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James OReilly

Web 2.0 - Wikipedia - 1 views

  • veränderte Nutzung und Wahrnehmung des Internets
  • Die Benutzer erstellen und bearbeiten Inhalte in quantitativ und qualitativ entscheidendem Maße selbst.
  • Typische Beispiele hierfür sind Wikis, Blogs, Foto- und Videoportale (z. B. Flickr und YouTube), soziale Online-Netzwerke wie XING, MySpace, Facebook und studiVZ sowie Social-Bookmarking-Portale wie Delicious, aber auch die schon länger bekannten Tauschbörsen sowie Politcommunitys wie dol2day und Politik-digital. (Browser-)Spiele und virtuelle Welten (z.B. Second Life) beinhalten ebenfalls Web 2.0-Elemente.
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  • Folgende Entwicklungen haben ab etwa 2005 zur veränderten Nutzung des Internets beigetragen:
  • Anwender ohne überdurchschnittliche technische Kenntnis oder Anwendungserfahrung benutzen Datenspeicher im Internet (z. B. für Fotos)
  • Programme aktualisieren sich selbstständig über das Internet, laden Module bei Bedarf darüber nach, und immer mehr Anwendungen benutzen einen Internet-Browser als Benutzerschnittstelle.
  • Anwender mit kaum mehr als durchschnittlicher EDV-Kenntnis stellen eigene Beiträge auf Server (siehe User Generated Content), pflegen Weblogs und verlagern auch private Daten ins öffentliche Netzwerk.
  • Mit einem Rollen- und Rechtesystem kann unterschieden werden, wer welche Beiträge welcher Personen einsehen bzw. bearbeiten kann. Benutzer können dafür in Gruppen mit verschiedenen Rechten eingeteilt werden.
James OReilly

Web 2.0 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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James OReilly

Translation-quality standards - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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James OReilly

Translation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    Machine translation
James OReilly

Grid computing - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • CERN, one of the largest users of grid technology, talk of The Grid: "a service for sharing computer power and data storage capacity over the Internet."
  • Grids can be categorized with a three stage model of departmental grids, enterprise grids and global grids.
  • World Community Grid Global November 2004 unknown
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  • According to John Patrick, IBM's vice president for Internet strategies, "the next big thing will be grid computing
  • It is a form of distributed computing whereby a "super and virtual computer" is composed of a cluster of networked, loosely coupled computers, acting in concert to perform very large tasks.
  • It can be small -- confined to a network of computer workstations within a corporation, for example -- or it can be a large, public collaboration across many companies or networks.
  • "Distributed" or "grid" computing in general is a special type of parallel computing[citation needed] that relies on complete computers
  • connected to a network
  • by a conventional network interface, such as Ethernet.
  • The primary advantage of distributed computing is that each node can be purchased as commodity hardware, which when combined can produce similar computing resources to a multiprocessor supercomputer, but at lower cost.
  • One feature of distributed grids is that they can be formed from computing resources belonging to multiple individuals or organizations (known as multiple administrative domains). This can facilitate commercial transactions, as in utility computing, or make it easier to assemble volunteer computing networks.
  • Grids offer a way to solve Grand Challenge problems such as protein folding, financial modeling, earthquake simulation, and climate/weather modeling.
  • The European Union has been a major proponent of Grid computing.
  • According to John Patrick, formerly IBM's vice president for Internet strategies, "the next big thing will be grid computing." [1]
  • back-office data processing in support of e-commerce and Web services.
  • European DataGrid (EDG) and is arguably the largest computing grid on the planet
  • along with the LHC Computing Grid [5] (LCG), has been developed to support the experiments using the CERN Large Hadron Collider. The LCG project is driven by CERN's need to handle huge amounts of data, where storage rates of several gigabytes per second (10 petabytes per year) are required.
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