Posts Tagged ‘Web 2.0’

Creating semantic Web sites could be smooth as Silk

Friday, May 11th, 2012

You can now build and view a Silk Web site that combines lots of information into one single spot, sparing you and others from searching different places for all that data.

Moving from private to public beta today, Silk is an online application that tries to tap into the "semantic" Web by collecting and displaying information from the Internet, from your own documents, and from other sources. As the folks at Silk describe it, the idea is to let people select "the data they want from the mass of information available, and to view and arrange it in ways that make sense to them."

You can create your own Silk-based Web site and view sites already built by others.

Here’s how Silk works.

You first set up your Web site with your own Silk domain name. You then start populating it with pages containing data from any source you choose, such as other Web sites or your own documents and spreadsheets. You then add tags to each page to identify it and connect it to all the other pages on your site. You can also insert widgets to add tables, charts, maps, and other objects.

Of course, building the site is most of the battle as you have to hunt for and gather up all the information you need to add. But after your site is up and running, you can invite other people to add even more information to it, turning it into a collaborative group effort. The more people you invite, the bigger and more comprehensive your site can become.

In one sense, a Silk site is similar to a Wiki in that it unites information from different sources and can grow through the combined efforts of several creators and contributors.

If building your own site is not your thing, you can view sites created by other people.

One Silk site I like is devoted to the Simpsons, offering everything you ever wanted to know about the popular cartoon characters from Springfield. You can browse specific pages on different characters to pick up certain details. For example, the page on Bart provides his full name, date of birth (he’d actually be 30 in real years), his relationships with other characters, and some of the episodes in which he’s appeared.

As with any Web site, all the information is linked together so you can easily jump from one Simpsons character or episode or other tidbit to another.

People have been touting the semantic Web for years. But it’s still a concept that has yet to fully bloom. Silk is in the same boat. Yet the potential is there to be able to provide a great amount of information in one place. The folks behind the application have more tricks in store. So I expect we’ll be hearing more about Silk as it continues to grow.

Source:

http://news.cnet.com/8301-17939_109-57431882-2/creating-semantic-web-sites-could-be-smooth-as-silk/

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Web 2.0 Technologies Allow You to Create Ideas

Tuesday, December 27th, 2011

What are Web 2.0 technologies?

They are what digital natives – think grandchildren – will probably do first when they need help in the future; i.e. summon their electronic social networks to assist them, collaborate together in online environments to solve problems, participate in discussion and share resources.

GoogleDocs

A familiar desktop environment that enables you to create, store and access word processing, spreadsheet and presentations from any computer anywhere, anytime there is Internet access. You can also edit and share documents to work on collaboratively in real time.

Image Generators

Image generators give us new methods for expressing ourselves – a further creative edge to traditional communication formats. You can create a new image, add text to a picture, or design text into a picture. However be warned, exploring image generators results in serious time consuming fun.

Glogster

Glogster enables anyone with a computer, Internet provider or library card to create online posters. Possibilities for use are broad. School project, garage sale, charity announcement, lost dog, etc.

Details and creative liberties in one nice neat electronic location. With a simple drag and drop interface, text, videos, images, audio, graphics data and drawing can be placed in your original work. Make a mistake on the poster paper – simply resize.

Source: http://lakeforest.patch.com/articles/web-2-0-technologies

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How to earn money online – web 2.0 or PPC?

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

So many people are asking yourself, today more than ever before, how to earn money online. Initially when I first started looking at how to earn money online making I desired to nderstand how to help to make money fast and how to help to make money simple. There’s a lot regarding junk on the web however, and my personal first words of advice is actually to do your research around the product or business you want to use to get rid of the frauds. Is someone else is offering the “get rich quick” structure, I might be wary of the provide. In order to help make money quick and help to make money simple you will need to realize how to earn money online along with Yahoo advertising and how to use web 2.0 attributes and also how to generate landing pages.

How to earn money online can be an individual question you’ll need to think about. Initially you have to have products or services to promote. THis can be your personal product/service or you can do something referred to as affiliate marketing online. Affiliate marketing is a good aproach to earn money online if you do not have got your personal product/service. Affiliate marketing online is a ctually marketing a person’s product/service online and receiving a percentage for that selling.

Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/BreakingNews/TechandScience/Story/STIStory_745165.html

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Web development method: agile vs waterfall

Wednesday, August 10th, 2011

As we know, agile development is cheaper, faster, and quicker to respond to changing market demands. Moreover, Agile is more suitable for projects that are amenable to its speed and quick reaction time. Nowadays more traditional waterfall industries are starting to see the value of using this methodology. Agile is most often talked about in terms of modern Web 2.0 applications where we see frequent updates and changes to code as feature sets are enhanced and new functionality is added at a rapid pace. While in waterfall projects, progress is seen as cascading steadily through the phases of conception, initiation, analysis, design, development and testing. It’s very important to understand that Agile is a set of values and principles, not a pre-defined process with obvious areas of limitations.

Source: http://www.cmswire.com/cms/web-cms/web-development-methodologies-agile-vs-waterfall-012266.php

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A New Bubble?

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

We all remember the Internet bubble back in 1999-2000 era. Start-ups were getting huge valuations. The joke then was – if you are 27 years old and not a millionaire, then you are a failure. All you needed was a sign-board saying “new internet company” and stand on Sand Hill Road. Several cars will stop and within hours, you should have a check worth millions as investment.

This is an exaggeration of course. Jeff Bezos of Amazon even said – we spell profit as “prophet”. Then the bubble burst one day and the debris was huge. Hundreds of B2C and B2B companies went belly up.

Now after a decade, we see a bit of a bubble again. The landscape is somewhat different. There is no rush to an IPO, which was the only way to make the founders and investors very rich. Now there is a secondary market that buys stocks off the founders and early employees (and some investors as well). So we see Zynga planning to raise $500m. Groupon raised a huge amount. Kleiner Perkins which missed out on the hottest social networking companies, by focusing on green technology, decided to make up for lost time. Hence they invested $120m in Twitter and also $35m in Facebook at an astronomical valuation of $52B. It sounded like KP just wanted a check mark on its portfolio by investing in Zynga, Twitter, and Facebook. In the latter two, they have no board seat nor significant influence on the management. Everyone seems to come up with another “discount coupon” type company after the success of Groupon. While there is no technological differentiation, it’s an “early-to-market” advantage in building a brand. Zynga, a virtual gaming company, is valued around $10B, while Twitter is rumored to be values at $4B. Google was offering Groupon $6B as a purchase price.

When president Barack Obama visited the Silicon Valley last week, he had dinner with a power group of 12 leaders. Besides the leaders of Cisco, Yahoo, Apple, Oracle, and Genentech, there were the CEO’s of Facebook, Twitter, Netflix, and Google.

For an enterprise software guy like me, it is hard to understand the valuations of social networking and gaming companies. By building a huge clientele, these companies make money on advertising. However, sustainability is another issue. The original Facebook founders and investors are worth obscene amount of money, even before its IPO next year. The only company likely to go for an IPO this year seems to be Linked-In. With huge investment dollars pouring in, these companies do not feel the pressure of seeking an IPO soon. But we may see another mini-bubble building up. So caution is the keyword.

source: http://websphere.sys-con.com/node/1724486

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Intranet 2.0: Integrating Web Apps for True Productivity

Monday, February 21st, 2011

The intranets of yesterday were primarily used for document storage and/or simple news. But the next generation of intranets can be much more, especially when we start integrating web applications. Take SharePoint and Office Web Apps for example.

Office Web Apps and SharePoint

Microsoft launched ‘Office Web Apps’ back in June, primarily as a direct competitor to the more established ‘Google Docs’ . Essentially the suite includes web based versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote.

I’m not going to cover the features and limitations of the software here, but suffice to say each application is a cut down version of its desktop parent. Word and Excel are probably the most advanced, with PowerPoint and OneNote lagging a little way behind.

Microsoft have made the tools available to end users via three different methods:

  • Windows Live (including hotmail, docs.com and more recently Facebook).
  • What is now called ‘Office365’, but was formally the Microsoft ‘Business Productivity Online Services’. BPOS is a cloud based subscription service.
  • Hosted locally as part of a SharePoint server system.

The last two channels are of most interest to us here, where Office Web Apps are used in conjunction with an Intranet or other enterprise systems — email, file storage, communications tool.

The Real Intranet 2.0

The second coming of the Intranet has been long promised. The excitement generated by the hype of the ‘web 2.0’ a few years ago brought us close to this goal, with social networking and community style features changing the way people thought in the enterprise environment. But web applications could offer a true revolution in the workplace, one whose practical applications are much more immediate. A revolution where users are freed from the traditional software model, and the Intranet being the center of the office is finally a reality.

Let us use Office Web Apps and SharePoint as an example. SharePoint has always featured strong document management features, and with the right adoption strategies it is possible to get users thinking of their Intranet as a central secure document repository.

Now we can throw Office Web Apps into the mix. Seamlessly integrated with SharePoint, users can now create, edit and amend Office documents directly in the browser. There is no need to open a desktop application, there is no need to actually have a local app installed at all. Everything can be done through the browser (‘everything’ being not quite ‘everything’ right now, what with the limited feature set of the current release — but let’s put that aside for a moment).

This also frees users from their desktop machines, and allows them to maintain productivity remotely across a range of devices or on the move. The Intranet becomes more than a document store, it now becomes a rich web application in itself.

Microsoft, as you would expect, is not the only game in town. Google Apps have been available for enterprise outfits for some time, and the service has recently been upgraded to offer a wider range of applications. These include services covering streaming media, shared calendars and communications services — proving web apps don’t just need to stick to the traditional office application space.

In fact we should think of web applications, integrated to our Intranets, in as broad as sense as possible. The web is teeming with innovative services and applications. Online photo editing, audio creation, communications, media streaming — the list is almost endless.

The future of Intranets is one where these services are built in, and offer end users a functional toolbox. They no longer need to think of the Intranet as simply a storage area, and something separate to the tools they need to actually generate content and documents. The Intranet could be the center of everything.

Final Thoughts

Whilst remote access and thin client technology are nothing new, the kind of integration we have looked at in this piece is a step change. For a long time people have been told that the Intranet should be the center of their working day, but now this is a distinct possibility. Gone are the days where the Intranet was simply about retrieving files and reading news, it is now a tool in itself.

The boundaries between applications, storage, and delivery are becoming increasingly blurred. The user does not need to worry about having the correct program installed, or being on the right machine, they can simply focus on the tasks at hand.

We are only just beginning to understand how web applications can integrate with our Intranets. There are huge and immediate advantages for users working outside of the traditional office environment. But even for those desk bound workers a brave new dawn might be just around the corner.

source: http://www.cmswire.com/cms/enterprise-collaboration/intranet-20-integrating-web-apps-for-true-productivity-009460.php

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W3C: HTML5 Spec Due in 2014

Friday, February 18th, 2011

The World Wide Web Consortium has reset its timeline for the delivery of HTML5 to see a final version of the specification in 2014.

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) has established a more defined timeline for the HTML5 specification, shooting for May 2011 as the last call date and a final full spec by 2014.

The W3C extended the charter of the HTML Working Group with clear milestones for HTML5, the cornerstone of W3C’s Open Web Platform for application development. Coming in May 2014, the "Last Call" phase of the HTML5 spec proffers an invitation to communities inside and outside the W3C to confirm the technical soundness of the specification. The group will then shift focus to gathering implementation experience. The W3C is developing a comprehensive test suite to achieve broad interoperability for the full specification by 2014, the target date for Recommendation, the W3C said in a press release.

The 2014 time frame is significant because the W3C has had different targets for the HTML5 spec, including not seeing the final specification until 2022.

"Even as innovation continues, advancing HTML5 to Recommendation provides the entire Web ecosystem with a stable, tested, interoperable standard," Jeff Jaffe, W3C CEO, said in a statement. "The decision to schedule the HTML5 Last Call for May 2011 was an important step in setting industry expectations. Today we take the next step, announcing 2014 as the target for Recommendation."

Although W3C officials have warned developers not to adopt the HTML5 capabilities prematurely, the standards body also is encouraging developers to implement HTML5 where appropriate. For example, the Apple iPad supports HTML5 and Apple even recently redesigned its homepage using HTML5 technologies. Microsoft also is betting heavily on HTML5 in its Internet Explorer 9 (IE9) browser technology

By setting a date for HTML5 standardization, the W3C will ensure broad interoperability of the emerging Web technologies over a variety of platforms—from mobile browsers to Web on TV, W3C officials said.

The W3C said there are more than 50 organizations participating in the HTML Working Group, all committed to royalty-free licensing under the W3C Patent Policy. There are more than 400 individuals from all over the world in the group, including designers, content authors, accessibility experts, and representatives from browser vendors, authoring tool vendors, telecoms, equipment manufacturers and other IT companies.

Meanwhile, as the audience for the Web platform continues to grow, so does the need for interoperability among the many technologies of W3C’s Open Web Platform, including HTML5, CSS, SVG, WOFF, various APIs and more. Nearly all of these technologies are already in use, at varying degrees of maturity and implementation.

Additionally, because HTML5 anchors the Open Web Platform, the W3C has started work on a test suite to ensure high levels of interoperability. The W3C invites test suite contributions from the community, which will enable software implementers to fulfill the W3C’s implementation criteria and make it easier to create content and applications. The testing effort will play an important role in the timely completion of the standard.

As part of developing IE9, which is in a "release candidate" phase, Microsoft submitted thousands of tests to the W3C and other standards groups. In a Feb. 10 blog post, Dean Hachamovitch, corporate vice president for Internet Explorer at Microsoft, said:

"Implementing Web standards is just the start of our commitment to an interoperable Web and Same Markup. Comprehensive test suites developed through the standards bodies are crucial to making sure that browser vendors implement these standards consistently. With this Release Candidate we’ve added over a thousand new test cases for JavaScript and updated over fifty test cases based on community feedback. During IE9 development we have now submitted just under 4000 test cases in total for standards like HTML5. We have submitted these tests to the appropriate standards bodies for feedback and eventual inclusion in their official test suites. You can try them out for yourself at the IE Test Center."

Also, according to the W3C, stable standards play an important role in the broad deployment of technology. As reference points, they make it easier for large numbers of independent implementers to achieve interoperability across diverse platforms, devices and industries. This is particularly important in the rich ecosystem of HTML producers and consumers, which includes authoring tools, browsers, e-mail clients, security applications, content management systems, tools to analyze or convert content, assistive technologies, and unanticipated applications. Stable standards with community support give developers and implementers confidence that what they build today will continue to work in the future, the W3C said.

Meanwhile, as part of the mission of the W3C HTML Working Group to continue the evolution of HTML, W3C Director Tim Berners-Lee also encourages the group to begin discussion of requirements for future versions of HTML.

Source: http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Application-Development/W3C-HTML5-Spec-Due-in-2014-108529/

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Social Networking and Web 3.0 – Part 1

Friday, January 21st, 2011

 

‘If Facebook was a country, it will be fourth largest in the world’. Such is the volume and usage of social networking sites among organizations. While some companies use Linkedin to find prospective employees,
others use Twitter or other social network to capture new customers. The potentials of social networks have become clear to companies, and thus is the adoption of multiple social networks by organizations for purposes ranging from collaboration to promotion of their brands. Here, we take a look at some of the upcoming trends and technologies in social networking, and how is Web 3.0 going to change the landscape.

While it’s hard to predict what the future of Web would look like, one thing is apparent. Today you don’t need a PC or a laptop to browse Web. Browsers have reached almost everywhere -right from mobile devices to gaming consoles (Wii and PS3) to even television. Even in places where there is no browser (as yet) such as Xbox360, Twitter and Facebook have already made their way to. New firmware of PS3 also as Facebook. Social networking vendors are making sure that you can access them from where you are, without needing a computing device.

Everything mobile
One of the key reasons why microblogging got so popular so quickly has been that, the vendors in the space have targeted mobile users since beginning. They realized that, for a person to fully utilize the power of social networking, he should be able to update his microblogs from anywhere and at anytime. Even today majority of Twitter usage comes from mobile devices.With social networks leveraging mobile devices more and more, location based social networking is also gaining momentum. In a research done last year by ABI Research, location based social networking is expected to be a $3.3 billion market by 2013.

Twitter would be launching geo-tweets very soon, which will allow users to embed their location with their tweets. Similarly a company called PhotoWALL displays real-time media streams (or WALLs) by presenting live
media precisely when it happens. It allows mobile users to send live photos along with various geo-tags and VoiceTags to an attractive searchable website for public, network or private viewing. It also enables simultaneous live uploading of mobile media to Facebook, Flickr and Twitter. Location based social networking also opens a whole new range of possibilities such as location based advertising, finding like-minded people who are near to you, recommending places to friends, finding reviews what people around you have to say about a particular place or product, etc.

Social TV
Television is mostly enjoyed to its fullest, when it’s watched with friends and family. And one can’t always be around friends or like minded people to fully enjoy a show or game. But now things are starting to change, TV is not only going interactive but is also getting social. There are quite a few models starting to come in this area. Orange has tied up with Twitter to improve Twitter experience for its mobile, Internet and TV users. As part of the deal, Twitter will be integrated into Orange’s IPTV platform and Twitter feeds will run alongside programs to create an interactive environment. Another approach that is coming up is in the form of Social TV widgets or just TV widgets. Verizon’s FiOS TV already provides Facebook and Twitter widgets to its subscribers. Also earlier this year, Yahoo! tied with Samsung, Sony, LG and Vizio to provide TV widgets for their televisions sets, popularly known as Yahoo connected TV. Similarly there are companies who are offering software that bring social networking to set top boxes.

A slightly different example is Clikthrough (www.clikthrough.com), which makes watching videos online even more interactive. Videos hosted on the website have ‘hotspots’; if someone clicks on the hotspots, they can view information like comments made by others about that video, products used in the video, people present in the video, etc. You can even add the product in your wishlist.

Source: http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/2535433/social_

networking_and_web_30.html?cat=15

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Social Web in 2011 and Beyond

Thursday, January 13th, 2011

 

Around October 2010, Facebook, Amazon, and Zynga invested $250 million in sFund. This fund provides financing, advices, and relationship capital for new business to start up on social web. Facebook offers new business to get access to Facebook credits and other application technologies. Amazon will provide free customer service to starting businesses for a year.  This fund is intended to aid and built companies like Zynga, Playfish, and more. The social web is changing the digital economy. For example, Farmville alone brings in about $1 million per day last year. Farmville is an online farming game created by Zynga. It is mostly played by Facebook users. The game became a huge success because the game system is built and designed around the social network. When users log on Facebook or other social networks, they would notice that their neighbors had sent them gifts, and their friends had commented on the user’s gaming progress. To return the favor, they sent comments or gift back to their friends/neighbors. There are many more social gaming companies who targets social web sites to make money.

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Understanding Web 2.0

Wednesday, January 5th, 2011

 

Every few years, there are certain buzz words that just take off in the business world, and before you know it, they are a part of your everyday jargon. For example, years ago a PowerPoint presentation was called just that – a PowerPoint presentation. Skip forward a bit, and people now refer to it as a deck. There was the trend of pinging someone versus the old-fashioned wording of e-mailing them. Low-hanging fruit became common wording in strategy sessions, and inboxes no longer referred to plastic black trays at the end of your desk.

In this world of ever-evolving changes in word choices and hip semantics, it naturally goes to flow that terms in the technology arena pop up at the speed of lightning. Within a few short years, WiFi and URLs are part of our everyday language. Texts no longer mean school books, and social networks, not the corner bar downtown, are now the places to see and be seen.

With your daily information overload and multiple multimedia interactions at an all-time high, who has time to keep up with all of this? Really, it’s not easy so don’t be embarrassed if you are increasingly hearing of Web 20. but not really grasping a good concept of what it is. In an effort to keep this simple and not provide too much detail, here is a high-level overview of what Web 2.0 is and is not, in essence, Web 2.0 for Dummies.

Web 2.0 is not an upgrade of the Internet

Often when a number is behind anything related to software or the Internet, it is easy to think upgrade or software patch. No doubt, your mind easily makes that assumption based on your experience with various software products. In this case, however, Web 2.0 is not an upgraded World Wide Web.

Web 2.0 is a new way of using the Internet

Think back to when you got your first personal computer at work. A strong guess is that you used it primarily for business functions such as word processing or the creation of spreadsheets. Over time, more software applications were developed; the Internet hit the mainstream; companies adapted their IT infrastructure to support corporate e-mail. Your use of the computer had greatly changed, while the hardware may have remained the same. Think of Web 2.0 as a way to use the same Internet technology in a different and more creative and collaborative way. Instead of just going to the Internet to view sites and find information, you now through Web 2.0 have the ability to contribute content to many sites and to share information. This enables your experience on the Internet to become more of a two-way street, versus a one-way flow of outbound information to you.

What does Web 2.0 mean to you

Without going into all the complexities of the many technical components that create and support Web 2.0-enabled sites, for example, let’s keep this as simple as possible so that you can understand how Web 2.0 is impacting your life. Keep in mind that Web 2.0 is an expanded way of doing things and it is often collaborative. Wikipedia is a great example of a site that uses Web 2.0 technologies. Through the constant updates of definitions by multiple authors, this site is a fluid and dynamic source for information. Social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace are built on Web 2.0 technologies. You have the opportunity on these sites to add your own profile, connect with others and even change the pages of others by adding comments, for example. Again, this is a fluid and non-static site. Web 2.0 is increasingly being embraced by the software developers and Web site architects because society demands a say in things, now more than ever. You are no longer looking at just movie critics’ opinions, for example, when deciding which DVD to rent. Additionally, you are looking at consumer reviews and recommendations made by your friends, all enabled by Web 2.0 technologies. Due to these technologies, you can also share and add a voice to things about which you are passionate, whether it be a good recipe or a political opinion. Web 2.0 in a nutshell means a world of opportunity in terms of information sharing, information gathering, networking, shopping and many other activities.

While this article only scratches the surface of what Web 2.0 is and what it may mean to you, it hopefully will help anyone who was a bit fuzzy on this concept to have more confidence the next time someone mentions it or you see it in print. Technology today is changing so rapidly, but sometimes just a bit of knowledge can take you far.

Source: http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/2719321/web_20.html?cat=59

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