With Web2.0 continuing to grow in popularity many people are asking exactly what is Web 2.0. If it can be summed up into one sentence you would find many interpretations.

In a nutshell, Web 2.0 is a group of powerful applications that improve the way we communicate online.

With that said, imagine what Web 3.0 will be like and how its applications will be different than its predecessor?

One focal point of Web 3.0 will be a much richer semantic interpretation of information that’s being searched out on the Internet.

As we’ve watched the Internet evolve, many people have paid attention to the power of search, what it does, how it generates information, and how that information can be used personally, professionally and through collaboration with others.

While applications will continue to grow and software will expand, the searching power of Web 3.0 will greatly enhance our lives and the people who we interact with.

What makes Web 3.0 a lot different than Web 2.0 is that Web 3.0 builds on certain attributes that have been offered up in previous versions and it enhances them – not just in flat content, such as print material – but also through video, audio and other media formats.

The wonderful thing about Web 3.0 is that it’s new, it will grow and as Web 3.0 takes shape on the Internet, an emerging strategy will come out for people who are continuously working at developing enhancements to it.

Web 3.0 will change many of the things we know about Internet search. What’s promising to Internet users is the accuracy of queried information and the search results.

The improved search results we get will change how we research information, make interpretations of it and use it to better our lives.

What’s nice too, is we will witness first-hand how the Internet will once again change for the better.

In the end, Web 3.0 structured semantics will benefit everyone and numerous new software applications will run on servers, PC workstations, mobile devices and other PC centric hardware.