Geotagging, user generated content and social networksThomas Landspurg
The document discusses geotagging, user-generated content, and social networks in mobile applications. It provides examples of how geotagging can enhance content by adding location metadata. While access to location and creating content on mobile present challenges, these issues can be addressed by linking mobile applications to existing web services and communities to reach critical mass. Monetization strategies for mobile applications may include geotargeted advertising or premium services.
The document summarizes key takeaways from the re:publica 2009 conference. It discusses how collaborative innovation is becoming a useful tool for companies to leverage collective intelligence. Social networks are mainly used for communication and fun. Borders between online and offline worlds are blurring. Bloggers now have significant influence over elections and corporations. Open source principles are becoming standard. Learning 2.0 is already integrated into education. Copyright regulations will fade as more access the internet through mobile versus desktop. Germany lags behind in adopting new technologies.
This document provides an overview of key concepts in online communications and internet mediation. It examines developments such as strategic planning, monitoring, and evaluation. It explores how the internet has changed communication through various platforms and channels, including one-to-one, one-to-many, many-to-many, and many-to-one models. It also discusses how information and knowledge sharing online can create value for organizations.
Digital Networks & Platform Business Models (Masterclass)Benjamin Tincq
Slides from a Masterclass I did at WeFab in São Paulo, for business executives and entrepreneurs:
1) Introduction
2) The Long Tail of Production
3) Uberization? No: Platform Economy
4) Open, Collaborative & Decentralized
5) Exercise: The Platform Design Toolkit
Communications for a changing world July 2015Andrew Garfield
This document discusses the changing communications landscape. It notes that trust in institutions has declined and stakeholders now expect companies to clearly choose sides on political and social issues. It also summarizes that digital communications have disrupted the traditional media model, with most web users getting their news from aggregators and social media rather than directly from news websites. Additionally, it highlights that visual content is shared much more widely than text on social platforms. The document advocates for communicators to tell their own company stories directly using a variety of digital storytelling tools and channels.
This document discusses the evolution of the web and the potential future of Web 3.0. It describes how Web 1.0 was mostly static and read-only, while Web 2.0 enabled more interaction through user-generated content and social media. Web 3.0, also called the Semantic Web, aims to build upon these foundations by leveraging artificial intelligence and distributed ledger technologies like blockchain. This could allow machines and users to interact directly without intermediaries, making societies and organizations more efficient and resilient through decentralized communication and governance.
Geotagging, user generated content and social networksThomas Landspurg
The document discusses geotagging, user-generated content, and social networks in mobile applications. It provides examples of how geotagging can enhance content by adding location metadata. While access to location and creating content on mobile present challenges, these issues can be addressed by linking mobile applications to existing web services and communities to reach critical mass. Monetization strategies for mobile applications may include geotargeted advertising or premium services.
The document summarizes key takeaways from the re:publica 2009 conference. It discusses how collaborative innovation is becoming a useful tool for companies to leverage collective intelligence. Social networks are mainly used for communication and fun. Borders between online and offline worlds are blurring. Bloggers now have significant influence over elections and corporations. Open source principles are becoming standard. Learning 2.0 is already integrated into education. Copyright regulations will fade as more access the internet through mobile versus desktop. Germany lags behind in adopting new technologies.
This document provides an overview of key concepts in online communications and internet mediation. It examines developments such as strategic planning, monitoring, and evaluation. It explores how the internet has changed communication through various platforms and channels, including one-to-one, one-to-many, many-to-many, and many-to-one models. It also discusses how information and knowledge sharing online can create value for organizations.
Digital Networks & Platform Business Models (Masterclass)Benjamin Tincq
Slides from a Masterclass I did at WeFab in São Paulo, for business executives and entrepreneurs:
1) Introduction
2) The Long Tail of Production
3) Uberization? No: Platform Economy
4) Open, Collaborative & Decentralized
5) Exercise: The Platform Design Toolkit
Communications for a changing world July 2015Andrew Garfield
This document discusses the changing communications landscape. It notes that trust in institutions has declined and stakeholders now expect companies to clearly choose sides on political and social issues. It also summarizes that digital communications have disrupted the traditional media model, with most web users getting their news from aggregators and social media rather than directly from news websites. Additionally, it highlights that visual content is shared much more widely than text on social platforms. The document advocates for communicators to tell their own company stories directly using a variety of digital storytelling tools and channels.
This document discusses the evolution of the web and the potential future of Web 3.0. It describes how Web 1.0 was mostly static and read-only, while Web 2.0 enabled more interaction through user-generated content and social media. Web 3.0, also called the Semantic Web, aims to build upon these foundations by leveraging artificial intelligence and distributed ledger technologies like blockchain. This could allow machines and users to interact directly without intermediaries, making societies and organizations more efficient and resilient through decentralized communication and governance.
Digital Roadshow The US Dimension Autumn UpdatesNigelG
The document discusses the accelerating pace of technological change and its effects. It covers how digital technology is infiltrating various aspects of life, blurring lines between online and offline activities. It also examines challenges faced by companies like Google in maintaining growth and market leadership as technologies and user behaviors continue to rapidly evolve.
The Next Wave of AR: Mobile Social Interaction Right Here, Right Now!Tish Shute
I began by asking the question: Can we create an open framework for distributed augmented reality using "off the shelf" standards, e.g., the Google Wave Federation Protocol?
But the implications of this proposal go well beyond augmented reality and towards an open framework for in context mobile social communication.
Also see video here http://www.mobilemonday.nl/talks/tish-shute-the-next-wave-of-ar/
This document analyzes the RIBA architectural research wiki project and proposes strategies to strengthen connections between practitioners, academics, and the wiki. It introduces a "pattern language" approach using 17 patterns to describe different scenarios for the wiki's development. The baseline scenario focuses on seeding content. Further scenarios decentralize responsibility, connect people through knowledge networks, and integrate the wiki with other RIBA initiatives. The goal is to increase user participation from hundreds to thousands to ensure the wiki's long-term viability in sharing architectural knowledge.
This document discusses the evolution of the World Wide Web from Web 1.0 to the current Web 2.0 and looks ahead to future developments. It defines Web 1.0 as static HTML pages viewed through browsers compared to Web 2.0 which features more user-generated content and applications. Key trends of Web 2.0 are noted as the rise of social media that allows users to create and share content, the ability to access data through web APIs, and the maturation of technologies like AJAX that power dynamic user interfaces. The document also briefly introduces concepts like Web 3.0's semantic web and Web 4.0 as areas of future development for the online world.
This document discusses the digital divide, which is defined as the gap between those who have access to information technologies and those who do not. It provides facts showing disparities in access between different regions and countries, such as Africa having just 3 computers per 1000 people compared to Manhattan having more phone lines. The document outlines factors contributing to the digital divide such as poverty, illiteracy, and geographical divides between urban and rural areas. It recommends potential solutions and further readings on addressing the issue.
This document discusses various technology and social media trends including search becoming more social, the growth of video and mobile usage, and the benefits of cloud computing. Specific trends and tools mentioned include the rise of social networks and their impact on how people search for information, the popularity of video and its viral nature, the advantages of cloud services like Dropbox, and the increasing importance of mobile and how more people are using the internet and applications on their phones.
The document discusses the evolution of the World Wide Web from Web 1.0 to the current vision of Web 3.0. Web 1.0 referred to the initial commercialization of the web for shopping and e-commerce. Web 2.0 introduced social media and user-generated content through platforms like blogs, wikis, and social networks. Proposed characteristics of Web 3.0 include a semantic web that understands meaning through metadata, real-time information sharing, open communication, and integration of location-based data from mobile devices. Examples discussed include search engines like Evri that organize information by topic and Bottlenose's real-time analysis of social media trends. Overall, the document explores competing definitions of Web 3.0
This document discusses transparency in government through the use of web 2.0 technologies. It begins with examples of existing government 2.0 transparency initiatives and explores why transparency matters. A new vision is emerging of a more open and collaborative government that builds on citizen knowledge and participation. The document recommends that governments do no harm, enable others, and actively promote web 2.0 approaches to increase transparency, accountability, and civic engagement.
ePSI Platform: objectives & opportunities for #SOD14Matteo Brunati
La presentazione creata assieme al team di gestione della ePSI Platform per favorire l'emergere del riuso del patrimonio informativo pubblico (PSI), portata alla sessione del raduno di SpaghettiOpenData 2014.
Web 2.0 Design Concepts & Their Application to the EnterpriseRick Ladd
Given at the 2008 Southern California Aerospace Knowledge Management Conference held at the Graziadio School of Business and Management of Pepperdine University in Malibu, CA.
Web 20 For Government Grow Call Latest FinalNick Davis
The document discusses how governments can leverage Web 2.0 technologies to better engage with citizens. It recommends that governments syndicate news, share public data, foster online communities, and adopt internal social tools to collaborate. Web 2.0 enables connecting people through blogs, social networks, wikis and user-generated content rather than just connecting computers. This shifts how organizations interact with customers by emphasizing communities, knowledge sharing, and collaboration.
How to Stop Freaking Out About Digital Technology in the Not-For-Profit SectorXplore - your web agency
However, the not-for-profit sector is lagging with digital technology adoption.
A recent study revealed that 64% of not-for-profits are less than satisfied with the way they use technology. More than half of their staff are either “not confident” or only “a bit confident” when using new technology.
Find out how to overcome common technology adoption challenges in your not-for-profit, and how to leverage technology to help increase funding, make your team more productive and facilitate your social outcomes and deliverables.
From MySpace, MySociety to MyDemocracy. Civil Society Media, an overview. Geert Wissink
This document discusses the principles of Web 2.0 and civil society media and how local governments can apply these principles. Web 2.0 is characterized by users collaboratively sharing and remixing content. Civil society media involves peer production of content by citizens to benefit their communities. Local governments should adopt an open and participatory approach by opening their data, considering their services as platforms, and stimulating civil society media through partnership and small funds.
From MySpace to MySociety to MyDemocracyKennisland
The medialandscape is changing. In this presentation the emerging role of the civil society media will be outlined against the changing medialandscape.
The State of the Web 2009, according to tech blog ReadWriteWeb. This presentation outlines 5 big trends on the Internet this year: Structured Data, Real-Time Web, Personalization, Mobile Web / Augmented Reality, Internet of Things.
The document discusses the concept of Web 2.0 and how it represents a social revolution brought on by new forms of online interaction and data sharing. It notes that Web 2.0 allows data to be freely exchanged and remixed across various platforms and devices. Additionally, it asserts that Web 2.0 has shifted power away from large media organizations and brands towards individual users, who now have more active and influential roles in online conversations and content creation through various social media platforms and tools. The document argues this represents a significant change in how brands must approach marketing and engagement with consumers.
This document describes the Gamow Tower model built by students Lars Anderson, Katherine Ebeling, Kelly Mitchell, Sarah Safranek, Joseph Schmitz, and Jordan Tsiao. The tower was constructed primarily from wood and included LED lights, a light sensor, sound sensor, and schematics. The students encountered difficulties with the large scale of the tower, finding necessary materials, and implementing the electronics and laser cutting components.
Pinnacle Associates helps clients manage health, safety, and environmental risks through embedding risk management practices. They offer a wide range of consultancy services, and place client satisfaction as their top priority. Their unique approach involves tailoring solutions to client needs using a network of partners. Pinnacle360 is their proprietary assessment methodology that identifies risks based on real behaviors rather than just compliance. It provides a more accurate view of performance by engaging internal and external stakeholders.
The American Revolution was caused by growing tensions between the 13 colonies and British rule. Dissatisfaction stemmed from the colonies' lack of representation in Parliament, unfair taxation policies, and their desire for equal rights and self-governance. The French and Indian War weakened Britain's control and protection of the colonies, further fueling independence sentiments. Ultimately, disagreements over how the colonies should be treated compared to the treatment they received led to the Revolutionary War and American victory.
Focus groups are a moderate discussion with 6-12 people who share something in common, usually lasting around 60 minutes. They are used to learn views and opinions to help improve marketing plans and find out what customers want. Organizing effective focus groups requires choosing participants at random and from different audience segments. Moderators with backgrounds in psychology or communication should guide open-ended, neutrally presented questions and keep the conversation flowing. Analyzing focus groups involves a minimum of three people categorizing themes and conclusions drawn from participants' answers.
Digital Roadshow The US Dimension Autumn UpdatesNigelG
The document discusses the accelerating pace of technological change and its effects. It covers how digital technology is infiltrating various aspects of life, blurring lines between online and offline activities. It also examines challenges faced by companies like Google in maintaining growth and market leadership as technologies and user behaviors continue to rapidly evolve.
The Next Wave of AR: Mobile Social Interaction Right Here, Right Now!Tish Shute
I began by asking the question: Can we create an open framework for distributed augmented reality using "off the shelf" standards, e.g., the Google Wave Federation Protocol?
But the implications of this proposal go well beyond augmented reality and towards an open framework for in context mobile social communication.
Also see video here http://www.mobilemonday.nl/talks/tish-shute-the-next-wave-of-ar/
This document analyzes the RIBA architectural research wiki project and proposes strategies to strengthen connections between practitioners, academics, and the wiki. It introduces a "pattern language" approach using 17 patterns to describe different scenarios for the wiki's development. The baseline scenario focuses on seeding content. Further scenarios decentralize responsibility, connect people through knowledge networks, and integrate the wiki with other RIBA initiatives. The goal is to increase user participation from hundreds to thousands to ensure the wiki's long-term viability in sharing architectural knowledge.
This document discusses the evolution of the World Wide Web from Web 1.0 to the current Web 2.0 and looks ahead to future developments. It defines Web 1.0 as static HTML pages viewed through browsers compared to Web 2.0 which features more user-generated content and applications. Key trends of Web 2.0 are noted as the rise of social media that allows users to create and share content, the ability to access data through web APIs, and the maturation of technologies like AJAX that power dynamic user interfaces. The document also briefly introduces concepts like Web 3.0's semantic web and Web 4.0 as areas of future development for the online world.
This document discusses the digital divide, which is defined as the gap between those who have access to information technologies and those who do not. It provides facts showing disparities in access between different regions and countries, such as Africa having just 3 computers per 1000 people compared to Manhattan having more phone lines. The document outlines factors contributing to the digital divide such as poverty, illiteracy, and geographical divides between urban and rural areas. It recommends potential solutions and further readings on addressing the issue.
This document discusses various technology and social media trends including search becoming more social, the growth of video and mobile usage, and the benefits of cloud computing. Specific trends and tools mentioned include the rise of social networks and their impact on how people search for information, the popularity of video and its viral nature, the advantages of cloud services like Dropbox, and the increasing importance of mobile and how more people are using the internet and applications on their phones.
The document discusses the evolution of the World Wide Web from Web 1.0 to the current vision of Web 3.0. Web 1.0 referred to the initial commercialization of the web for shopping and e-commerce. Web 2.0 introduced social media and user-generated content through platforms like blogs, wikis, and social networks. Proposed characteristics of Web 3.0 include a semantic web that understands meaning through metadata, real-time information sharing, open communication, and integration of location-based data from mobile devices. Examples discussed include search engines like Evri that organize information by topic and Bottlenose's real-time analysis of social media trends. Overall, the document explores competing definitions of Web 3.0
This document discusses transparency in government through the use of web 2.0 technologies. It begins with examples of existing government 2.0 transparency initiatives and explores why transparency matters. A new vision is emerging of a more open and collaborative government that builds on citizen knowledge and participation. The document recommends that governments do no harm, enable others, and actively promote web 2.0 approaches to increase transparency, accountability, and civic engagement.
ePSI Platform: objectives & opportunities for #SOD14Matteo Brunati
La presentazione creata assieme al team di gestione della ePSI Platform per favorire l'emergere del riuso del patrimonio informativo pubblico (PSI), portata alla sessione del raduno di SpaghettiOpenData 2014.
Web 2.0 Design Concepts & Their Application to the EnterpriseRick Ladd
Given at the 2008 Southern California Aerospace Knowledge Management Conference held at the Graziadio School of Business and Management of Pepperdine University in Malibu, CA.
Web 20 For Government Grow Call Latest FinalNick Davis
The document discusses how governments can leverage Web 2.0 technologies to better engage with citizens. It recommends that governments syndicate news, share public data, foster online communities, and adopt internal social tools to collaborate. Web 2.0 enables connecting people through blogs, social networks, wikis and user-generated content rather than just connecting computers. This shifts how organizations interact with customers by emphasizing communities, knowledge sharing, and collaboration.
How to Stop Freaking Out About Digital Technology in the Not-For-Profit SectorXplore - your web agency
However, the not-for-profit sector is lagging with digital technology adoption.
A recent study revealed that 64% of not-for-profits are less than satisfied with the way they use technology. More than half of their staff are either “not confident” or only “a bit confident” when using new technology.
Find out how to overcome common technology adoption challenges in your not-for-profit, and how to leverage technology to help increase funding, make your team more productive and facilitate your social outcomes and deliverables.
From MySpace, MySociety to MyDemocracy. Civil Society Media, an overview. Geert Wissink
This document discusses the principles of Web 2.0 and civil society media and how local governments can apply these principles. Web 2.0 is characterized by users collaboratively sharing and remixing content. Civil society media involves peer production of content by citizens to benefit their communities. Local governments should adopt an open and participatory approach by opening their data, considering their services as platforms, and stimulating civil society media through partnership and small funds.
From MySpace to MySociety to MyDemocracyKennisland
The medialandscape is changing. In this presentation the emerging role of the civil society media will be outlined against the changing medialandscape.
The State of the Web 2009, according to tech blog ReadWriteWeb. This presentation outlines 5 big trends on the Internet this year: Structured Data, Real-Time Web, Personalization, Mobile Web / Augmented Reality, Internet of Things.
The document discusses the concept of Web 2.0 and how it represents a social revolution brought on by new forms of online interaction and data sharing. It notes that Web 2.0 allows data to be freely exchanged and remixed across various platforms and devices. Additionally, it asserts that Web 2.0 has shifted power away from large media organizations and brands towards individual users, who now have more active and influential roles in online conversations and content creation through various social media platforms and tools. The document argues this represents a significant change in how brands must approach marketing and engagement with consumers.
This document describes the Gamow Tower model built by students Lars Anderson, Katherine Ebeling, Kelly Mitchell, Sarah Safranek, Joseph Schmitz, and Jordan Tsiao. The tower was constructed primarily from wood and included LED lights, a light sensor, sound sensor, and schematics. The students encountered difficulties with the large scale of the tower, finding necessary materials, and implementing the electronics and laser cutting components.
Pinnacle Associates helps clients manage health, safety, and environmental risks through embedding risk management practices. They offer a wide range of consultancy services, and place client satisfaction as their top priority. Their unique approach involves tailoring solutions to client needs using a network of partners. Pinnacle360 is their proprietary assessment methodology that identifies risks based on real behaviors rather than just compliance. It provides a more accurate view of performance by engaging internal and external stakeholders.
The American Revolution was caused by growing tensions between the 13 colonies and British rule. Dissatisfaction stemmed from the colonies' lack of representation in Parliament, unfair taxation policies, and their desire for equal rights and self-governance. The French and Indian War weakened Britain's control and protection of the colonies, further fueling independence sentiments. Ultimately, disagreements over how the colonies should be treated compared to the treatment they received led to the Revolutionary War and American victory.
Focus groups are a moderate discussion with 6-12 people who share something in common, usually lasting around 60 minutes. They are used to learn views and opinions to help improve marketing plans and find out what customers want. Organizing effective focus groups requires choosing participants at random and from different audience segments. Moderators with backgrounds in psychology or communication should guide open-ended, neutrally presented questions and keep the conversation flowing. Analyzing focus groups involves a minimum of three people categorizing themes and conclusions drawn from participants' answers.
The document discusses Canada's role in Afghanistan and outlines 6 priorities and 3 signature projects. The priorities are: 1) Training Afghan security forces 2) Delivering basic needs 3) Humanitarian assistance 4) Enhancing the Afghanistan-Pakistan border 5) Advancing democratic development 6) Facilitating political reconciliation. The signature projects are rebuilding Dahla Dam, expanding education in Kandahar, and assisting with polio vaccination efforts. Canada aims to help build capacity, provide services, and create a more stable environment in Afghanistan.
Reed Technology is a leading specialist recruiter that provides recruitment services for IT professionals. They recruit for a variety of IT roles across many industries. Reed Technology consultants have expertise recruiting for IT teams and can manage full recruitment processes. They have a large database of candidates and networks to source qualified candidates for clients.
Gregory Scott Sparrow has extensive education and experience in counseling, psychology, and dream analysis. He holds doctoral and master's degrees in counseling and has been a licensed counselor since the 1980s. He has worked in a variety of clinical, teaching, and research roles and has authored several books on religious and dream experiences. Currently he is on the faculty of the University of Texas-Pan American and is involved with the International Association for the Study of Dreams, where he serves on the board and committees.
The American Revolution was caused by growing tensions between the 13 colonies and British rule. Key factors included the colonies wanting more self-governance and equal rights to those in Britain, as well as opposition to new taxes being levied by the British to pay for wars. As the colonies felt they were not being properly represented or consulted on decisions affecting them, and their allegiance to Britain no longer provided clear benefits, they united to fight for independence from the British Empire.
Presentation of the Campus Navigator, a solution for seamlessly guiding visitors indoor and outdoor. The solution was developed by Esri Deutschland and NavVis.
This document discusses trends in modern web technology, including the evolution from Web 1.0 to Web 2.0 to Web 3.0. It covers the history and development of the world wide web from its inception. Key aspects that are discussed include the usage of blogs, wikis, tagging, and multimedia sharing on the web. Modern approaches to web design emphasized in the document include simplicity, storytelling, and responsive design. Finally, it outlines some worst practices to avoid such as excessive copying of content, intrusive advertisements, and overuse of social media.
This document discusses the shift towards mobile internet access and the rise of responsive web design. It notes that mobile has surpassed PC internet access in China and will likely surpass PC globally by the end of 2013. Tablets are also increasing in popularity and expected to overtake PC sales within 3 years. Responsive design is presented as a sensible solution to address this growing device fragmentation and allow websites to adapt to multiple screen sizes from mobile to desktop. Several examples of responsive design implementations are provided and their benefits highlighted.
This document discusses the need for global brands and media companies to publish high-quality video content across online, mobile, and social platforms to engage audiences. It describes the requirements for an online video platform, including supporting various content types, mobile/social publishing, analytics, and extensibility. Kyte is presented as a platform that meets these requirements through its capabilities for high-quality online and live video delivery, mobile/social support, analytics, and customization via APIs. Case studies demonstrate how MTV Networks leverages Kyte for certain innovative online video projects.
This document discusses the need for global brands and media companies to publish high-quality video content across online, mobile, and social platforms to engage audiences. It outlines requirements for an online video platform, including supporting various content types, mobile/social publishing, analytics, and extensibility. Kyte is presented as a platform that meets these requirements through its capabilities for high-quality online and live video delivery, mobile/social support, analytics, and customization via frameworks and APIs. Case studies demonstrate how MTV Networks leverages Kyte for certain innovative online video projects.
Elgg is an open-source social networking platform that can be used to build social networking sites for any domain without cost. The document discusses how Dish Network could use Elgg to build an online social network for customer service that allows customers and service representatives to interact and share information. This could transform customer service by providing a more in-depth interaction compared to traditional phone calls. Service representatives would have personal profiles and customer feedback would help improve service over time as issues are documented in a searchable database.
Trends are the natural changes in behaviours or proceedings. We like to be aware of those indicators for inspiration and guidance. At the beginning of every year we look at UX, UI trends and emerging technologies to get that guidance from.
Businesses and publications have been wrestling with “mobile publishing”
for a relatively short time. Apple’s iPhone was introduced in 2007, and
the iPad tablet in 2010. Other portable devices, like laptops, have been
around much longer. However, the modern smartphone/tablet phenomenon —
and the pressure created by the Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) trend — have
created a sense of urgency that’s hard for businesses to ignore.
Web 2.0 refers to applications that leverage the collective intelligence of users by allowing them to add value through participation and contribution. It delivers software as a continually updated service that improves as more people use it. Web 2.0 applications consume and remix data from multiple sources, including individual users, while also providing data and services that others can similarly reuse.
According to the document, there are several current trends in information and communication technologies (ICT). These include increased use of artificial intelligence, machine learning, robotic process automation, edge computing, quantum computing, virtual and augmented reality, blockchain, the internet of things, 5G networks, and continued advancements in cybersecurity. All of these technologies are driving innovation and changing how people interact and businesses operate.
The document discusses the evolution of the web from Web 1.0 to Web 2.0. Web 1.0 consisted of standalone websites used for broadcasting information, while Web 2.0 enables user-generated content and collaboration through social media and user participation on the network as a platform. Key aspects of Web 2.0 include delivering continuously updated services, mixing and sharing data across sources, and rich user experiences through participation and network effects.
Web 2.0 allows users to interact with information online through collaborative applications like blogs, wikis, and mashups that mix data from different websites. Popular examples include Gmail, Google Maps, and Flickr. Real estate companies can benefit from Web 2.0 by networking with other users, advertising properties for sale, and enhancing property searches through location-based applications. While Web 2.0 provides new opportunities, companies must consider reliability issues and costs of training employees on new technologies.
Cloud technology has entered a new phase; light years away from the staid, clunky back-office functionality of 10 years ago, this new phase of cloud technology is transforming entire business sectors and forging new revenue streams from previously inconceivable avenues. In the 7th of a series of reports, commissioned by HSBC, The Economist Intelligence Unit looks at how multinationals are using the cloud to reinvent business model.
镝数 is an interactive news production platform that aims to simplify the process of creating interactive data-driven news stories. It allows users to integrate writing, data analysis, and visualization all in one platform without needing coding or data analysis skills. The tool provides templates and integrated workflows to search for data, create charts, and publish interactive news stories. While the full version is not yet available, the beta platform seeks to lower barriers to interactive news production and empower journalists to tell stories with data.
A Study on Contemporary Technical Trends of Web Journalism
Be it an academic scholar or a professional aspirant, anybody who want to be
successful or achieve excellence in the field of web journalism should keep track of the changing
processes and practices that the online world is going through. With this
dissertation paper I have tried to sketch out the whole idea and process of Online
Journalism in the current context, and shed light on some contemporary technological
trends. With this I have also explored online media habits of
the audience. I feel this work of mine will help those scholars to conduct more
detailed research on emerging issues of web journalism & also expect aspiring
web journalists to get benefitted from this.
Department of Journalism & Mass Communication
West Bengal State University
Semester: 3 Session: 2013-2015
Reg No. 002017-2013
Paper: Communication Research
#AkashCreations
In the past 15 years technology has changed in ways that no one could have foreseen. Now, with the convergence of the mobile Web and touch screen technology we’re embarking on another journey into the unpredictable.
However If we’re all heading in the same direction why not make use of the hive mind to prepare ourselves? We asked some leading industry thinkers what they thought. To make it easier to digest, we’ve grouped these thoughts in to common themes.
HTML5 is a new digital commons that was finalized in 2014 and strengthened the technological capabilities of the World Wide Web. It was developed through a collective and cooperative process between the WhatWG and W3C standards bodies. The development of HTML5 helped address issues from the proliferation of proprietary technologies, the rise of mobile devices, and the W3C's slow progress. HTML5 adoption has led to a new approach of living standards that can quickly incorporate useful features without lengthy deliberation. However, questions remain regarding how data collection and use impacts user privacy and commodification in the digital economy.
This document discusses the emerging field of computational journalism and how computing technologies can enhance the journalism process and products. It provides examples of how tools like crime maps, fact-checking plugins, interactive data visualizations, and services that augment news websites can help journalists tell stories and help the public engage with news in new ways. The document argues that news organizations need to adopt computational approaches to keep up with changes in how people consume information and ensure transparency.
1. Knight Mozilla News Tech Partnership Seven Topics we want to discuss at the 1 st Innovation Challenge Sascha Venohr / Editor ZEIT ONLINE
2.
3. Re-think the experience of online comments & online debate Online discussion threads have been part of the Internet experience since the late 1990s. The form of user commentary has stayed fairly static, often relegated to sit far "below the fold" at the end of the news story.
4. Re-think the experience of online comments & online debate New capabilities in the browser, like HTML5 canvas and video, provide an opportunity to completely re-think the relationship between news users, and news producers. Meanwhile, emerging standards like OStatus, Webfinger, and Salmon are making it possible to re-imagine the relationship between people who comment, and the sites they comment on. Users should be able to annotate and deeplinks sections in Articles
5.
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8. The news storytelling potential for HTML5 video HTML5 and open video makes it possible to pull data from across the web into a story, and for information related to the video to literally pop onto the page.
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10. Prototype for cross-platform news delivery that only requires the open web to work People are reading news on a growing number of screens. Mobile devices and other new devices are becoming more powerful.
11.
12. Build a mash-up that combines the relevance of breaking news with the importance of in-depth coverage The web has enabled breaking-news coverage like we have not experienced before.
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15. Thank you for your attention. twitter.com/zeitonline twitter.com/venohr facebook.com/zeitonline