Reviewing Web Architecture: Conclusions
Grok Headline matches for Reviewing Web Architecture: Conclusions
Reviewing Web Architecture
Reviewing Web Architecture
12/17/2003 07:19 PMKendall Clark analyzes the W3C Technical Architure Group's
"Architecture of the World Wide Web" document, newly published as a
Last Call draft at the W3C.
Reviewing Web Architecture:
Identification
Reviewing Web Architecture:
Identification
01/08/2004 08:50 PMContinuing his review of the W3C Technical Architecture Group's
"Architecture of the World Wide Web", Kendall Clark focuses on the the
web's addressing scheme, the URI.
Features: Reviewing the Architecture of
the World Wide Web
Features: Reviewing the Architecture of
the World Wide Web
02/01/2005 08:52 PMHarry Halpin reviews the final published edition of the W3C TAG's
Architecture of the World Wide Web document.
3G Traffic Conclusions
3G Traffic Conclusions
12/11/2003 05:01 AM3G Dec 11 2003 3:32AM ET
We Are All Connected: The Path from
Architecture to Information Architecture
We Are All Connected: The Path from
Architecture to Information Architecture
01/07/2004 06:41 PMIn this article, author Fu Tien Chiou describes a link between
traditional architecture and Information Architecture, showing how the
Information Architect uses a set of blueprints that builders --
designers and programmers -- can construct. 1217
We are all connected: The path from
architecture to information architecture
We are all connected: The path from
architecture to information architecture
11/11/2003 04:46 AMConclusions excerpted from the full
report
Conclusions excerpted from the full
report
07/10/2004 02:35 PMconclusions .. pdf
intelligence.senate.gov/conclusions.pdf
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Walmart and RFID tags some conclusions
Walmart and RFID tags some conclusions
11/14/2003 04:38 AMIf you have been reading here for a while you will remember my rant on
these RFID tags that companies...
Ex-CIA Chiefs Rebut Bush Panel
Conclusions (AP)
Ex-CIA Chiefs Rebut Bush Panel
Conclusions (AP)
04/01/2005 10:44 PMAP - Two former CIA chiefs on Friday disputed claims cited by a
presidential commission that agency officials warned them that the
government's leading source on Iraq's biological weapons had a
reputation for making things up.
MS unveils newest Xbox game: Jump to
Conclusions
MS unveils newest Xbox game: Jump to
Conclusions
05/29/2004 09:33 AMMS's $50 iPod killer is vaporware. Xbox 2-PC hybrid a pie in the sky?
Also, a shakeup at Ion Storm.
"the conclusions that this veteran
footie writer took fifteen years to
draw"
"the conclusions that this veteran
footie writer took fifteen years to
draw"
05/05/2004 10:47 PM"movie reviewing game"
"movie reviewing game"
06/18/2004 12:29 AMBeerwizard Rating/Reviewing
Beerwizard Rating/Reviewing
07/14/2004 11:57 AMProject in very early planning phases
CodeWalkers: Reviewing the Dreamweaver
CodeWalkers: Reviewing the Dreamweaver
02/21/2003 08:29 AMMCI Reviewing New Qwest Offer
MCI Reviewing New Qwest Offer
03/19/2005 02:58 AMMCI said early Thursday that it is reviewing Qwest's latest offer to
buy the company, and will have a response by March 28. Qwest sweetened
the offer by about $450 million – or $26 per share versus $24.50 in
its first offer. To date, Verizon has not changed its offer, which
still stands at $6.7 million or $20.75 per share.
Peer-reviewing the monkeyhouse
Peer-reviewing the monkeyhouse
12/17/2004 06:41 PM
Introducing the
Inte
rnational Journal of Web Based Communities (IJWBC), a quarterly
peer-reviewed scientific journal whose
first issue
just went online. Growing out of the papers presented at the
IADIS International Conference on
Web Based Communities, the journal lists among their
intended subject coverage such topics as
"the
history, architecture and future of virtual communities",
"group processes and self-organisation", and
"fading hierarchies and epistemic dictatorship".
Read it while you can, because future hardcopy subscriptions will run
you $450/€430 a year.
Reviewing Seattle's 3G Service
Reviewing Seattle's 3G Service
09/25/2004 12:04 PMNancy Gohring reviews AT&T Wireless's new UMTS 3G cell data
network in Seattle: Our senior editor Nancy Gohring wrote this for The
Seattle Times. Nancy notes that AT&T Wireless has their UMTS
service in six markets; Verizon Wireless will roll out its EV-DO
service in 11 more cities for a total of 14. Nancy tried the Real
Networks video news service and gives them high marks; there's an
audio-only component that offers NPR, too. That service is $4.95 per
month. She notes, however, that much of that content is available for
free on the Internet in formats included in the regular mMode
subscription, which is $24.99 per month for unlimited use with basic
Internet access and certain mobile data services. Nancy also tried a
data card that works with the service, although you can connect to the
Motorola phone that's one of two options for the network via a cable
to use it as a modem. The data card had worse coverage area, for
reasons that are inexplicable. As with Nancy's earlier tests of
AT&T Wireless's 2.5G GPRS service, the company couldn't explain
the performance variations she saw in being able to get online around
town....
Infoworld: Reviewing Open Source CMS
Infoworld: Reviewing Open Source CMS
01/15/2003 11:50 AMOpen-source CMSes (content management systems)—such as PHP-Nuke
(www.phpnuke.org), eZ Publish (www.ez.no) and Bricolage
(www.bricolage.cc)—provide a compelling third option, one that can be
flexible and relatively inexpensive without requiring companies to
build their own CMS from the ground up.
Of course, an open-source CMS solution can present its own challenges.
As we've seen before with open-source software, the flip side of great
flexibility is often challenging complexity. While it's true that open
source enables companies to cross off licensing-fee line items from
their project budgets, a portion of these savings must be redirected
to development expertise, be it outsourced or in-house.
"zeldman.lo2"
Dr. ROM Reviewing Firefox and
Thunderbird Books
Dr. ROM Reviewing Firefox and
Thunderbird Books
04/16/2005 07:47 AMReviewing the Yahoo 360 launch, after
the fact
Reviewing the Yahoo 360 launch, after
the fact
04/02/2005 07:28 AM
Th
e launch of Yahoo 360 seems so long ago, but it was just six days.
How did it go? This screed nails it.
Invite-only, exclusive, two-tier marketing of beta services, a
tradition started by Google (as far as anyone knows) don't work. It
only worked for Gmail because there was great anticipation, the idea
was new (the method of marketing, that is), and you could use Gmail to
communicate with people who didn't use Gmail.
Everything about Yahoo 360
is for members only, and in the first few hours of its life in the
blogosphere, most people couldn't get in. Now, after it's
launched, there's no way to see anything other than a ghost town.
Maybe that's all there is, maybe not. But for a service like this, the
appearance of being a ghost town is just as bad as actually being one.
All this fuss for a service that most people thought was a poor
cousin to Flickr that Yahoo bought just before rolling out 360.
It's a disaster epic on the scale of The Towering Inferno
or The Poseidon
Adventure. They did everything wrong, and worked really hard at
it.
Moral of the story, big companies don't have
mojo, they can't, and it's not fair to make that the issue. They can,
however, make the trains run on time, and at that Yahoo does quite
well. But they should leave the innovation to small, nimble, motivated
devteams with nothing to lose and no corporate hierarchy to please.
Hire a business school prof to do a case study for you. It's never
worked differently in Silicon Valley, yet this is a lesson Silicon
Valley keeps relearning. The next revolution isn't on stage at
Esther's or SXSW or even Etech -- those were the last
revolutions.
FCC Reviewing Calls Made Over Internet
FCC Reviewing Calls Made Over Internet
12/02/2003 09:56 AMCRM Assist Dec 2 2003 9:34AM ET
Mathew Gross: Reviewing Obama
Mathew Gross: Reviewing Obama
07/28/2004 02:42 PMMatthew Gross
mathewgross.com/blog/archives/000498.html
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U.S. Agency Reviewing Internet-Related
Patent
U.S. Agency Reviewing Internet-Related
Patent
11/13/2003 04:11 AMLos Angeles Times Nov 13 2003 3:25AM ET
Judge Reviewing Java Plan Proposed by
Sun, Microsoft
Judge Reviewing Java Plan Proposed by
Sun, Microsoft
01/21/2003 10:57 AMJoint proposal on Microsoft's plan to release Windows with Java.
Reviving The Internet Tax Ban, Reviewing
Google's Chastity Belt, and More Belts
and Boilermakers in Cyberspace
Reviving The Internet Tax Ban, Reviewing
Google's Chastity Belt, and More Belts
and Boilermakers in Cyberspace
04/23/2004 09:45 PMAVN Online Apr 24 2004 1:40AM GMT
Go Digital The best of Go Digital,
reviewing the year in technology
Go Digital The best of Go Digital,
reviewing the year in technology
12/29/2003 06:12 AMBBC Dec 29 2003 4:46AM ET
Architecture + Ecology in AZ
Architecture + Ecology in AZ
11/16/2003 06:17 PM "We have a society that is moving very rapidly to the super-,
super-, super-
consum
ptive," says architect
Pa
olo Soleri. "And I'm proposing that might not be the final
answer. So I'm saying, why don't we try
a
leaner alternative?"
(via PBS; more
inside.) pDNS architecture
pDNS architecture
05/07/2004 05:00 AMDiagram of how it
fits..
Diagram of how it fits.
Submitted by joeldg on Thu,
05/06/2004 - 16:19.
For those of you in the #pa channel you are
familiar with the conversations we have been having about why to USE
the rdfs/rdf/owl/dc ontologies built into a parser just for FOAF.
One of the reasons for wanting this is because you
will get back a array of statements regarded as good, and another with
statements regarded as bad. By looking over this we can debug rdf
docs, determine what xmlns statements would be optimal and which are
not needed (some generators just throw a huge list in for no good
reason).
So I had created a parser from scratch that had
this capability but due to the fact that it is a from scratch
quick/hack deal I don't think it will be workable and it was not as
fast as the built-in SAX parser in PHP which defeats the purpose of
why we wanted to do that. In addition we needed a small parser that
does the basic job of RAP in a small set, yet still be extensible to
allow for vocabulary based parsing.
I am trying to marry these two concepts and it is a
pain. I have a nice
parser
that I am using as the base as it keeps the structure in a very good
form for filtering through the vocabulary checker in an "after-parsed"
way.
Another point to note is that using the
vocabularies we can specify based on a few things
(class/property/disjointwith/subclassof etc..) we can specify a
general distiction of how to treat data within tags.
For instance, rdfs:subPropertyOf has specified
range and domain of Property which is defined in rdf-syntax-ns which
makes sense, so based on this fact, if this property is used in a
different context we can throw a warning. If it is used within a
disjointwith then throw an Error.
At least this is the base idea and it will
become clearer as work progresses on this. I am limited in my capacity
to work deeply on this as I have a full time job.. So this is
basically a side-project..
Anyway, enough rambling. Marc wanted a diagram
for how pDNS fits in with everything else.. I took the word "fits"
literally and create this following puzzle-piece diagram
;)
To explain:
pDNS
totally depends on the parser, pa needs pDNS for doing lookups in a
logical way that is not as screwy and intensive as rdql as we are
looking for large scale in this project.
Anyway, any
questions.. drop em.. or any suggestions..
Moving Your Architecture to .NET
Moving Your Architecture to .NET
03/13/2003 10:24 AMThe architecture of participation
The architecture of participation
08/17/2004 10:59 AM
Discussions about open source and innovation tend to cluster around
two opposing memes. One says that open source can't innovate; the
other that only open source can innovate. Both are wrong. Sometimes
large, well-funded R&D programs can achieve breakthroughs that
lone geniuses can't. And sometimes the reverse is true. Either way,
the real innovation of the open source movement is the architecture of
participation. It can help turn a good idea -- wherever it came from
-- into a best-quality implementation. Software companies that don't
choose the open source model have to find other ways to recruit and
reward participants. [Full story at
InfoWorld.com] [See also: other
open-source-related items]
The term 'open source' presumes that the essence of software is source
code, and that participation means hacking it. And that's true. But
the emergence of the services model creates modes of participation
that don't require access to source. Back in 2000, Rael Dornfest
introduced the term
open services in order to make that distinction.
...PHP Cluster Architecture
PHP Cluster Architecture
09/02/2004 08:24 AMNew documents added
Architecture pilgrimage
Architecture pilgrimage
07/02/2004 02:43 PM
Architect
ure pilgrimage. Sketches of the world's great architecture.
Deterministic AI Architecture
Deterministic AI Architecture
06/25/2004 08:59 AMMajor change in development
The architecture of intermediation
The architecture of intermediation
03/30/2005 06:14 PM
When Steve Mallett recently cloned
del.icio.us to create
de.lirio.us, the predictable
controversy ensued. Here's a capsule summary:
Good! del.icio.us is closed-source, the world needs an
open-source social bookmarking service.
Bad! Geez, what a lame ripoff!
Rather than taking sides in this debate -- which I can't do, because I
sympathize with both positions while endorsing neither -- I'd like to
try to broaden its scope.
...Emergent Architecture
Emergent Architecture
08/05/2002 10:43 PMInformation Architecture for Everyone
Information Architecture for Everyone
11/13/2002 04:55 AMThe purpose of this article is to help you define information
architecture so that you can
recognize when it is you are wearing an IA hat, as well as provide you
some tips, basics
and resources to help you build the most well architected sites
possible. So let's get
started.
TAG: 3D Architecture Guide
TAG: 3D Architecture Guide
06/14/2004 01:21 PMTAG 1.6 Released...
Ecclesiastical Architecture, et al.
Ecclesiastical Architecture, et al.
06/17/2004 10:14 AM
The Churchmouse:
Ecclesiastical Architecture, Stained Glass, Church Monuments and other
Funerary Monuments such as Cast Iron Grave Markers.
TAG and the Web's Architecture
TAG and the Web's Architecture
09/04/2002 07:03 PMKendall Clark reviews the first public draft of the W3C Technical
Architecture Group's publication "Architectural Principles of the
World Wide Web", intended to be a definitive statement of how the Web
should work.
Grok Description matches for Reviewing Web Architecture: Conclusions
GrokA matches for Reviewing Web Architecture: Conclusions
Reviewing Web Architecture: Conclusions