We have seen Web 2.0 technologies used to create new web GIS applications. In this paper Eamon Walsh, Chief Technology Officer for eSpatial examines technologies progressing the industry from the first Web 2.0 GIS applications.
Key new capabilities include:
• Annotating and updating spatial data rather than just viewing and searching, using “pure web” technologies rather than desktop GIS tools.
• Data input from other consumer devices, such as cell phones.
• Working with organizations’ own data (including large databases) rather than just points of interest on standard maps.
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Web 2.0 has captured the imagination of consumers and businesses alike. But knowing how to leverage Web 2.0 concepts to fuel collaboration and innovation among employees, partners, and customers is another story. Web 2.0 can change an enterprise but recognizing how, and determining whether one should, is confusing. This paper aims to dispel some of the myths surrounding Web 2.0 and discusses its practical applications and its impact on online users by demonstrating HE goal oriented eLearning based on service oriented architecture (SOA).
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The introduction of Web 2.0 technologies into the enterprise greatly increases the value of your company?s most important asset: employees? knowledge, relationships and initiative. Increased collaboration accelerates productivity. Making knowledge more visible increases innovation and shortens turnaround times. Your company transforms into a more socially connected organization that reacts faster and more effectively to the market.
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Nearly all Web 2.0 applications started life as consumer-focused services, only later finding their way into the enterprise. But unlike many consumer ‘toys’, Web 2.0 actually delivers impressive benefits to the enterprise, including:
Streamlining collaboration within and beyond the enterprise
Accelerating search and information retrieval
Capturing knowledge assets and facilitating knowledge transfer
Speeding application development and deployment
Communicating with stakeholders in new ways
Some of these benefits are ‘soft’. Others are quantifiable. But all have combined to earn the attention of line-of-business managers and IT strategists alike. Web 2.0 is here to stay.
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This paper details various security concerns and risks associated with web 2.0 technologies such as Asynchronous Java script and XML (AJAX), Syndication, aggregation and notification of data in RSS or Atom feeds, mashups created by merging content from different sources. This paper also describes the security implications leading with the usage of web 2.0 technologies such as AJAX, RSS, and Mashups. Increase in application functionality leading to the emerging new web technologies (web 2.0). These new web technologies open more avenues to security threats to the online applications and users. Efficient protection mechanisms should be considered when dealing with web 2.0 technologies usage.
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Whether we like it or not, Web 2.0 technologies are profoundly changing the way we work and interact. User-generated Web content—hosted applications, blogs, wikis, social networking sites, RSS feeds—is rapidly creeping into organizations, offering users new ways to collaborate and communicate.
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Zend Core™ supports businesses using PHP and managing database information for mission critical web applications. It provides a seamless out-of-the-box experience delivering a stable, easy to-install and supported PHP development and production environment.
Presented in a browser-based environment, Zend Core provides a highly stable and efficient means for installing and managing PHP servers. Resources and reference information are bundled into Zend Core for “one click” access to a wide range of information, configurations and reference documents.
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10 Dec
Posted by jj as Hardware, WLAN and LAN
You have just purchased a modem featuring a pioneering new technology, making Internet access possible at speeds previously only imagined. This external cable modem is one part of a comprehensive communications system that utilizes the cable television network to deliver high-speed data to your computer. Data is requested and sent over the cable television network at burst rates of up to 38 megabits per second (Mbps)*. This chapter explains how to prepare your computer system for cable modem installation.
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