WEB 2.0
- Darly Cardona
- 18 nov 2022
- 1 Min. de lectura
Actualizado: 20 nov 2022
We are referring to a model of Web pages that facilitate the transmission of information, interoperability and collaboration between its users, through a design focused on their needs, rather than those of the company.

The term originated in 2004, as a product of Tim O'Reilly's conference on the future of the Internet, and plays with the usual denomination for computer programs (1.0, 1.1., 1.2, 2.0, etc.)as they are updated and improved. However, it does not really refer to a technical improvement of the network, but to a different way of understanding it.
Some examples of Web 2.0 pages are social networks, wikis, Internet sales pages or other collaborative projects in which users must generate content and not simply consume it.
“They are those programs or websites available to carry out certain functions within the Internet, and that can be applied to other vital aspects, such as learning or teaching."
Social networks
Virtual communities in which people at a distance can communicate in real time by writing (chat), they can have their information publicly available and connect with other people who share their interests, their history or their desires (even romantic ones).
The Wikis
Sites of free access to information through the voluntary accumulation of knowledge, in the manner of the old encyclopedias, but this time organized in a collaborative way: each user contributes their grain of sand.
Blogs
Individual or group pages that serve as newspapers, publications or literary texts, to share various forms of text and story (including audiovisual) using Internet tools and also receiving feedback from readers or followers.
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