The document discusses several topics related to Web 2.0 technologies including the long tail effect, wikis, blogs, Ajax, and potential developments in Web 3.0. It provides an overview of each topic, examples, and references for further reading.
Adaptive Input — Breaking Development Conference, San DiegoJason Grigsby
Windows 8. Chromebook Pixel. Ubuntu Phone. These devices shatter another consensual hallucination that we web developers have bought into: mobile = touch and desktop = keyboard and mouse.
We have tablets with keyboards; laptops that become tablets; laptops with touch screens; phones with physical keyboards; and even phones that become desktop computers. Not to mention new forms of input like cameras, voice control, and sensors.
We've learned how to respond to screen size. Our next challenge is learning how to adapt to different forms of input.
Thinking of developing your very own Facebook Apps? Here is a basic guide to start and get to know the important elements of a Facebook application. (Samples are in Java)
Slideshare = Twelve Technology Tools For Teams And Top ProducersDoug Devitre
Thank you for attending the customize webinar for the National Women’s Council of REALTORS® organization. I know that we covered a lot of material in a short period of time which is why I wanted to share with you some resources that you will be able to use to extend education outside of the classroom.
Adaptive Input — Breaking Development Conference, San DiegoJason Grigsby
Windows 8. Chromebook Pixel. Ubuntu Phone. These devices shatter another consensual hallucination that we web developers have bought into: mobile = touch and desktop = keyboard and mouse.
We have tablets with keyboards; laptops that become tablets; laptops with touch screens; phones with physical keyboards; and even phones that become desktop computers. Not to mention new forms of input like cameras, voice control, and sensors.
We've learned how to respond to screen size. Our next challenge is learning how to adapt to different forms of input.
Thinking of developing your very own Facebook Apps? Here is a basic guide to start and get to know the important elements of a Facebook application. (Samples are in Java)
Slideshare = Twelve Technology Tools For Teams And Top ProducersDoug Devitre
Thank you for attending the customize webinar for the National Women’s Council of REALTORS® organization. I know that we covered a lot of material in a short period of time which is why I wanted to share with you some resources that you will be able to use to extend education outside of the classroom.
LA2M Google Tools Presentation Apr 1st 09oneilldec
This week Declan ONeill will be leading a discussion on Google Products such as Alerts / Feed Burner / Webmaster Tools / iGoogle, and how they can be used for marketing, advertising and sales.
Declan helps new businesses make the transition to the web, and more established companies define their web presence by offering tailored web solutions. Learn more about ONeill Creative Agency, and Declan O'Neill by following these links: http://www.oneillcreative.com/ & http://www.linkedin.com/in/declanon
SEO and Social Media for Multilingual and Multidevice Sitesluckyboost
All the tags you need to put in the header of your page for SEO, Best practice on social media (facebook, twitter, google+, pinterest, linkedin), running a multilingual website and for different types of screens.
B-sides Las Vegas - social network securityDamon Cortesi
A presentation I gave at the first b-sides Las Vegas security conference showing the security challenges we face going forward in the era of open-by-default social networking.
“When is it beneficial for a firm to pursue a unified procurement strategy for enterprise software solutions?,” 42nd Hawaii International Conference on Systems Science (HICSS), Kona, HI, January 2009
“Does co-opetition change the game? A Bayesian analysis of firm participation strategy in an industry standard-setting organization,” 43rd Hawaii International Conference on Systems Science (HICSS), Kauai, HI, January 2010
2009-JCMC-Discussion catalysts-Himelboim and SmithMarc Smith
This study addresses 3 research questions in the context of online political discussions:
What is the distribution of successful topic starting practices, what characterizes the content
of large thread-starting messages, and what is the source of that content? A 6-month
analysis of almost 40,000 authors in 20 political Usenet newsgroups identified authors
who received a disproportionate number of replies. We labeled these authors ‘‘discussion
catalysts.’’ Content analysis revealed that 95 percent of discussion catalysts’ messages
contained content imported from elsewhere on the web, about 2/3 from traditional news
organizations. We conclude that the flow of information from the content creators to the
readers and writers continues to be mediated by a few individuals who act as filters and
amplifiers.
A talk on "Deployment Strategies For Web 2.0" given by Brian Kelly, UKOLN at the University of Nottingham on 12 March 2007.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/seminars/nottingham-2007-03/
Slides from a talk by Brian Kelly,UKOLN in the "Web 2.0: Behind The Hype" panel session given at the Institutional Web Management Workshop 2006 on 15 June 2006.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/webmaster-2006/talks/panel-1/
Web 2.0: What Can It Offer The Research Community?lisbk
What are the implications of Web 2.0 for the research community? In this presentation Brian Kelly, UKOLN describes how various Web 2.0 technologies are being exploited within the higher education sector and more widely.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/meetings/pparc-2007-03/
Web 2.0: Implications For The Cultural Heritage Sectorlisbk
Brian Kelly, UKOLN gave a talk on "Web 2.0: Implications For The Cultural Heritage Sector" at a seminar on "From Bits to Blogs - Taking the IT Revolution into Museums, Libraries and Archives" organised by MLA North East and held at Teesside University, Middlesbrough on 18 October 2006.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/seminars/mla-ne-2006-10/
LA2M Google Tools Presentation Apr 1st 09oneilldec
This week Declan ONeill will be leading a discussion on Google Products such as Alerts / Feed Burner / Webmaster Tools / iGoogle, and how they can be used for marketing, advertising and sales.
Declan helps new businesses make the transition to the web, and more established companies define their web presence by offering tailored web solutions. Learn more about ONeill Creative Agency, and Declan O'Neill by following these links: http://www.oneillcreative.com/ & http://www.linkedin.com/in/declanon
SEO and Social Media for Multilingual and Multidevice Sitesluckyboost
All the tags you need to put in the header of your page for SEO, Best practice on social media (facebook, twitter, google+, pinterest, linkedin), running a multilingual website and for different types of screens.
B-sides Las Vegas - social network securityDamon Cortesi
A presentation I gave at the first b-sides Las Vegas security conference showing the security challenges we face going forward in the era of open-by-default social networking.
“When is it beneficial for a firm to pursue a unified procurement strategy for enterprise software solutions?,” 42nd Hawaii International Conference on Systems Science (HICSS), Kona, HI, January 2009
“Does co-opetition change the game? A Bayesian analysis of firm participation strategy in an industry standard-setting organization,” 43rd Hawaii International Conference on Systems Science (HICSS), Kauai, HI, January 2010
2009-JCMC-Discussion catalysts-Himelboim and SmithMarc Smith
This study addresses 3 research questions in the context of online political discussions:
What is the distribution of successful topic starting practices, what characterizes the content
of large thread-starting messages, and what is the source of that content? A 6-month
analysis of almost 40,000 authors in 20 political Usenet newsgroups identified authors
who received a disproportionate number of replies. We labeled these authors ‘‘discussion
catalysts.’’ Content analysis revealed that 95 percent of discussion catalysts’ messages
contained content imported from elsewhere on the web, about 2/3 from traditional news
organizations. We conclude that the flow of information from the content creators to the
readers and writers continues to be mediated by a few individuals who act as filters and
amplifiers.
A talk on "Deployment Strategies For Web 2.0" given by Brian Kelly, UKOLN at the University of Nottingham on 12 March 2007.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/seminars/nottingham-2007-03/
Slides from a talk by Brian Kelly,UKOLN in the "Web 2.0: Behind The Hype" panel session given at the Institutional Web Management Workshop 2006 on 15 June 2006.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/webmaster-2006/talks/panel-1/
Web 2.0: What Can It Offer The Research Community?lisbk
What are the implications of Web 2.0 for the research community? In this presentation Brian Kelly, UKOLN describes how various Web 2.0 technologies are being exploited within the higher education sector and more widely.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/meetings/pparc-2007-03/
Web 2.0: Implications For The Cultural Heritage Sectorlisbk
Brian Kelly, UKOLN gave a talk on "Web 2.0: Implications For The Cultural Heritage Sector" at a seminar on "From Bits to Blogs - Taking the IT Revolution into Museums, Libraries and Archives" organised by MLA North East and held at Teesside University, Middlesbrough on 18 October 2006.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/seminars/mla-ne-2006-10/
Web 2.0: What Is It, How Can I Use It, How Can I Deploy It?lisbk
Slides used in a presentation on "Web 2.0: What Is It, How Can I Use It, How Can I Deploy It?" given by Brian Kelly at an Aslib Engineering Group seminar on "Engineering Information: Today And Tomorrow" on 22 November 2006.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/seminars/aslib-2006-11/
Slides for talk on "An Introduction to Web 2.0" given at the "Sharing Made Simple: a Practical Approach to Social Software" workshop on 6 June 2007.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/archivists-2007-06/
Slides from talk on "Engaging Virtual Communities: Web 2.0" given at CILIP CDG conference on 30 April 2007.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/conferences/cilip-cdg-2007-04/
Web 2.0 has brought new life to the Internet, providing a more interactive user experience that is comparable to fat client desktop applications. Web 2.0 introduces new types of services that are designed to share presentation and multimedia objects (presentation services) and give the ability to develop a new application by combining services from different sites or applications (e.g. through Mashups). One of the popular components of today’s Web 2.0 is Rich Internet Applications (RIAs). They include new features to process information and interactive user interfaces based on Ajax, Flex, JavaFX, Silverlight, etc. The user no longer has to wait for a new page to load whenever he makes a request; some information retrieval now happens asynchronously in the background while the user is interacting with the GUI, while other requests can be managed by logic that runs on the client without requiring calls over the Internet to the server side. However, what users see is merely a facade. It is powered by server-side distributed Business services that process data according to client requests. The question then becomes how services should be designed to support the requirements of RIA clients. We will look at RIA support services that are included in a SOA infrastructure and are managed through SOA governance tools.
Research Report Future CRM Technology 2010 to 2013Ram Srivastava
Research Report, Future, CRM technology, 2010 to 2013,
Marketing, Sales, Customer Service, Field Service Management, Social CRM
Information Infrastructure Management, Analytics – BI, E-Commerce
Web-oriented architecture of CRM systems, Mobile CRM, iTV
Technological Hpothesis Research Plan In The CRM Future1Ram Srivastava
We studied some of following technology hypothetical research model/framework for CRM technology research
Technology Acceptance Model (TAM)
Task-Technology Fit Models (TTF)
Computer Self-Efficacy (CSE)
We are finding that Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) is the simple and would be appropriate for CRM technology research