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Julie Lindsay

Nota : Casual Collaboration - 1 views

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    "Mash your ideas and media together with friends in a dynamic whiteboard wiki. Using photos, videos, and other web content you can instantly create brainstorms, presentations, scrapbooks, and enjoy an interactive chat with more than 50 friends."
 Lisa Durff

Web Conferencing Solution Rankings | 2009 Top 10 Web Conferencing Solution Vendors Report - 0 views

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    Workflow example
Ralph C

Council candidates embrace social media - Idaho Press-Tribune: News - 0 views

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    if canidates have a Facebook or twitter page they are more popular than canidates that dont. "I have a Web Page and a political Facebook link for my campaign. It is important to get our goals for Caldwell out to the public. I do not have a personal Facebook due to the nature of my husbands' job. I prefer to not have pictures and a day by day accounting of my life on the World Wide Web"
Andrew Kemp

Twenty years of the world wide web: What's the score? | The Economist - 0 views

  • The web, as everyone now knows
  • has found uses far beyond the original one of linking electronic documents about particle physics in laboratories around the world
  • But amid all the transformations it has wrought, from personal social networks to political campaigning to pornography, it has also transformed, as its inventor hoped it would, the business of doing science itself
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    info onhow the web has changed science.
travis robertson

Internet TV & Web TV: News and Trends for Internet Television - 0 views

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    This channel is focused on Internet TV (AKA Internet Television, Web TV, Online TV, etc…). Internet TV is essentially television content streamed and distributed via the Internet. Here we will cover news, trends, and general information about Internet TV technology. Stay informed with the latest in Internet television - including up-to-date news information on Google TV, Apple TV, Roku, Boxee, Netflix, Hulu and other emerging alternatives to traditional cable & broadcast television. Source: Internet TV & Web TV: News and Trends for Internet Television http://www.reelseo.com/video/internet-tv/#ixzz1bLTMzUxe ©2008-2011 ReelSEO.com Online Video Guide
tyler smith

web 2.0 in art - 0 views

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    this tells me how web 2.0 is used in art
Sonya G

Netscape- One of the first browsers - 0 views

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    This website tells about many popular web browsers of today's Internet. Netscape was the first, that set a precident for many of today's web browsers.
Andy J

Web 2.0 Summit 2011 - Co-produced by UBM TechWeb & O'Reilly Conferences, October 17 - 1... - 0 views

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    Flat classroom project website.
Justine B

Web 2.0 Science Tools | Digital Learning Environments - 0 views

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    Web 2.0 Science
Justine B

Web 2.0's "gigantic impact" on health care - Videos | ZDNet - 0 views

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    Video on Web 2.0 Health
Jeff Kern

The Business of Street Painting Art: Web 2.0 - 0 views

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    This article talks about how a video channel uses live streams online to give video coverage of street paintings being created and presented. 
TaylorJ j

Resource #1 - 0 views

  • In the 2000s the Internet grew to an astounding level not only in the number of people who regularly logged on to the World Wide Web (WWW) but in the speed and capability of its technology. By December 2009, 26 percent of the world’s population used the Internet and “surfed the web.
  • The rapid growth of Internet technology and usage had a drastic cultural effect on the United States. Although that impact was mostly positive, the WWW caused many social concerns. With financial transactions and personal information being stored on computer databases, credit-card fraud and identity theft were frighteningly common.
  • Hackers accessed private and personal information and used it for personal gain. Hate groups and terrorist organizations actively recruited online, and the threat remained of online terrorist activities ranging from planting computer viruses to potentially blowing up power stations by hacking computers that ran the machinery. Copyright infringement was a growing concern
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  • At the turn of the century, most users accessed the Internet by a dial-up connection in which computers used modems to connect to other computers using existing telephone lines. Typical dial-up connections ran at 56 kilobytes per second.
  • raditional communications media such as telephone and television services were redefined by technologies such as instant messaging, Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP), mobile smartphones, and streaming video.
  • The Internet changed the production, sale, and distribution of print publications, software, news, music, film, video, photography, and everyday products from soap to automobiles.
  • With broadband, Internet users could download and watch videos in a matter of seconds, media companies could offer live streaming-video newsfeeds, and peer-to-peer file sharing became efficient and commonplace. News was delivered on websites, blogs, and webfeeds, and e-commerce changed the way people shopped. Television shows, home movies, and feature films were viewed on desktop or laptop computers and even on cell phones. Students researched online, and many parents began working from home for their employers or started their own online businesses.
  • It was also becoming increasingly easy for users to access it from Internet cafés, Internet kiosks, access terminals, and web pay phones. With the advent of wireless, customers could connect to the Internet from virtually any place that offered remote service in the form of a wireless local area network (WLAN) or Wi-Fi router.
  • In January 2001 Apple launched the iPod digital music player, and then in April 2003 it opened the iTunes Store, allowing customers to legally purchase songs for 99 cents. Although federal courts ordered that music-sharing services such as Napster could be held liable if they were used to steal copyrighted works, Fanning’s brainchild realized the power of peer-to-peer file sharing and the potential success of user-generated Internet services.
  • Email was the general form of internet communication and allowed users to send electronic text messages. Users could also attach additional files containing text, pictures, or videos. Chat rooms and instant-messaging systems were also popular methods of online communication and were even quicker than traditional email. Broadband made other popular forms of Internet communication possible, including video chat rooms and video conferencing. Internet telephony or VoIP became increasingly popular f
  • or gaming applications.
Jake Snead

Khalil Edney Is Big Shot at New Rochelle High School and on YouTube - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    The age of Web2.0 allowed this amazing basketball shot to be seen around the world. This buzzer-beater shot was uploaded to the Internet and made this player and high school famous because it was watched from all around the world and even made an appearance on SportsCenter.
JenaH h

Research #1 - 0 views

  • The term “web 2.0” refers to the growing focus on collaborative, interconnected, user-generated content that distinctly altered the way Internet users spent time on the World Wide Web
  • which allowed users to create individualized profiles as a part of a network of friends and contacts, also effectively became file-sharing outlets. Videos uploaded to the file-sharing site youtube.com could be easily posted on Facebook or Myspace and shared among friends.
Emmett Brown

Despite threat, State of the Union speech not disrupted online - CNN.com - 0 views

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    An internet hacking group, called anonymous, said they would hack many major websites and disrupt web streams of Barak Obama's State of the Union adress. They are protesting some of the things that obama is backing, such as his cybersecurity order.
Jake Snead

Online Piracy Alert System to Begin This Week - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    This week the Copyright Alert System is being put into effect on the Internet. The system is used as an alert to companies about copyright infringement on their websites. Now when people on the Internet attempt to copy and paste a company's work onto their own work, they will receive a series of warnings. Media companies will observe online traffic and report to Internet providers if they think work has been downloaded illegally. The person who did this will receive up to six warnings and after that service providers can stop their Internet flow or give them up to a $35 fine. This relates to the sharing of information through Web 2.0 because people's work that they upload can be stolen or plagiarized, and this is helping to prevent that by discouraging the stealing of work.
Greg Keener

Government Citations - 0 views

started by Greg Keener on 11 Mar 13 no follow-up yet
Jake Snead

Celebrities Help Unicef Turn On 'Taps' for Clean Water - 0 views

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    The Unicef Tap Project has gone to Web2.0's new technologies to gain attention and followers worldwide. Celebrities participating in the project, which sends water to people in thrid-world countries, can go on social networking sites and tell people to help out. This effectively gets attention to the project.
Ethan Bennett

fcp picture citation - 0 views

"W3C Invites Chinese Web Developers, Industry, Academia to Assume Greater Role in Global Web Innovation | Global Alliance on Accessible Technologies and Environments." Global Alliance on Accessible...

started by Ethan Bennett on 13 Mar 13 no follow-up yet
Cole Seymour

10 Lessons for Gov 2.0 from Web 2.0 - O'Reilly Radar - 0 views

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    What is Web 2.0? In 2005, it meant geeks embracing a set of principles and practices: using the web as a platform, harnessing collective intelligence, data is the new "Intel inside," and others.
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