blog posts

By James Burke on 29 May 2010 15:21

Slides from a short talk on The Guardian and open/public data given by Chris Thorpe (@jaggeree) at the Gov2.0 Expo in Washington on the "Four perspectives of data.gov.uk" panel with Sir Tim Berners-Lee, John Sheridan and Dominic Campbell.

At the same conference Tim O’Reilly had a discussion (videoed) with Aneesh Chopra around “Government as a Platform” and in particular Healthcare.

By James Burke on 23 May 2010 18:09
You left the Ark where? by nickgoesglobal, on Flickr

The term "curation" appears to be on the rise lately in many web, iPhone and iPad applications emerging and mainstream blog articles being published such as “Why Content Curation is Here to Stay” and “Curators of the Real-Time Web: Distilling the chatter to relevant, actionable information” although this is not showing up too much yet on google trends.

User Generated Content (UGC) has become the "norm" in many web2.0 and post web2.0 applications where text, images, audio, video etc. is openly shared and licenced with licences such as Creative Commons or freely shared via the "embed" where legal reuse and repurposing rights and obligations can sometimes be difficult to ascertain due to that lack of an adopted content licence.

RSS is well established for sharing a "collection" of resources from a single source and OPML is gaining adoption for "collections" of resources from multiple sources. On the real-time-web front protocols such as PubSubHubbub allow the real-time publishing of feeds but the usefulness and relevance of these feeds appears to be sparking a new area of interest in web apps.

One aspect of "Web 3.0" could be seen as the "return of the expert" and the rise and validation of the "subject matter expert" where their curated "works" is seen as holding value over and above other people and their collections due to them having more contextual social capital or "whuffie".

By James Burke on 12 October 2008 21:20

Lots of thoughts, blogs etc. on the demise of Web2.0 in conjunction with the global financial crisis which Loren Feldman from 1938media sums succinctly in his own way!

By James Burke on 08 December 2007 00:00
The Web 2.0 bubble as portrayed in a catchy little song with video, and yes - as the song says I blogged about it...
By James Burke on 23 October 2007 23:00
Another video clip from Kansas University - this time on the nature of information and its classification and storage. I'm not too sure where the Semantic web fits into this picture though...
By James Burke on 09 October 2007 23:00
Tim O Reilly's keynote speech at SAP Tech Ed Oct 1st 2007
By James Burke on 04 October 2007 23:00
Jason Calcanis is starting a debate (intentional?) regarding his definition of Web 3.0 - is defined as the creation of high-quality content and services produced by gifted individuals using Web 2.0 technology as an enabling platform.
By James Burke on 01 October 2007 23:00
Web 2.0 is probably coming to an end now and more and more people are looking to defining and developing “revision 3” for new Internet product developments.
By James Burke on 25 February 2007 23:00
Web 2.0 has the potential to be a liberating development of applications and services delivered over a wide range of increasingly convergent devices, but how “green” in Web 2.0!?
By James Burke on 27 January 2007 23:00
This blog entry contains two images that show the Web 2.0 technology features timeline from 1992 to 2006 and Web 2.0 functionality features as a tagcloud.
By James Burke on 11 January 2007 00:00
Most Web 2.0 business tend to have a common look in terms of logo and branding but what if well known company brands were created now – what would their logo look like?
By James Burke on 20 October 2006 23:00
Web2.0 applications are essentially Internet based and accessed by a web browser that does all the rendering. Web2.0 services and applications have caused a shakeup in how people use applications and data but still lack a market reach due to the constant need for an Internet connection and reluctance of some to stop using desktop based applications. Adobe Apollo is a cross operating system runtime environment that allows developers to deploy Rich Internet Applications to the desktop.
By James Burke on 13 October 2006 23:00
This is a useful and brief explanation of web 2.0 and what it means for those developing digital learning content.(BECTA)
By James Burke on 08 October 2006 23:00
Don Hinchcliffe provides an excellent short blog entry on "struggling to monetize Web2.0" where he introduces and discussed the three main revenue models (the Web2.0 trinity). The feedback via comments on his blog provide useful insight into emerging business models and the application of tried and trusted business models for Web2.0
By James Burke on 02 September 2006 23:00
A UK version of Techcrunch the blog covering Web 2.0 startups is now available.
By James Burke on 02 September 2006 23:00
Paul Graham is an investor from Y Combinator which is a new kind of venture firm specializing in funding early stage startups. Paul believes we’re not in a bubble, that startups shouldn’t worry about their business models and the best companies are the ones with potential to kill old monopolies.
dotnetnuke