Le Real Time Web Week

by Kris_Tuttle on December 8, 2009

Thanks to Google this week already started off with a focus on the real-time web, based on mobil­ity and new devices with sen­sors, cam­eras, micro­phones, HD dis­plays and speak­ers.   On Mon­day Google pre­sented a slew of new fea­tures and tech­nolo­gies aimed at improv­ing search by loca­tion, by voice, and by sight.   When com­bined with enhanced real-time search, one that includes a vari­ety of con­tent from sources like twit­ter, location-aware appli­ca­tions and fixed search con­tent, the real-time web becomes a much richer expe­ri­ence than what we have known so far with things like IM and SMS.

Tomor­row and Thurs­day we will be attend­ing Le Web 2009 in Paris who has cho­sen “real time web” as the theme.  As with all Le Web events there is a fairly diverse range of con­tent across three dif­fer­ent pro­grams but the usual sus­pects (Twit­ter, Google, Face­book) will all be in atten­dance and elab­o­rat­ing on real-time as the lat­est “mode” of web development.

We wouldn’t put “real-time” as a true facet of tech­nol­ogy as it relates to our work.  Latency has been a key fac­tor in tech­nol­ogy usage for thirty years.  We did include an analy­sis of this and other fea­tures for what we view as the ulti­mate Inter­net archi­tec­ture in our Feb­ru­ary 2007 research monthly (pdf).  IBM funded many stud­ies that demon­strated the dra­matic increases in pro­duc­tiv­ity and value that came from “sub-second respond time” as we called it back then.  As with many things on the web and in the cloud old things are new again.  What’s new now is the abil­ity to deliver instant responses across appli­ca­tions, net­works, dis­tances and devices.

What’s so pow­er­ful about this notion today is the rich­ness that can be brought into the realm of real-time use: Peo­ple, places, things, and all related infor­ma­tion in one place and cur­rent to within a few sec­onds ago.  As we’ve writ­ten before the ini­tial oohs and aahs of insight will be com­ing from so-called aug­mented real­ity and real-time social net­work­ing appli­ca­tions on the iPhone and the like.

From an invest­ment stand­point we con­tinue to focus on the mobile seg­ment of this space with com­pa­nies like Apple, Google, Research in Motion and Motorola being the ones to own.  Based on our IV work it seems that Research in Motion has the most near-term upside here.  RIM is also too strate­gic to not be acquired by some­one like Microsoft, HP, or IBM.

More broadly we know that cloud-based GPU com­put­ing is already in early deploy­ment which will add yet another growth story for both Nvidia and AMD.

If it feels like just the begin­ning it’s because it is.  There are many more related themes to this trend as it devel­ops rang­ing from wired and wire­less band­width, con­tent, devices, cloud ser­vices and infra­struc­ture, new soft­ware infra­struc­ture and on and on.

Thanks to the expo­nen­tial pace of tech­no­log­i­cal advance and our lin­ear per­cep­tions, we know that many of these advances will seem to hap­pen “all of a sud­den” in the next few years.

For more infor­ma­tion on the Google Search brief­ing there is a sum­mary here on TechCrunch.  More infor­ma­tion on the Le Web 2009 pro­gram can be found on the Le Web event web­site. The events on Wednes­day and Thurs­day are sup­posed to be avail­able via webcast.

[Dis­clo­sure: Research 2.0 has model port­fo­lio posi­tions in Google, Apple, Research in Motion and Nvidia.]

{ 1 comment }

Dan Olsen December 9, 2009 at 5:40 AM

Good post, and I’m glad Le Web is focusing on the real-time web. I agree that we are just in the beginning of the real-time web. My team and I participated in ReadWriteWeb’s Real-Time Summit in October where there were a lot of great conversations on this topic.

At my startup YourVersion http://www.yourversion.com, we believe that real-time discovery offers the opportunity to create a lot of value for users. We launched our real-time discovery engine YourVersion in September at TechCrunch50 where we won the People’s Choice Award. YourVersion continuously discovers new, personally relevant content for users tailored to their specific interests.

You mentioned that you were especially interested in mobile. We have a free iPhone app and have been excited to see usage exceed our expectations. It seems that people are increasingly using their mobile devices during otherwise “idle” time to stay on top of things.

I wanted to invite you to try out YourVersion to hear your reaction. I look forward to hearing any feedback or suggestions you may have.

Cheers and happy discovering,
Dan Olsen

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