jschneider + web   571

Automatic shifting and manual steering on the information superhighway « Jon Udell
"This property of the link — that it is both map and territory — is one I’ve blogged about before (a lucky blog for me, as it elicited three of my Favorite Comments Ever). But now I see something much larger coming into view. Each person enacts the network. At the same time, the network begins to represent and enact the infinities within the persons who make it up. The inside is bigger than the outside. Each part contains the whole, and also contributes to the whole."
RSS  networks  links  web 
july 2011 by jschneider
Adactio: Journal—One web
"Most of the time, creating a separate mobile website is simply a cop-out."
internet  net-neutrality  accessibility  design  mobile  web  responsive-design  univeral-design 
july 2011 by jschneider
Adactio: Journal—Content First
"This is what Mark describes as the “canvas in” approach:
It’s my belief that in order to embrace designing native layouts for the web – whatever the device – we need to shed the notion that we create layouts from a canvas in. We need to flip it on its head, and create layouts from the content out.""Unnecessary page cruft is being interpreted as damage and routed around with tools like the Readability bookmarklet, Safari’s Reader functionality, and Instapaper. These services exist partly to free up content from having a single endpoint but they also serve to break content free from the shackles of stifling overwrought containers. This isn’t anything new, of course; we’ve been here before with RSS. But the existence of these new reader-empowering tools should be taken as a warning …and a challenge—how can we design for our content in such a way that the reader won’t need or want to reach for Readability or Instapaper?"
content  design  mobile  web  screen-size 
april 2011 by jschneider
Seven ways to think like the web « Jon Udell
"Back in October, at the Traction Software users’ conference, I led a discussion on the theme of observable work in which we brainstormed a list of some principles that people apply when they work well together online. It’s the same list that emerges when I talk about computational thinking, or Fourth R principles, or thinking like the web. Here’s an edited version of the list we put up on the easel that day:

Be the authoritative source for your own data

Pass by reference not by value

Know the difference between structured and unstructured data

Create and adopt disciplined naming conventions

Push your data to the widest appropriate scope

Participate in pub/sub networks as both a publisher and a subscriber

Reuse components and services"
Jon  Udell  REST  web  computational-thinking  patterns 
january 2011 by jschneider
OCLC Introduces “A Web Presence for Small Libraries” | Disruptive Library Technology Jester
"The Innovation Lab group conducted some research about the existing state of public library web presences by sorting the IMLS-reported data from 2008 by number of volumes held and number of library staff. They looked at the lowest quartile (roughly 20,000 volumes or less and staff size in the low single digits) and found that there was generally no web presence for these libraries. In the second quartile there were instances of library websites, but they did the library no credit (outdated, poorly constructed, incomplete information — as was said at the meeting, these libraries had a presence on the web but probably shouldn’t). Some had automation systems supplied by large groups, but others didn’t have evidence of an automation system. So the project charter was to find an easy and inexpensive way for a library in these quartiles to create a desktop and mobile device web presence."
libraries  web  OCLC 
january 2011 by jschneider
[no title]
"The AIM schema contains a unique
identifier to the image available in
all the representation languages, so
the image is linked to the annotation regardless of whether the annotation is serialized to DICOMSR, HL7 CDA XML, or OWL.""The process by which users viewed images and created AIM annotations was similar to the current process radiologists use
to perform this task, by drawing or notating
directly on images (see Figure 1). However,
the annotation tool creates semantic structure (hidden from the user during annotation), which is stored in computer-accessible
formats. Thus, AIM and the annotation tool
provide a means to conceptually link the
image to its semantic contents for subsequent data analysis or access on the Semantic Web." <-- clever!
DICOM  AIM  image-annotation  annotation  semantic  web  e-science  OWL  ontologies 
january 2011 by jschneider
Adactio: Journal—The URI is the thing
"They are the one universal syntax of the web. Don’t take that for granted.
That’s why I feel so disappointed and sad when I see previously-robust URLs swapped out for the fragile #! fragment identifiers. I find it hard to articulate my sadness, but it’s related to what Ben said in his comment to Nicholas’s article on how many users have JavaScript disabled:
The truth is that if site content doesn’t load through curl it’s broken."
javascript  web  twitter 
january 2011 by jschneider
Real Editors Ship (Ftrain.com)
"Editors are first and foremost there to ship the product without getting sued." (misread `sued' as `sad'!) "Editors are really valuable, and, the way things are going, undervalued. These are people who are good at process. They think about calendars, schedules, checklists, and get freaked out when schedules slip. Their jobs are to aggregate information, parse it, restructure it, and make sure it meets standards. They are basically QA for language and meaning."" Google just acquired MetaWeb, which is not user-generated as much as user-edited content. (C.f. the Shakespeare page).""Google is not really a media company as much as a medium company.""I see three problems with my idea. First, editors and journalists are mostly luddites, as already noted, and they don't really hang out in places where you might think to hire them. (I think the Awl should have a jobs board; that would be perfect.) But I think this one can be solved: even my most technically mystified editor pals could be trained to use Freebase Gridworks. Add to that the willingness to schedule the living shit out of everything, the ability to see patterns, a total dedication to shipping, and willingness to say "no," and you start to have this very interesting source of power inside your organization, especially given the changes coming in web content, where you need structure and connections in order to play with others. Editors can help you play nice. And they actually do understand standards, at least conceptually. If you tell them the line needs to end with a semicolon they will end it with a semicolon. Words into Type and ISO 8879 are of similar complexity.

Second problem: most editors want to be editing for print or broadcast, not for the web, which is still seen as slumming it. But that said more and more of the big-deal journalism is about aggregating data. Which means that more and more journalists are getting exposed to thinking in grids and bulk-editing and so forth. Or at least getting interns to do it for them. Which is interesting. Also, getting fired or taking a buyout helps people gain perspective on what they like doing; there's that."
publishing  editing  user-edited  user-generated-content  web  future-of-journalism 
september 2010 by jschneider
Is the web really dead? - Boing Boing
" It doesn't map to time spent, work done, money invested, wealth yielded... Does 50MB of YouTube kitteh represent more meaningful growth than a 5MB Wired feature?"
web  bandwidth  internet  traffic 
august 2010 by jschneider
Generations of the Web – an Overview. – webr3.org
"This brings me to HTML5, the key here isn't the new HTML5 document format, the semantics, the ability to embed microdata or anything like that - it's the introduced (or implied) dependency on JS /ECMAScript via the JS APIs. This leads to JS being rolled out on to the majority of devices - it's also important to note the server side JS movement in this too.""We've had a "Web of Documents", we're building a "Web of Data", the next logical step is to have a "Web of Applications", for this we need two things: a Universal Programming Language (JS...) and an "Internet of Things" which support the universal data model and the universal programming language."
web  history  linkeddata  html5 
may 2010 by jschneider
Understand The Web · Ben Ward
via http://adactio.com/journal/1661/ "I’m all for making the web richer, and exposing new functionality, but I value what makes the web weblike much, much more.""He refers to “open content”. What is that? Content wrapped inside an impenetrable, proprietary, single-vendor container format? Flash, by design, locks content away (in exchange for other supposed benefits.) Comments like “Flash is an open specification” is unhelpful too: The page hosting the Flash specification doesn’t specify a license, the document itself just exerts copyright and disclaimers on behalf of Adobe. Furthermore there are no native or competing implementations of Flash, nor is the development of Flash open to participation.""All of these things are vying for attention and evangelism. Some of them are great, some of them are stupid, but they’re all clubbed together under this vague banner of ‘The Open Web’. It sets expectations and demands from developers, who are all the while being wowed by the efficiency and quality of proprietary application frameworks like Flash and Cocoa.""the half-life of most things on the internet is short""It is not acceptable to me that 21st century knowledge retention has become so short and shallow as to be overwritten by influential ranting on Twitter. A greater tool for the dissemination of misinformation has never been known.""Microsoft’s development of enhancements like ActiveX, and XMLHttpRequest were not being prepared to be standardised for the web with W3C participation, they were invented in such a way as to inject proprietary, Windows-only code into the web. Tools not to make to web better, but to make it dependent on Microsoft.""Want to know if your ‘HTML application’ is part of the web? Link me into it. Not just link me to it; link me into it. Not just to the black-box frontpage. Link me to a piece of content. Show me that it can be crawled, show me that we can draw strands of silk between the resources presented in your app. That is the web: The beautiful interconnection of navigable content. If your website locks content away in a container, outside the reach of hyperlinks, you’re not building any kind of ‘web’ app. You’re doing something else.""Cross-platform user interface sucks. It’s a nightmare of inconsistency and wrong, momentarily obsoleted assumptions. But cross-platform content? Well that is content. It’s articles and poems and pictures and movies and music, everywhere!"
html5  web  standards 
may 2010 by jschneider
Adactio: Journal—Understanding
"Want to know if your ‘HTML application’ is part of the web? Link me into it. Not just link me to it; link me into it. Not just to the black-box frontpage. Link me to a piece of content. Show me that it can be crawled, show me that we can draw strands of silk between the resources presented in your app. That is the web: The beautiful interconnection of navigable content. If your website locks content away in a container, outside the reach of hyperlinks, you’re not building any kind of ‘web’ app. You’re doing something else."
web  internet  adactio  linking  hypertext  rich-internet-applications 
may 2010 by jschneider
Discussion: Semantic Web | LinkedIn
"Making it easy to publish metadata about web sites

We've seen a lot of standards published for attaching metadata to web sites, but I think things are tough for the brave webmaster who actually tries it. For instance, I've tried to attach some DC-HTML to

http://ny-pictures.com/nyc/photo/picture/29009/photo_showing_entrance_ellis_harbor

Well, now I'm wondering, "Did I do it right?" I don't find it easy to find validators online, but when people do point them out that (i) the validators see no triples, or (ii) they won't even try because this is an XHTML.

Mind you, DC-HTML is a simple standard. Matters get worse with RDFa.

For one thing, RDFa is supported as a standard for XHTML. Trouble is, XHTML "in the wild" is about as successful as Netscape Netcaster. One issue is that mainstream toolchains don't generate valid XHTML on dynamic web sites: they might generate valid XHTML sometimes, but it's very hard to promise that, say, A PHP script is going to produce valid XHTML under all circumstances.

(Generally, producing valid XHTML means that you need an XML-based toolchain for outputting your markup. In most cases that means it's hard to hire a web designer to control the look of your site, maybe even hard to hire a programmer who can make a five-minute change in less than five hours. ASP.NET solves this problem well, but, it's pretty hard to get everything else right if you use ASP.NET)

RDFa, in my mind, gives authors way too many choices, and an understanding of one 'simple' thing (like the use of rel="license") involves understanding how several different standard documents interact. I'm concerned that the use of element enclosure to propagate 'subject' is going to dangerously couple presentation and contents. For instance, I tell my designer to move something to a different part of that page, that means moving it outside the <div> that the subject is in it, and poof goes my linked data...


The problem, however, is way bigger than RDFa. The documentation for microformats and other options is bad too. People who make web sites are busy, and they need simple instructions that tell them specifically what to do to accomplish their goals and an understanding of how this contributes to the bottom line. Faced with current docs and specs, most people are going to just give up, and the remainder are going to do it wrong.

It's dawning on me that this is a "people problem" more than it is a technical problem, but if we don't tackle it, linked data and the semantic web are going to stay stuck in neutral.

What we can do? "
metadata  web 
march 2010 by jschneider
Epeus' epigone: iPad is the web made physical
"The Web is something that started out as a display medium, but is now the platform we all expect to build our applications on, precisely because it is an abstraction that comes between us and the particular hardware our users are running. The web is an agreement on how to phrase things.

The iPad picks up this agreement and delivers on it in a new form, but exceptionally well. When the iPhone was launched, I said that the web was the one standard even Steve Jobs can't ignore. This is reinforced by the iPad - it opens with web browsing, and the Book format adopted, ePub, is built on HTML."
ipad  web 
february 2010 by jschneider
stevenwalling.com » Blog Archive » New York Times to Charge Online Readers? My Two Cents
"I’m not going to link to you if there’s even a mediocre chance my friends, family and colleagues aren’t going to be able to read what I’ve shared."
nytimes  paywalls  web  web-etiquette 
january 2010 by jschneider
I, Reader › I, Reader: A Book Outline
John Miedema's blog "The I, Reader series started as a collection of notes I kept over the previous year, as part of a book concept. ""The series was entitled, I, Reader, an allusion to Isaac Asimov’s book, I, Robot, a popular collection of short stories that dealt with many of the conflicts that arise between people and their technology.""The current subtitle is Bibliophilia and Its Discontents. It is a nod to Ellen Ullman’s book, Close to the machine: Technophilia and Its Discontents. "
code4lib  books  ebooks  reading  web 
december 2009 by jschneider
The Magical Geography of the Web « Mark Klein’s Weblog
"And because there is no proper notion of location, there is no such thing as truly useful maps. There is no country called “PTSD and blood sugar – istan”, where all the information on that topic is co-located. So we have to rely on explorers, either dumb but persistent mechanical ones like google, or smarter (but less persistent) human ones, to explore this uncharted vastness and come back with useful tidbits that they deposit in a centralized depository."
geography  web  search  recommended  interesting 
december 2009 by jschneider
inkdroid » Blog Archive » flickr, digital curation and the web
"The point of this blog post is that Dave, Rob and I were able to independently work on tools for pushing the same repository content around without having to talk much at all. The World Wide Web, and URIs in particular, enables this sort of integration. I guess some people would argue that this is a Web2.0 Mashup, and I guess they would be right in a way. But really it is using the Web the way it was designed to be used–as a decentralized information space. Flickr can tell me about the Chronicling America content that’s on Flickr; and Chronicling America can tell other people about the repository objects themselves."
Ed  Summers  semanticweb  web  architecture  web-architecture 
september 2009 by jschneider
A History of Our Own, Representing Communities and Identities on the Web (SAA09: Session 202) - Spellbound Blog
"Setting his papers aside, he spoke to the audience about the eXHulme website which he had discovered the evening before while finishing his presentation. Having lived in Hulme, Manchester himself, he felt a great impact from looking through the site. He spent 4 hours looking at it – including photos such as the travellers living in their buses parked – otteburn close 1996 seen at the bottom of this page. His discovery and exploration of this site gave him a greater personal understanding of the impact of these types of community documentation projects. I felt he would have been happy to keep talking about this site and the directions it had sent his thoughts — but he then got back to his papers and continued."
archives  web  community  living-archives  communities  recommended  history 
september 2009 by jschneider
Pearltrees.com
Like mindmaps crossed with webdesign.
mindmapping  web  bookmarking  odd 
july 2009 by jschneider
Introducing Yip: A Unified Notification System for the Web « abi's blog
"Yip is a Firefox extension that ports the Fluid and Prism notification APIs over to Firefox so you can receive Growl notifications from web applications."
growl  notifications  web 
june 2009 by jschneider
A longitudinal study of Web pages continued: a consideration of document persistence. Web documents, Half-life, Linkrot, Persistence, Web citations
"This paper does not dwell on content stability issues. Its focus is Web page persistence and reports findings from a continuing longitudinal study extending more than 325 weeks from December 1996 to May 2003. It is, I believe, the longest continuous study of a single set of URLs. Most URL longevity studies are relatively short and are monitored over a period of days, weeks, or sometimes months. Furthermore, if the literature suggests interest, there is a greater interest in document stability than in content stability—there are far more papers published on the former than the latter.""the stability of Web site may be a function of URL form, domains, or of other factors. We suggest here that Web page persistence is somewhat more complex.""It is not unreasonable to ask, from a bibliographical perspective, whether a Web document, once moved from one address to another remains the same document or whether it is metamorphosed into something different."
Web  publication  half-life  persistence  linkchecking  linkrot  preservation 
may 2009 by jschneider
Jon Udell | LSA Magazine | Spring 2009 | Can the Noosphere Save Us?
"We are all continually discovering useful knowledge that we want to share. Until very recently, it was costly to transmit that knowledge beyond the local sphere: friends, family, tribe. Now, suddenly, it's free to address the whole world. The only cost is your time. Of course that is the scarcest commodity. But you already invest your time in the crafting of messages that you deliver only to the few. When appropriate, consider placing those messages in online venues where they can also inform the many. The tragedy of the environmental commons will not similarly play out in the information commons because, as Jefferson observed, "he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me." The library is open. Visit often, and use its free services in every way you can. While you're there, light a few candles of your own. We're all in this together. There's never been a greater need, nor better opportunity, to pool and apply what we collectively know. "Prod costs >0...
libraries  web  Jon  Udell  lpnews  publishing 
may 2009 by jschneider
Context-similarity based hotlinks assignment: Model, metrics and algorithm
"We present a randomized algorithm, which combines the popularity of the webpages, the website structure, and for the first time to the best authors’ knowledge, the similarity of context between pages in order to suggest the placement of suitable hotlinks. We verify experimentally that users need less page transitions to reach expected information..."
ia  web  hypertext  usability  navigation  near 
may 2009 by jschneider
Network management
"On the web, he says, authority trickles up, not down. ""1. All ideas compete on an equal footing. 2. Contribution counts for more than credentials. 3. Hierarchies are natural, not prescribed. 4. Leaders serve rather than preside. 5. Tasks are chosen, not assigned. 6. Groups are self-defining and -organizing. 7. Resources get attracted, not allocated. 8. Power comes from sharing information, not hoarding it. 9. Opinions compound and decisions are peer-reviewed. 10. Users can veto most policy decisions. 11. Intrinsic rewards matter most. 12. Hackers are heroes."
future  management  Lorcan  Demsey  web  change 
april 2009 by jschneider
Re: registering info: uris? from Ross Singer on 2009-03-30 (stdin)
"1. The web is not going to wait for info:uris 2. The web is not going to use info:uris anyway, even after we've exhausted all of the corner cases and come up with the perfect URI model for a given domain, *because there's nothing the web can do with them anyway*."
info:uris  web  rsinger  wisdom  dereferencing 
march 2009 by jschneider
Unilever Centre for Molecular Informatics, Cambridge - The library of the future - Guardian of Scholarship? « petermr’s blog
"When I started in academia I got the impression (I don’t know why) that Libraries (capital-L = formal role in organization) had a central role in guiding scholarship. That they were part of the governance of the university (and indeed some universities have Librarian positions which have the rank of senior professor - e.g. Deans of faculties). I have held onto this idea until it has become clear that it no longer holds. Libraries (and/or Librarians) no longer play this central role. That’s very serious and seriously bad for academia as it has left a vacuum which few are trying to address and which is a contributor to the current problems. ""So, simply, the librarian of the future must be a revolutionary. They may or may not be Librarians. If Librarians are not revolutionaries they have little future. "
librarianship  academia  copyrigth  1972  1993  web  fail 
march 2009 by jschneider
Respect the URL in Reference Lists - source/literacy
“the MLA no longer recommends the inclusion of URLs in the works-cited-list entries for Web publications.”
MLA  fail  citations  web 
march 2009 by jschneider
Aza’s Thoughts » My Dream Way To Write A Firefox Extension
"This is a sketch of how I’d like to be able to write a Firefox extension.""I’d like to be able to open my extensions in a web page and debug them with Firebug. In the second example, because much of the code is outsourced to a HTML page, debugging it is as simple as pointing a browser at it. For more complicated extensions, we can mock-out the Browser object so that the extensions can be prototyped in content-space. Really, anything that gives line numbers and useful error messages would be a big help in debugging my mistakes."
web  programming  firefox 
march 2009 by jschneider
Learning to Fear the Semantic Web (Ftrain.com)
"non-standard, closed-source document formats are awful stuff that block competition between software vendors and, worse, waste god-awful amounts of my time.""If I can see the shadow of a lawsuit anywhere I am obligated to shine a light upon it and freak out at least a little; otherwise I'm not doing my job.""Now, finally, ten years on, I know that the Semantic Web is real and viable, because I'm afraid I'll get sued for using it. That's the true measure of a maturing technology"
zotero  web  openacalais  liability  Thomson-Reuters 
march 2009 by jschneider
Adactio: Journal—Small world, loosely joined
"The World Wide Web is a beautiful piece of social software."
socialsoftware  web  adactio  microformats 
march 2009 by jschneider
Adactio: Journal—Source
"In the preface to my book DOM Scripting, the first of my acknowledgments is a "thank you" to View Source. Thanks to that one little piece of browser functionality, I was able to learn HTML, CSS and JavaScript. In these days of RESTful APIs, there are even more sources to be viewed. "
DOM  scripting  transparency  source  web  openness  web-principles 
february 2009 by jschneider
twill: a simple scripting language for Web browsing
"twill is a simple language that allows users to browse the Web from a command-line interface. With twill, you can navigate through Web sites that use forms, cookies, and most standard Web features."
scripting  testing  cli  web  unittesting 
february 2009 by jschneider
The Politics of Web Space Richard Rogers
Compare figures 7 and 8 to the xkcd map! "Web software now routinely knows a user’s geographical location, and acts upon the knowledge. You are reminded of the geographical awareness of the Web when in France you type into the browser, google.com, and are redirected to google.fr.""The digital divide cartograms show countries resized according to percentages of the online populations per country. ""Generally, thinking in terms of the Web as a universe (to be charted) coincided with early ideas of the Web as a hyperspace, where one would jump from one site to another at some great, unknown distance." (example of random site) Linking style (figure 3) is interesting . linking relationships, not all links are equal. "
politics  web  location-aware  end-of-cyberspace  geography  "hyperlink-diplomacy"  authority  googlebombing 
february 2009 by jschneider
if:book: Can Books and the Web Play Well Together?
"no matter how things shake out, writers will still write and readers will still read. "
publishing  web 
january 2009 by jschneider
Web, scissors, stone
"At over 100 A4 pages, it's impractical to read on screen and I don't really want to print out 50-odd sheets of paper just to read it either." "I hate PDF! We need to get more imaginitive in the way we surface stuff. And we desperately need to get out of the mindset that more equals better."
publishing  web  PDF 
december 2008 by jschneider
Study: Newspaper Websites Are Still Figuring Out This Whole Conversation Thing
"In terms of reader-submitted material, newspapers are more comfortable accepting images than words. More newspaper sites accept photos from readers (58 percent) than videos (18 percent) or articles (15 percent). Comments are less controversial, with 75 percent allowing reader comments on articles. One thing I found curious is that 57 percent of newspaper sites offer their editions in PDF form. Why? A PDF of a page, maybe, but nobody prints out the whole edition.""Sites that require registration are down from 29 percent to 11 percent, which means that most newspapers have finally figured out that putting up any barriers, even a temporary one, between readers and articles simply drives readers to other sites."
publishing  newspapers  web  trends 
december 2008 by jschneider
Rudy Ray Moore, 81, 'Dolemite' star, precursor of rap, dies -- chicagotribune.com
"The cause was complications of diabetes, his Web site said." First time I've seen "his web site said" in this sort of context (e.g. obituary)
rap  music  obituaries  web 
october 2008 by jschneider
The Mundaneum Museum Honors the First Concept of the World Wide Web - NYTimes.com
"Otlet envisioned links that carried meaning by, for example, annotating if particular documents agreed or disagreed with each other."
Paul  Otlet  nytimes  hyperlinks  Mundaneum  web  "web-science"  purple  collaboration  ontologies  semanticweb  history-of-technology 
june 2008 by jschneider
mediabistro.com: FishbowlNY
"There were headlines to write but I was sitting around playing with maps,"
web  nytimes  data  maps  journalism 
may 2008 by jschneider
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