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Web 3.0 is only partly about semantics
Tags: webdev, web3.0, web2.0, socialmedia, semanticweb, mashup, vincentmaher on 2008-08-05 and saved by2 people -All Annotations (0) -About
more fromwww.bizcommunity.com
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Another compelling reason to share some of the information you're holding onto is that you want to be positioning yourself as a knowledge leader in your field and therefore a trustworthy authority. Trust is easier earned by being useful than by advertising.
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I am not suggesting you share or give away all your information; I am suggesting that you make sure the information your customers need is available to them without having to seek you out.
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For businesses, this means a further relinquishing of control over where their data is displayed - let's face it, the data is the stick and the transaction is the carrot, so holding onto your data doesn't really make sense anymore anyway.
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Web 3.0 will be a web of applications
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Calais is the kind of service you will use to do this automatically. Again, you need a little money to have someone build the tool that sends each piece of archived information to Calais, gets the list of tags or semantic code and puts this into your database.
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In most cases the decision to adopt a semantic approach to content is limited by two things. Firstly, you need to change the way you store and display information on your website. This can be solved by spending some money; it's not complicated technically. The second and more problematic aspect of this is what to do with your historical information. It is seldom practically feasible to manually tag each piece of information because this will take forever and you may never catch up.
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The potential outcomes of this new way of delivering information are staggering because it paves the way for applications that deliver information to the consumer in a much more intelligent way
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This is a problem because now, and even more so in the near future, you're going to want other sites that aggregate this type of information and send you traffic to be able to do this automatically without you even knowing about it.
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The Semantic Web and its technologies allow you to embed tags around your information that are hidden to ordinary readers but visible to the bots, crawlers and other evil-sounding things that spend their digital lives going from page to page gathering information. These tags tell the bots that this type of information is flight information and that information is hotel room information, so they gather this information up and store it in a way that makes more sense for searching.
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This is achieved by providing context to the information you publish on the Web.
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the Semantic Web is about bringing information to life.
Enterprise cloud computing gathers steam
Tags: web2.0, strategy, saas, cloudcomputing, webservices, zdnet, web3.0, api, convergence, webservice, dionhinchcliffe on 2008-08-05 and saved by3 people -All Annotations (0) -About
more fromblogs.zdnet.com
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This model includes any service which provides a consistent, service-oriented interface over a network to interact with people in a directed, collaborative manner. This is an on-demand form of outsourcing as well a cloud-based form of crowdsourcing.
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One type of cloud computing tends to defy traditional categorization and that’s harnessing human workers in the cloud, as a service. This is best exemplified by Amazon’s intriguing offering, Mechanical Turk, which plugs thousands of people into its on-demand cloud.
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Here are some of the types of cloud computing services that are emerging today:
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Service-oriented
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Centralization vs. federation
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Scalability and performance
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Security
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Multitenancy
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Low barrier to entry
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Reduced capital expenditures
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These aspects are:
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Interestingly, it’s at this very intersection of issues that cloud computing appears especially compelling. By offering easy access to more efficient IT capabilities across computing, storage, and applications while providing direct and immediate access to both external innovation and innovation capability, cloud computing offers an on-demand, scalable, and repeatable resource that can be used the solve two of the major challenges facing IT departments today.
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Google has a well-known reputation for globally scalable applications that can reliably service millions of concurrent users while successfully controlling costs and efficiency in everything from power and bandwidth to storage and processing power. So when they claimed that anyone can now “build scalable web apps on top of Google’s infrastructure” it received considerable attention.
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Businesses must keep costs down to stay competitive while at the same time investing in new ideas that will offer compelling new products and services to those same customers.
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The promise of cloud computing has captured the industry’s imagination this year for two big reasons. The first is the growing realization that cloud computing can successfully be used to strategically cut costs and drive innovation. And the second is that current offerings are getting very close to being ready for prime-time use in enterprise environments.
Welcome to Web 3.0: Now Your Other Computer is a Data Center
Tags: cloudcomputing, web2.0, web3.0, opendata, knowledgemanagement, linkeddata, dataondemand, virtualization, techcrunch, webdev, marcbenioff, salesforce.com on 2008-08-05 and saved by16 people -All Annotations (0) -About
more fromwww.techcrunchit.com
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Because code lives in the cloud, global talent pools can contribute to it. Because it runs in the cloud, a truly global market can subscribe to it as a service.
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For ISVs, Web 3.0 means that they can spend more time focusing on the core value they want to offer to customers, not the infrastructure to support it.
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Because every developer around the world can access the same powerful cloud infrastructures, Web 3.0 is a force for global economic empowerment.
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For developers, Web 3.0 means that all they need to create their dream app is an idea, a browser,
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The new rallying cry of Web 3.0 is that anyone can innovate, anywhere. Code is written, collaborated on, debugged, tested, deployed, and run in the cloud. When innovation is untethered from the time and capital constraints of infrastructure, it can truly flourish.
Everywhere I look, I see Clouds
Tags: zdnet, cloudcomputing, paulmiller, web2.0, web3.0, opendata, knowledgemanagement, linkeddata, dataondemand on 2008-08-05 -All Annotations (0) -About
more fromblogs.zdnet.com
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This wealth of Web-addressable data needs web-native structures in which it can be stored and manipulated. The siloised mentality, code and structures of the RDBMS are unlikely to fit the bill here, whereas the web-native model of the Semantic Web is ready and waiting.
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we’re moving ever closer to a mode in which software is available on demand (SaaS)… and so is data
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Google did web developers, application users (and themselves) a huge favour when they formalised the apis that provided access to large bodies of map data.
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Discussing these posts internally, a colleague was quick to remind us that these huge hosted data centres are not just full of powerful servers. They’re full of data, ripe for interconnection and manipulation in very similar ways to those in which computers and software applications are already being meshed and combined. The Linked Data movement is increasingly central to the Semantic Web and it is a small step to move beyond its current projects to consider web-based applications that draw seamlessly upon these web-addressable pools of accessible and usable data.
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He suggests that Web 1.0 was, fundamentally, a ‘transactional’ web; Web 2.0 a ‘participatory’ web; Web 3.0 a web in which anyone can innovate by calling upon shared resources in the Cloud.
Entrepreneurs See a Web Guided by Common Sense
Tags: business, datarelationships, new york times, startup, technology, web3.0 on 2008-03-23 and saved by2 people -All Annotations (0) -About
in list: Startup
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