We just spent a whole day talking about the real-time web a the RWW Real-Time Web Summit. While the general mood was obviously extremely upbeat, a few sessions at the conference also focused on some of the questions that still remain to be answered. Brizzly's Jason Shellen, for example, asked us what we hated about the real-time web, while Stinky Teddy's David Hardtke focused on how we can make sure that information on the real-time web is credible.
Here is a small selection of the issues that were raised about the current state of the real-time web:
How do we know a user is credible? On the real-time web, we are obviously looking for speed, but that speed obviously comes at a cost. While traditional search engines can rely on PageRank-type algorithms that can give us an idea that a source is credibly and trusted, the real-time web's focus on speed makes this highly impractical. Once we start filtering data, we automatically lose some of the real-time aspects.
Are we trading in freshness for quality? Is quicker really always better and is less really more? After all, how often is the instant timeliness of the real-time web actually really useful?
How can we filter the real-time web? How, for example, can we filter out the most boring people (even though there is social pressure to follow all your friends)? How can we find the most interesting stories? And how can we weed out spam?
Even though many questions were asked about the real-time web and even though many questions remain to be answered, it doesn't come as a surprise that the overall feeling was that the real-time web will soon be a normal part of everybody's experience of the Internet. Now, all we need to figure out how we can extract the most value out of it without being completely overwhelmed by information overload, getting spammed by scammers, or bored to death by those of our friends who feel the need to tweet about what they had for breakfast.
What questions around the real-time web do you think still need to be answered? What is it that bothers you about the real-time web?
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I hate the fact that it's all old news compared to my posts. I make all my posts date the day ahead of real time. Of course you wouldn't know that till you read it making that real time. Real time web is over glorified. It was bound to happen, it can't go any farther ahead other than using some kind of statistical guessing, and news is only read or heard by those that read or listen. Real time web does not occur within ones head.
I hate missing out on parts of the 'flow'. Sometimes you come into the 'flow' at a certain point in time and struggle to catch up on the bits that you missed. And I use my mobile quite a bit and am finding it difficult to sync where I am in the flow when switching between the mobile and the PC.
What do I hate about the Real Time Web, well the fact that you have blogging diarrhoea for one ...
Remember 'less is more' - it applies to the Web too.
Problem is that with social media clutter and redundancy has multiplied...people need someone to cut the clutter, may only 20% of web content matters...show what is meaningful and found useful by others, enable better expression of tacit!