Archiv

Artikel Tagged ‘Mashups’

Enterprise MashUps: New Book, New Highlights

10. Januar 2009

Enterprise Mashups: New Book Highlights the Patterns

mashuppatternsAlthough mashups started out in the consumer space, their success makes a migration into corporate IT environments inevitable. Firms exploring this new software development model may struggle at first to understand the importance of mashups from a corporate perspective. In the upcoming book, Mashup Patterns, author Michael Ogrinz provides a collection of use-case driven patterns intended to explain the value of enterprise mashups to both technical and non-technical readers

Popularity: 1% [?]

enterprise 2.0 ,

Enterprise MashUps

7. Januar 2009

Enterprise Mashups: New Book Highlights the Patterns

mashuppatternsAlthough mashups started out in the consumer space, their success makes a migration into corporate IT environments inevitable. Firms exploring this new software development model may struggle at first to understand the importance of mashups from a corporate perspective. In the upcoming book, Mashup Patterns, author Michael Ogrinz provides a collection of use-case driven patterns intended to explain the value of enterprise mashups to both technical and non-technical readers

Popularity: 1% [?]

Allgemein , ,

Google Blog Gadget

7. Januar 2009

Kommt gut und ist schnell zusammengestellt: das neue Google Gadget. Aus “How to Embed Almost Anything in your Website” Learn how to embed almost anything in your web pages from Flash videos to Spreadsheets to high resolution photographs to static images from Google Maps and more …

Popularity: 1% [?]

Allgemein , ,

Predictions

6. Januar 2008

Wenn Dion Hinchliffe zur Feder greift, lohnt die Lektüre. Das gilt auch für seine Web 2.0 Predictions for 2008. In Sachen offene Schnittstellen (API), MashUps, Widgets und Ajax setzt er ein paar interessante Statements ab, speziell im Hinblick auf tragfähige Geschäftsmodelle versus Konjunkturabkühlung. Drei Häppchen für den kleinen Hunger zwischendurch – den Rest bitte selbst lesen!

  • Open APIs finally go beyond free as successful business models emerge. Sites like Twitter are finding that their APIs get ten times the use of the site itself (Web 2.0 principle: A platform beats an application every time), but monetizing them is a challenge for all but a few major player such as Amazon.
  • Rich Internet Application (RIA) platforms such as Adobe AIR and Microsoft’s Silverlight get major traction as the development of non-trivial Web applications in Ajax remains difficult and time-consuming. While Ajax is made from 100% open Web standards, it was never explicitly designed for the job of creating rich user experiences and it’s proven tough going for many companies trying to create next generation Web experiences in Ajax. Adobe and Microsoft have been making enormous investments in browser plug-ins and supporting development tools that will change the way the Web will look in 2008 and beyond. These two platforms will be huge successes this year, despite the many challenges that RIA platforms face such as supporting page view-based business models, analytics, accessibility, network effects, link structure, search engine optimzation (SEO) and more.
  • A wave of new killer mobile Web applications (and their startups) appear, spurred by the iPhone Software Development Kit (SDK) and ever more untethered workers. Twitter was likely just the first in an era of fundamentally network-oriented applications with communications and collaboration at their design core. The release of the iPhone last year proved that Web apps could be nearly as functional and pleasing as desktop apps. The coming iPhone SDK, which will let anyone build iPhone software legally, will help usher in a new era of useful new consumer and business mobile applications, many which will sport Web 2.0 capabilities or even be fundamentally Web 2.0 based, such as route capturing software and automatic traffic tracking, particularly as more mobile devices add GPS capability in 2008.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Die kreative Klasse , , ,

BBC mit neuer MashUp Website

26. Dezember 2007

Die BBC zeigt mal wieder, wie es gehen kann. Nach Podcasts, eigenem Player usw. jetzt eine Netvibes-ähnliche Webseite, auf der man sich (technisch interessant gelöst) seine eigene, personalisierte Startseite zusammenklicken kann: it´s fun!

Popularity: 1% [?]

Allgemein

Next Step Browser

31. März 2007

Eins der heissesten Themen auf der “Future of Web Apps” in London waren diesmal webbasierte Anwendungen (Web Apps), in den Worten von Google-Sprecher Kay Oberbeck: “Wir sind fest davon überzeugt, dass die Reise weg von installierter Software hin zu webbasierten Anwendungen geht.”

Gut so – und Google Apps turnen es ja bereits erfolgreich vor, aber was tun, wenn das Netz mal Schnupfen hat und das Web mal kurz weg ist?? Adobe Apollo und Firefox 3.0 funktionieren auch offline – die nächste Firefox-Verson wird einen persistenten Speicher haben, wodurch SaaS (Software as a Service) immer interessanter wird. Der Vollständigkeit halber: Redmonton rockt den WPF, das muss genügen!

Popularity: 1% [?]

Allgemein , ,

NEU: Google Apps for Education

11. September 2006

Sharing information and ideas is vital to learning. So imagine how valuable it would be if your entire campus community shared a set of powerful, easy-to-use and integrated communication and collaboration services. With Google Apps for Education, you can offer all of your students innovative email, instant messaging, and calendaring, all for free.* You can select any combination of our available services (see below), and customize them with your school’s logo, color scheme and content. You can manage your users through an easy web-based console or use our available APIs to integrate the services into your existing systems — and it’s all hosted by Google, so there’s no hardware or software for you to install or maintain.

Popularity: 1% [?]

elearning ,

The quest for enterprise mashup tools

14. August 2006

The recent round of discussion of enterprise mashups has been a good one, led primarily by a stellar write-up recently by Galen Gruman, and highlights a phenomenon that is nigh upon us. As part of tracking this, I’ve been spending the better part of the last couple of months searching high and low for good quality tools that let anyone build enterprise-quality mashups, and I can safely report here that there are only a few.

Popularity: 1% [?]

enterprise 2.0

Video MashUps: Imagine

8. Juli 2006

Popularity: 1% [?]

Culture Club, Die kreative Klasse