Canadian tech journalist and podcaster Jesse Brown has a go at Wired Magazine’s rather inane story that “The Web is Dead,” something they first predicted back in 1997.
(How’s that whole ‘webby, deady’ thing workin’ out for ya there?)
I’ve enjoyed Jesse’s Search Engine podcast for a few years now, and tend to believe him more than I believe most people when it comes to technology. So if he says Wired Magazine is staffed by doom-predicting mouth breathers, I’ll believe him.
(Note: He didn’t actually say that, I’m just saying I would believe it if he did.)
(Note #2: I wouldn’t actually believe it, because the people at Wired are “wicked smaht.” But I would believe that a significant percentage of them breathe through their mouths. And get a lot of stuff wrong when predicting things are dead.)
Other things that people say are dead that are not dead, and are further from death than Wired Magazine
- Facebook is NOT a Google Killer
- The Era of Calling Things “Dead” Is Dead. Or Should Be.
- Social Media Fans Use Email More, Not Less
- Is Social Media Making Corporate Websites Irrelevant? Hardly.
I think people need to stop saying things are dead just for the shock value, like the doomsayer from Facebook is NOT a Google Killer, who thought Google was going to be dead and gone completely within five years (YouTube anyone?).
The only thing that ends up being shocked are the doomsayers when they realize their average is 2 – 9 (looking at YOU, Wired Magazine). Quit being the magazine that cried “wolf.” You’re creating about as much drama as a high school prom, but with a lower payoff.
You used to be cool, Wired, but now you’re just coming across as an attention-seeking drama queen.



