Skip to main content

Home/ Mobile Learning/ Group items tagged Reasons

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Mobiletech Force

5 Genuine Reasons to use HTML5 for Mobile App Development - 0 views

  •  
    HTML5 is getting popular day-by-day due to its fabulous features and functionality. Now, developers prefer to use HTML5 for developing different genres of mobile apps. Do you why they prefer? Check this blog and find some genuine reasons.
Mobiletech Force

10 Extremely Common Reasons For App Rejection on Apple Store - 0 views

  •  
    In order to survive from rejection of the application, do consider these top 10 extremely common reasons while submitting your mobile application in app store.
Mobiletech Force

10 Reasons That Tell HTML5 Is Best Option - 0 views

  •  
    If you are optimizing HTML5 features for mobile interfaces, it allows you to make your brand page light and focus on functionality through which you can take advantage of the smaller screen smart devices.
Mobiletech Force

Why You Should Invest in Mobile App Development? - 0 views

  •  
    Do you know why you should invest your money in mobile application development project? There are lots of reasons to invest in mobile development as you can get a lot of benefits and expand your business worldwide. Go through this blog and share your views by commenting below!
Mobiletech Force

Reasons How HTML5 Continue To Prove Major Force in the Mobile App Development - 0 views

  •  
    HTML5 is ruling the mobile app development industry since it's launched in the market. Being the most powerful web technology, HTML5 has made things a lot simpler for developers. To get more information on why HTML5 constantly proving itself in the mobile app market, continue reading this blog…
maclin jerry

Blackberry Pay as you go � Acquire a Great Phone With the Best Scheme - 1 views

  •  
    BlackBerry is a renowned company which doesnt need any introduction in the mobile phone industry. This brand is very well known for the amazing handsets it has produced from time to time. And due to this reason the top business executives and business men prefer to opt for these device, as they offer various special features.
Dianne Rees

How to Use Your iPhone as a PC Wireless Web Cam | K-12 Mobile Learning - 0 views

  • Top 6 Reasons Why You Need This: Efficiently leverage the technology that’s already the hands of yourself and other learners Wireless web camera for $4.99 (the price of the app) Use it to showcase augmented reality in your classroom
  • Display video all across the network, which would excellent cross-curricular teaching opportunities No need for jailbreaking to use this Unique from video broadcasting apps on the iPhone – this app actually makes your PC recognize your iPhone as a web camera
Sebastian Weber

DeWitt Clinton » Blog Archive » On Web 2.0 - 0 views

  • While the Internet started growing decades earlier, it was the release of the first Mosaic web browser that heralded in a new revolution. Though it reached its peak in less than ten years, the era of Web 1.0 will be long remembered as a turning point in human society. As we are still deep in the midst of all of the change it is easy to overlook just how profound the Internet revolution really is.
    • Sebastian Weber
       
      Netscape als Inbegriff von Web 1.0
  • Web 1.0 was the great equalizer. It put everyone on the same playing field. A single individual sitting at a computer in the remotest region of the globe had the ability to publish as easily and as widely as the largest newspapers. While it has taken several years to get to the point where this has become commonplace (for reasons that may be explained in defining Web 2.0), even the earliest days of the web turned the conventions on their head. From private citizens like Matt Drudge to garage startups like Amazon.com, Web 1.0 was the beginning of an era in which the smallest player on the field could have just as much impact as the largest conventional institution.
  • Yet the technology of Web 1.0 was simultaneously both ground-breaking and surprisingly traditional. It was ground-breaking in the sense that it reduced the cost of data distribution to nearly nothing. Yet it was traditional in the sense that it generally followed the model of the printing press. (Albeit with very, very inexpensive machinery.) It allowed anyone to run their own printing press, and it removed the middle man from the distribution process. Web 1.0 was a revolution in which hundreds of millions of consumers found their way to millions of new producers.
  • ...14 more annotations...
  • The legacy of Web 1.0 will be felt for years to come. In fact, the vast majority of traffic on the Internet still follows this paradigm. You have an endless number of sites, large and small, that still present their view of the world in a tightly controlled environment — managed explicitly at all times between the client and the server. For example, if you shop at Expedia or Travelocity you will be able to buy plane tickets, but you will do so reading their content, using their interface, using their shopping cart, all on their web site.
    • Sebastian Weber
       
      web applications / sites were isolated solutions and they were isolated information silos and not connected with each other
  • Thus Web 1.0 was the enabling of the small individual to present itself on par with a much larger entity.
  • Before we get to Web 2.0., it is useful to consider what does not characterize Web 2.0. For instance, for all of the love that rich client-side AJAX applications such as Gmail have earned, that alone does not make them Web 2.0. Simply having a Flash or WML interface or a XHTML+CSS homepage is not enough to qualify.
    • Sebastian Weber
       
      What qualify web applications to be Web 2.0?
  • There is an intermediary stage in between Web 1.0 and Web 2.0. Chronologically, of course, nothing is that linear — patterns sometimes arrive early, sometimes far before the world is ready for them. There is a tremendous amount of overlap in each of these phases, and nothing is dying off completely.
    • Sebastian Weber
       
      I agree with this view. Web 2.0 concepts existed as ideas earlier.
  • Web 1.5 was an early tremor that signaled that data, all data, wanted to break free of the tightly controlled environments of before. Web 1.5 was the birth of the web service API. Amazon’s Web Services are one of the earliest examples of a large scale web services API with meaningful data. Other major sites followed suit — EBay, Yahoo!, Google, have all exposed web services that enable people to access the underlying data without being cornered into one particular application of that data. But this alone is not Web 2.0, though it is a very important step in that direction.
    • Sebastian Weber
       
      Exposing Web Service interfaces alone is not Web 2.0, rather Web 1.5
  • Web 2.0 is about giving up control. It is about setting the data free. It is about providing services that work with other people’s data. It is about having a valuable resource and making no presumptions about how or where that resource will be used.
    • Sebastian Weber
       
      Web 2.0 definition
  • There are two traits that characterize Web 2.0 and differentiate it from Web 1.5. First, Web 2.0 APIs tend to be symmetrical and reciprocal in the sense that not only can data be read out via published interfaces, but can it also be written into those interfaces. This is most apparent when the API is REST-based and supports the full HTTP method set of GET, HEAD, POST, PUT, etc. SOAP APIs can also qualify, and the Web Service Description Language (WSDL) is a necessary component for the discovery of such interfaces. Second, Web 2.0 APIs are open standards with formal semantic meaning. This, more than anything else, differentiates the applications of Web 2.0 from those that came before. For example, the Amazon Web Services APIs are incredibly rich, but in order to use them a client application must be specifically aware of the AWS protocols and formats. Similarly, in order to use Google Maps, a client application must know specifically about, and code specifically to, the Google API.
    • Sebastian Weber
       
      comparison of Web 1.5 and Web 2.0
  • Where Web 1.5 is about exposing the data, Web 2.0 is about giving that data meaning and thereby setting it free.
  • Web 2.0 is the syndication of data, and syndicating it in such a way that anyone, anywhere can use the results. Web 2.0 does not lock the consumer (who also becomes a producer) into rigid use cases — it intentionally forfeits that control in favor of much greater returns. And Web 2.0 adds semantic meaning to the data so that the interconnected network of consumers and producers can evolve and adapt and thrive as the system grows. And importantly, Web 2.0 is about symmetrical and reciprocal relationships between producers and consumers to the point where the lines become blurred and one becomes the other.
    • Sebastian Weber
       
      Web 2.0 definition
  • In a sense, Web 3.0 will be more of the same. This incremental stage will be characterized by our ability to stream media in real-time — similar to the way that Web 2.0 lets us syndicate much simpler data today. Convergence will extend to include streaming video and audio over interoperable channels.
    • Sebastian Weber
       
      Web 3.0: * stream large amounts of multimedia data * easier and more powerful content syndication
  • Your handheld mobile device will call the same media APIs that your flat-panel plasma display does.
    • Sebastian Weber
       
      Mobile Web / Pervasive Web
  • If Web 2.0 is about the convergence of text and semantic data, Web 3.0 will do the same for all digital media.
    • Sebastian Weber
       
      Up to Web 2.0 everything about content is text-centric.
  • And to go really out on a limb — what will Web 10.0 be? Most likely, even more along those lines. Imagine a scenario in which any data — all data — can be instantaneously streamed anywhere at anytime. Your very experiences, your senses, perhaps even your thoughts, will be broadcast and archived for anyone to download and view. All human knowledge will be publicly accessible — all music, all art, all media, all things. The distinction between human thought and computer thought will be blurred. We will be part of the network, the network will be part of us. We will be the hive mind, and we collectively will have evolved into something quite unlike anything the world has ever seen.
    • Sebastian Weber
       
      "Web 10.0" -> look into the future. Distinction between human thoughts and computer thoughts will be blurred
1 - 9 of 9
Showing 20 items per page