population uses the World Wide Web? Or that the next billion users of
the internet will come from emerging markets like Brazil, China,
India, Indonesia and Russia?
The future of the web will be under discussion at the 20th
international World Wide Web Conference (WWW2011) here, a prestigious
event that India, with one of the world's fastest growing population
of internet users, will host for the first time. Beginning March 28,
it will be attended by 800 delegates from 49 countries.
"The conference will debate the future of the Web, which is important
for India," S. Sadagopan, director of the International Institute of
Information Technology (IIIT) in Bangalore, told a news agency.
"It is more relevant for India, especially in the context of high
mobile penetration among the younger generation, improving literacy
levels, large young and English-speaking population."
IIIT, Bangalore, in cooperation with the IIIT, Hyderabad, and the
Institute of Information Technology, Bombay (Mumbai), is hosting the
event.
The five-day meet has the theme "web for all". It will debate
technical challenges in overcoming the digital divide and ways to
bring the web to underserved populations. The event will be addressed
by Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the WWW Conference director and inventor of
the web. It will also have research papers that can shape the web of
tomorrow.
World Wide Web currently has two billion users. However, of the 4.8
billion people living in Asia and Africa, only one in five has access
to the web. In India, for instance, the 100 million web users
constitute less than 10 percent of the total population of 1.2
billion.
The event will discuss challenges like developing content in local
languages, poor PC penetration and lack of infrastructure to connect
the next billion users.
WWW2011 will discuss, debate and help set the future direction of the
Web. It will focus on the regional and global impact of expanding open
Web platform for application development.
Tim Berners-Lee will deliver a visionary keynote address on "designing
the web for an open society".
With the social media witnessing explosive growth, there will also be
a panel discussion on "Social media: source of information or bunch of
noise?".
According to conference organizers, Wikipedia has over 3.5 million
pages with descriptions of entities. Flickr members have uploaded over
five billion photos, YouTube has 35 hours of videos uploaded to the
site each minute, and Twitter users generate 65 million tweets a day.
Is there useful information in social media like tweets, how to sift
through the vast amounts of social media and filter out the
spam/offensive content are some of the questions the participants will
debate.
The participants include chief information officers, IT directors and
decision-makers from the public and private sector and researchers,
technologists and developers from institutions and technology-driven
businesses.
There will be 81 technical papers, 90 posters, 25 demos, 12 tutorials,
nine workshops and a PhD Symposium.
"It is a research conference. It brings out best of the research in
the world," said Sadagopan. Referring to the quality of research, he
said 80 best papers were selected from almost 700 papers submitted
from around the world.
The accepted papers have been put into various categories like search,
local language content, access, privacy, avoiding pornography, data
mining.
These research papers shape the Web of tomorrow. Technologies and
scientific innovations come from such a research.
"Many technologies which we take for granted today in fact came from
award- winning papers of yesterday."
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