Web 3.0 Applications. A common requirement for a Web 3.0 application is the ability to digest large-scale information and transform it into factual information and useful applications for users.
Some of the companies that develop or have products that they turn into Web 3.0 applications include Amazon, Apple, and Google. Two examples of applications that use Web 3.0 technologies are Siri and Wolfram Alpha.
Siri
Apple’s voice-controlled AI assistant has gotten smarter over the years, expanding its capabilities since it first appeared on the iPhone 4S. Siri identifies the user’s speech in conjunction with artificial intelligence to carry out complex and personalized commands.
Today, Siri and other AI assistants like Amazon’s Alexa and Samsung’s Bixby can understand requests like “where is the nearest burger joint” and immediately deliver the correct information to the user.
Wolfram Alpha
Wolfram Alpha is a “computational knowledge engine” that answers your questions through direct understanding, rather than giving you a list of web pages like search engines do. If you want a practical comparison, search “england vs brazil” in both Wolfram Alpha and Google and see the difference.
Because Google is the most popular search engine, it returns World Cup results even if you haven’t included “football” as a keyword. Alpha, on the other hand, will give you a detailed comparison of the two countries as you asked. This is the main difference between Web 2.0 and 3.0.
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