The rise of Web 2.0 technologies for business, Web 2.0 applications has benefited small scale industries. We have also come across a lots of changes in few past years such as increased knowledge sharing and more effective marketing. These benefits often have a measurable effect on the business leading to high source of income and revenue exposure.
2. Web 2.0 describes World WideWeb sites that emphasize user-
generated content, usability, and interoperability.The term was
popularized byTim O'Reilly and Dale Dougherty at the O'Reilly
MediaWeb 2.0 Conference in late 2004, though it was coined by Darcy
DiNucci in 1999.
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3. • Static pages instead of dynamic HTML.
• Content served from the server's file system instead of a RDBMS.
• Pages built using Server Side Includes or CGI instead of a web
application written in a dynamic programming language such
as Perl, PHP, Python or Ruby.
• The use of HTML 3.2-era elements such as frames and tables to
position and align elements on a page. These were often used
in combination with spacer GIFs.
4. • Proprietary HTML extensions, such as the <blink> and
<marquee> tags, introduced during the first browser war.
• Online guest books.
• GIF buttons, graphics (typically 88x31 pixels in size) promoting
web browsers, operating systems, text editors and various other
products.
6. • - free classification of information; allows users to
collectively classify and find information (e.g. tagging)
• - dynamic content, responsive to user input
• - information flows two ways between site
owner and site user by means of evaluation, review, and commenting.
Site users add content for others to see
• - Web 2.0 sites developed APIs to allow
automated usage, such as by an app or mash up
• - Universal web access leads to differentiation
of concerns from the traditional internet user base
8. • 69 percent of respondents report that their companies
have gained measurable business benefits Including:
• Innovative products and services
• More effective marketing
• Better access to knowledge
• Lower cost of doing business
• Higher revenues
9. 1. Blogs
2. Podcasts
3. Social Networks
4. Wikis
5. ePortfolios
6. Micro-Blogs
7. Social Bookmarking
10. • Over 70 million blogs have been created since 2003 and the
numbers just keep increasing! Why? Because people want to
express themselves and they like to have an audience.
• The World Wide Web makes it possible for you to publish your
thoughts (or whatever else you’d like) and distribute them out
to the entire world.
• There are several good, reliable blogging tools available for free
on the Web.
11. • A Podcast is basically just an audio (or video) file. What
distinguishes a podcast from other types of audio on the
Internet is that a “podcaster” can solicit subscriptions from
listeners, so that when new podcasts are released, they are
automatically delivered, or fed, to a subscriber's computer or
mobile device.
• The podcast features an audio show with new episodes that are
fed to your computer either sporadically or at planned intervals,
such as daily or weekly. This format encourages listeners to
“subscribe.”
12. • Social networking Websites provide a “virtual community” for
people interested in a particular subject or just to "hang out"
together. Members create their own online profile page with
biographical data, pictures, likes, dislikes and any other
information they choose to post.
• Users can communicate with each other text, voice, chat, instant
message, videoconference, and blogs, and the services typically
provide a way for members to contact friends of other
members, thus enabling everyone’s “network” to grow.
13. • "Wiki" is the word for "fast" in Hawaiian. A wiki is a page or
collection of Web pages designed to enable anyone who
accesses them to contribute or modify the content easily.
• Wikis are often used to create collaborative Websites and to
power online communities. Wikis are used in business to
provide intranets and knowledge management systems.
• Wikis are used in education to allow students to co-create
documents and research topics collaboratively.
14. • Electronic portfolios are gaining recognition as a valuable tool
for learners, instructors, and academic organizations.
• ePortfolios are higher education’s new “got to have it” tool.
They have been called the “show-and-tell platform of the
millennium” and are expected to revolutionize how students are
assessed in formal education.
• ePortfolios can best be viewed as a reactionary response to
fundamental shifts in learning, teaching, technology, and
learner needs in a climate where learning is no longer perceived
as confined to formal and traditional educational practices.
15. • ePortfolios can include a wide range of information and
content, for example:
• Personal information
• Education history
• Recognition – awards and certificates
• Reflective comments
• Coursework – assignment, projects
• Previous employer comments
• Goals, plans
• Personal values and interests
16. • Micro-blogging encompasses technologies which enable users
to write brief messages, usually limited to less than 200
characters, and publish them via Web browser-based services,
email, or mobile phones. The most popular micro-blogging
service today is called Twitter
17. • Social bookmarking is a way to store, organize, search, manage,
and share collections of websites. With the help of metadata
“tags”, or keywords, these lists can be organized and shared
across the Internet.
• People can access these bookmarks chronologically, by category
or tags, or via a search engine. Many social bookmarking
services provide web feeds (RSS) for their lists of bookmarks and
tagged categories.
• This allows subscribers to become aware of new bookmarks as
they are saved, shared, and tagged by other users.
18.
19. • When used effectively, they also may encourage participation in
projects and idea sharing, thus deepening a company’s pool of
knowledge.
• Bring greater scope and scale to organizations as well,
strengthening bonds with customers and improving
communications with suppliers and outside partners.
• Business benefits their companies have gained as a result of
using Web 2.0 technologies
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