|
|
Monday, December 2, 2002 |
|
Architecture of the World Wide Web Working Draft Updated. 15 November 2002: The W3C Technical Architecture Group (TAG) has released an updated Working Draft, Architecture of the World Wide Web. Comments are welcome. With technical issues organized around identification, representation, and interaction, the document also addresses some non-technical social issues that contribute to the shared information space. Visit the TAG home page. (News archive) [The World Wide Web Consortium] 5:34:00 PM |
|
Contributing to an intranet. I'm trying to come up with more models for thinking about communication. I came up with a question: What affects my contributions? And some attributes of an answer:
A powerful intranet system makes it easy for people to contribute, gives them a direct return on investment and allows what they have added to be re-used in as many ways as possible. Typically an employee can contribute via:
A cursory examination of these options follows:
bulletin board
document management system
database
As I have written before I do believe that all of these systems have a valuable role to play in building a successful intranet, however they address only the macro level and much of the knowledge an organisation needs to gain an understanding of itself and a competitve advantage over it's peers is micro-content. What is required is a communication medium that has low inertia, rewards the constributor and builds shared value. Answer: weblogs, or more accurately knowledge-logs. More later. [Curiouser and curiouser!]12:58:49 PM |
|
liveTopics in RSS2.0 #2.
Mikel picks up on my post yesterday regarding adding topics to Radio RSS. I've got a few things in mind for this, but I'm sure others will really lead the way. Let's just address one point first. When trying to handle feeds from multiple blogs, inevitably, as Mikel points out, we will reach the situation where people using different words to mean the same topic. This will be a problem, but hopefully not as a big of a problem as it could be. It is for this reason that I have been tracking XFML so carefully. With XFML we have the ability to say "A's topic X is the same as B's topic Y". liveTopics already does XFML. So I think the first and simplest usage scenario will be within the type of aggregators that we have now as a way of filtering a feed to get rid of posts we deem irrelevant. This will allow us to subscribe to many, many more feeds since we don't have to weed out so much chaff. Although I think we'll need to be careful as it may make it more difficult to experience serendipitous moments. The next scenario I can imagine is as a way of producing a consolidated "on-topic" feed from a number of other feeds. Combined with technology to scrape RSS from sites and databases and with a little automagic to add topics where they don't exist this could be very powerful. My imagination runs out here, maybe someone else..? [Curiouser and curiouser!]12:55:30 PM |
|
MS fights Open Source with freebies - an eyewitness writes -- "When I told them that I'd need at least ten licenses and at $400/each, this would be too much for me for the beginning, they offered to give us the license for free - and not only for now, but also for the future when we kept working on Microsoft." [The Register]
Another clear example of the competitive nature of computing's most-powerful company. Of course, when you have virtually unlimited cash resources, it's easy to give away software here and there to prevent individual defections that might lead to broader trends *away* from the company's core revenue sources. |