People, Places, and Things: The Next Generation Web
People, Places, and Things: The Next Generation Web
Abstract
Today's World-Wide Web was designed for sharing information among
many users, yet it lacks abstractions for people and places. Browsing
the Web is a solitary activity because Web clients and servers do not
natively support multi-user interaction. This paper discusses
these limitations in the current Web architecture and proposes
a set of extensions to improve the multi-user, interactive
nature of the Web.