The fundamental idea of this paper is for ChatGPT-like apps to lose natural language for less energy consumption and more determinism in their answers based on controlled natural languages like ACE; for the user to be able to modify this trade-off-ratio at will based on LLMs (which is not possible when starting from a ChatGPT-like app); and to capture this new paradigm in a new type of browser that has natural language as its primary interface, here called a semantic web-first browser.
i’m no longer sure if you’re envisioning a web browser or a website builder. your terminology is all over the place.
and no, the semantic web is in no way an an open, global codebase. it’s just a way of structuring html. i know berners-lee wanted the web to be more like what you are describing but the web we have today is not that. you’d need a new protocol.
I’s blurring the line in-between. It’s trying to set the interaction with the web on a lower level that is closer to the data. It’s like you are live-coding the website you want to use for a specific use-case. But then just call the high-level API-endpoints right away. Basically making the dev-tools and the dev-console of browsers the main way to interact with the web (which assumes a web that is build in a similar fashion).
Yeah, that’s true :(
you should probably also check out beaker browser then, it’s also trying to blur the line.
personally i don’t know if there is an actual benefit. most people seem content not producing things in fields they’re not interested in. we’ll never be able to get everyone on board with making websites no matter how simple the interface, just like we’ll never be able to get everyone on board with gardening or carpentry. if you want to do it, you will learn. if you don’t the learning curve is not the problem.