Archivos para Enero, 2008
ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF BLOGS
As wikipedia says a blog (a portmanteau of web log) is a website where entries are commonly displayed in reverse chron ological order. “Blog” can also be used as a verb, meaning to maintain or add content to a blog.
The advantages of blogs from an organizational perspective include the following:
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The consumer and citizen are potentially better informed and this can only be good for the long-term health of our societies and economies.
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Blogs have potential to help the organization develop stronger relationships and brand loyalty with its customers, as they interact with the ‘human face’ of the organization through blogs.
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Blogs, in an intranet environment, can be an excellent way of sharing knowledge within the organization.
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Blogs can be a positive way of getting feedback, and keeping your finger on the pulse, as readers react to certain pieces, suggest story ideas, etc.
- Blogs can build the profile of the writer, showcasing the organization as having talent and expertise.
The disadvantages of blogs are:
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Most people don’t have very much to say that’s interesting, and/or are unable to write down their ideas in a compelling and clear manner.
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I have often found that the people who have most time to write have least to say, and the people who have most to say don’t have enough time to write it. Thus, the real expertise within the organization lays hidden, as you get drowned in trivia.
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Like practically everything else on the Web, blogs are easy to start and hard to maintain. Writing coherently is one of the most difficult and time-consuming tasks for a human being to undertake. So, far from blogs being a cheap strategy, they are a very expensive one, in that they eat up time. As a result, many blogs are not updated, thus damaging rather than enhancing the reputation of the organization.
- Organizations are not democracies. The Web makes many organizations look like disorganizations, with multiple tones and opinions. Contrary to what some might think, the average customer prefers it if the organizat.ion they are about to purchase from is at least somewhat coherent.
http://www.gerrymcgovern.com/nt/2004/nt_2004_08_23_blogging.htm
CHAT
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Según wikipedia, Chat también conocido como cibercharla, es un anglicismo que usualmente se refiere a una comunicación escrita a través de internet entre dos o más personas que se realiza instantáneamente.
La soledad, es una constante en la vida de todo ser humano, a partir de esta constante es donde juegan un fuerte papel los chats, por muy Freaky que parezca, cada vez son más las personas que lo utilizan. ¿ Por qué esta actitud? en mi humilde opinión se trata del ansia de ser uno mismo el que lleva a las personas a recurrir al chat, ahí con un simple nik o pseudónimo dejas al margen tus problemas de forma real o imaginaria, inventas un personaje sin defectos, sin tus miedos, sin tus inseguridades.
O adoptas la postura contraria, eres tu mismo, con tus rarezas, con aquello que piensas habitualmente pero que eres incapaz de compartirlo con nadie, todo, absolutamente todo está permitido en un chat y muy probablemente no sereis los unicos con esa “rareza” o “peculiaridad”. Es un lazo de unión entre las distintas formas de vivir y sentir, con una diferencia primordial con la realidad, eres lo que quieres ser.
Which are the W3C objectives?
What is HTML
HyperText Markup Language (HTML) is a language to specify the structure of documents for retrieval across the Internet using browser programs of the WorldWideWeb.
HTML is an application of the Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML) which is the International Standard for text markup. The principle is that text markup concentrates on structure rather than appearance, making the files more reuseable and leaving the visual details to the end-user software (like the browser you’re reading this with now). For the reasons why, see Eliot Kimber’s comments.
Details of the specification are in the IETF Draft and the HTML Document Type Description. There is a FAQ (Frequently-Asked Questions) document, and a new book on HTML and the WorldWideWeb out shortly.
XML
What is XML?
XML is the standard Extensible Markup Language. XML is a metalanguage that defines the syntax used to define other languages labels structured. Its purpose is to help the sharing of information from different systems.
Objectives
* XML must be compatible with SGML.
* It should be easy to write programs that process XML documents.
* The number of optional features in XML must be minimum, ideally zero.
Advantages
The XML pretends to be more suitable for the browsers and easier to use than the HTML, which has always cause problems. The main advantages that the XML language includes are:
- It’s performance is simple and compatible with much aplications.
- Allows you using different languages at the same time.
- You can be sure that you are not having sintaxic errors.
The importances and consequences
As IBM Systems Journal says XML has become the predominant mechanism for electronic data interchange between information systems and can be described as a universally applicable, durable “Code of Integration.”
As we celebrate its tenth anniversary, it is appropriate to reflect on the role XML has played and the technical ecosystem in which it functions. In this paper, we discuss both the environment from which XML arose and its technical underpinnings, and we relate these topics to companion papers in this issue of the IBM Systems Journal.
We discuss the broad consequences of XML and argue that XML will take its place among the technical standards having the greatest impact on the world in which we live. We conclude with some reflections on the significant technical, economic, and societal consequences that XML is likely to have in the future.
http://geneura.ugr.es/~maribel/xml/introduccion/index.shtml#12 (11-01-08) 12:01 pm María Isabel García Arenas-Dpt.arquitectura y tecnología de computadoras-U. Granadahttp://www.research.ibm.com/journal/sj/452/adler.htm (11-01-08) 12:30 pm
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/XML (11-01-08) 12:45 pmhttp://www.ibm.com/developerworks/library/x-matters30.htm (11-01-08) 12:50pm
http://www.programación.net/html/xml/htmdsssl/capitulo1.htm#cap1s3 (15-01-08) 12:20 pm
http://www.desarrolloweb.com/manuales/18/ (15-01-08) 12:30 pm
http://www.w3c.es/divulgacion/guiasbreves/tecnologiasXML (16-01-08) 12:40 pm
http://www.w3.org/XML/ (16-01-08) 12:45 pm
WEB 2.0
The concept of “Web 2.0″ began with a conference brainstorming session between O’Reilly and MediaLive International. Dale Dougherty, web pioneer and O’Reilly VP, noted that far from having “crashed”, the web was more important than ever, with exciting new applications and sites popping up with surprising regularity. What’s more, the companies that had survived the collapse seemed to have some things in common. Could it be that the dot-com collapse marked some kind of turning point for the web, such that a call to action such as “Web 2.0″ might make sense? We agreed that it did, and so the Web 2.0 Conference was born.
In the year and a half since, the term “Web 2.0″ has clearlytaken hold, with more than 9.5 million citations in Google. But there’s still a huge amount of disagreement about just what Web 2.0 means, with some people decrying it as a meaningless marketing buzzword, and others accepting it as the new conventional wisdom.
The Web As Platform
Like many important concepts, Web 2.0 doesn’t have a hard boundary, but rather, a gravitational core. You can visualize Web 2.0 as a set of principles and practices that tie together a veritable solar system of sites that demonstrate some or all of those principles, at a varying distance from that core.
http://sociedaddelainformacion.telefonica.es/jsp/articulos/detalle.jsp?elem=2146