Live: See What's Big on Twitter Right Now - TweetMeme is one of the most innovative players in real-time technology today and is a must-watch startup.
OneRiot Launches Alternative Twitter Search Engine - OneRiot just starting to do something that Google will no doubt aim to do as well: deep search into links shared across the real-time web (including outside of Twitter). Twitter worked with OneRiot to enable this new product launch.
Surchur Relaunches Their "Dashboard to the Now"
Real-Time News: PubSub Gets Ready for a Comeback

Big Picture: What It All Means for Our Future

Faster - Why Constant Stress Is Part of Our Future

In April 2008, ReadWriteWeb guest author Alex Iskold examined why the real-time web is inevitable and what it means for all of us. Just another of Alex's many mind-expanding articles over the years.

See also:
Three Models of Value in the Real-Time Web - Our discussion of how the real-time web will be leveraged by individuals and web services.
Baynote: Does Focusing on Real-Time Behavior Trump Amazon's Technology? - Recommendation engine Baynote believes it can move the economic needle with its real-time technology.

Other Resources Off-Site

We've written about the real-time web a lot, but these are some of our favorite resources written by other people.

Le Web '09 - this year's theme is... the real-time web. So watch that space.
Activity Streams Discussion Group - Though not explicitly focused on real time, this community movement to build a standard data format for delivering user activity streams from site to site is very related.
Mining the Thought Stream - Erick Schonfeld discusses the huge potential of sentiment tracking and topic search from real-time streams like Twitter. If you enjoy that, you might enjoy our post written two weeks earlier, How a Facebook Sentiment Engine Could be Huge.

Those are some of our favorite resources on this important topic. We'd love to learn about more from readers. Good luck to us all in the coming real-time web!

Title photo: Listen to BREAKING ATOMS on KZSC, Creative Commons by Flickr user Heart of Oak.


Comments

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  1. We're offering an XMPP 'pipe' that businesses can subscribe to that ends in an XMPP desktop app that integrates IM, micro-blogging and anything else delivered via XMPP.

    This service allows companies to apply their corporate filtering and archiving policies to the XMPP data stream in much the same way that our managed email security customers do.

    The early release of the desktop app will be a free download from ximpp.com

    Posted by: David Banes | May 12, 2009 5:03 PM



  2. Nice post, although I have to admit the use of Main Source's album cover drew me in...

    Posted by: Will | May 12, 2009 6:04 PM



  3. It's clear that realtime is the 2009 version of widgets. Remember them, Marshall? Realtime is cool, and I love watching the Twitter stream for keywords in Tweetdeck, but then I'm a super geek myself. The vast majority of normal people just need information to help them get through the day, like deciding which painkiller to give their kids. I recently wrote up the issue of Motrin's ad disaster still being prominent in Google's search, and the fact that 165,000 people do a search for Motrin each month:
    http://www.alertrank.com/mrgooglealerts/2009/05/10/realtime-search-vs-permanent-reputation/

    In the long run, more purchasing decisions will be made through Google searches, making a brand's permanent reputation more important than their realtime search results.

    Posted by: Adam Green | May 12, 2009 8:03 PM



  4. There goes my afternoon!

    Off to explore those links, thanks Marshall ;-)

    All success
    Dr.Mani

    Posted by: Dr.Mani | May 13, 2009 1:30 AM



  5. Hi Marshall,

    We believe real-time search is yet another over hyped concept.

    The big deal is *discovery*, not search when it comes to the real-time web. You can't be actively searching for something you don't know is happening...

    Posted by: Pierre | May 13, 2009 1:33 AM



  6. Real time is overrated with abysmal signal to noise ratio.

    Posted by: vicaya | May 13, 2009 11:26 AM



  7. what about this new search engine, it looks amazing.
    http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2009/05/blog_epicenter_0511_wolframlevy/

    Posted by: Lance | May 14, 2009 5:36 AM



  8. SOHBET

    Posted by: chat Author Profile Page | July 5, 2009 3:06 AM



  9. In that article we explained that just like AJAX has made web pages instantly responsive to clicks, without having to request a whole new web page from the server, an IM-style web could radically speed up collaboration online.

    Posted by: ugg | September 10, 2009 1:10 AM



  10. Selam

    Posted by: araba | December 21, 2009 12:26 AM



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