31 de jan. de 2010

Use of semantic web on the BBC


O uso que a BBC tem feito da web semântica permite não apenas ao leitor encontrar mais rapidamente informação na interface da rede de tevê inglesa e conteúdos relacionados fora do espaço BBC como transformar a base de dados em APIs para criação de novos conteúdos. Reproduzo aqui o trecho que me parece mais contundente. A íntegra está no w3.org.


"The BBC Search Team is building on this newly-available linked data, by creating pan-BBC aggregations of content. These new pages are called Search+ —an indication that we are using this data to enhance the standard search experience. Each Search+ page shows the best content on its particular topic from around bbc.co.uk, and sometimes selected content from outside the BBC. The set of topics that make up the Search+ Pages essentially form a new BBC Controlled Vocabulary (CV) of concepts and entities. Each term in the BBC CV has an associated DBpedia resource, to enable us to use some of the metadata within DBpedia, and also enable links between our CV terms (and associated Search+ pages) and content both inside and outside the BBC. We also intend to use sources other than just DBpedia (e.g. Musicbrainz and Geonames) to provide these “Linked Open Data” associations in the near future.


Various groups around the BBC have contributed to the Search+ project, and we have a fledgling suite of tools to allow people within the BBC to manage the life cycle of the Search+ pages and the data used in them. These tools allow us to: associate DBpedia resources with content pages; then promote those DBpedia resources into the BBC CV in a controlled way; build the associated Search+ pages for those terms in the BBC CV; include additional pieces of content on those Search+ pages—both from inside and outside the BBC; and to monitor the quality and usage of the Search+ pages.

Conclusions

Creating web identifiers for every item the BBC has an interest in, and considering those as aggregations of BBC content about that item, allows us to enable very rich cross-domain user journeys. This means BBC content can be discovered by users in many different ways, and content teams within the organisation have a focal point around which to organise their content.


The RDF representations of these web identifiers allow developers to use our data to build applications. The two issues, providing cross-domain navigation and machine-readable representations, are tightly interleaved. Giving access to machine-readable representations that hold links to further such representations, crossing domain boundaries, means that much richer applications can be built on top of our data, including new BBC products. In addition the system gives us a flexibility and a maintainability benefit: our web site becomes our API. Considering our feeds as an integral part of building a web site also means that they are very cheap to generate: they are just a different view of our data.


The approach has also proved to be an efficient one—allowing different development teams to concentrate on different domains while at the same time benefiting from the activities of the other teams. The small pieces loosely joined approach, which is manifest in any Linked Data project, significantly reduces the need to coordinate teams while at the same time allowing each team to benefit from the activities of others.

Key Benefits of Using Semantic Web Technology

  • Usability—Making a site around the things people care and think about.
  • User Experience—Having meaningful predicates and granular, addressable resources, so that those resources can be visualised in new ways.
  • User Journeys—Allowing users to make their own journeys across our content. On the BBC /nature, users can start making their own documentaries. They can start on an animal, watch a programme clip, follow a link to a related habitat, read about that habitat and so on…
  • One page per thing—Making our resources part of the Web and therefore linkable and discoverable.
  • Our web site is our API—One URI for both machines and web browsers. Our web site can be used by third parties to create new products, e.g.,URIPlayTestTubeTellyFanHubz or Channelography(*).
  • Loosely coupled development—Different teams can work together in a loosely coupled fashion. Each team focuses on their domain of interest."

30 de jan. de 2010

Para quem perdeu a Campus Party


O canal da Campus Party no You tube tem a íntegra das palestras que rolaram no maior evento de internet da América Latina. Vale a pena incluir no bookmark.

29 de jan. de 2010

A world of connections

"Online social networks are changing the way people communicate, work and play, and mostly for the better, says Martin Giles". 

(via @TheEconomist)


25 de jan. de 2010

Internet 2009 em números

Email
90 trillion – The number of emails sent on the Internet in 2009.
247 billion – Average number of email messages per day.
1.4 billion – The number of email users worldwide.
100 million – New email users since the year before.
81% – The percentage of emails that were spam.
92% – Peak spam levels late in the year.
24% – Increase in spam since last year.
200 billion – The number of spam emails per day (assuming 81% are spam).


Websites
234 million – The number of websites as of December 2009.
47 million – Added websites in 2009.


Web servers
13.9% – The growth of Apache websites in 2009.
-22.1% – The growth of IIS websites in 2009.
35.0% – The growth of Google GFE websites in 2009.
384.4% – The growth of Nginx websites in 2009.
-72.4% – The growth of Lighttpd websites in 2009.




Domain names
81.8 million – .COM domain names at the end of 2009.
12.3 million – .NET domain names at the end of 2009.
7.8 million – .ORG domain names at the end of 2009.
76.3 million – The number of country code top-level domains (e.g. .CN, .UK, .DE, etc.).
187 million – The number of domain names across all top-level domains (October 2009).
8% – The increase in domain names since the year before.

Internet users
1.73 billion – Internet users worldwide (September 2009).
18% – Increase in Internet users since the previous year.
738,257,230 – Internet users in Asia.
418,029,796 – Internet users in Europe.
252,908,000 – Internet users in North America.
179,031,479 – Internet users in Latin America / Caribbean.
67,371,700 – Internet users in Africa.
57,425,046 – Internet users in the Middle East.
20,970,490 – Internet users in Oceania / Australia.




Social media
126 million – The number of blogs on the Internet (as tracked by BlogPulse).
84% – Percent of social network sites with more women than men.
27.3 million – Number of tweets on Twitter per day (November, 2009)
57% – Percentage of Twitter’s user base located in the United States.
4.25 million – People following @aplusk (Ashton Kutcher, Twitter’s most followed user).
350 million – People on Facebook.
50% – Percentage of Facebook users that log in every day.
500,000 – The number of active Facebook applications.


Images
4 billion – Photos hosted by Flickr (October 2009).
2.5 billion – Photos uploaded each month to Facebook.
30 billion – At the current rate, the number of photos uploaded to Facebook per year.


Videos
1 billion – The total number of videos YouTube serves in one day.
12.2 billion – Videos viewed per month on YouTube in the US (November 2009).
924 million – Videos viewed per month on Hulu in the US (November 2009).
182 – The number of online videos the average Internet user watches in a month (USA).
82% – Percentage of Internet users that view videos online (USA).
39.4% – YouTube online video market share (USA).
81.9% – Percentage of embedded videos on blogs that are YouTube videos.




Malicious software
148,000 – New zombie computers created per day (used in botnets for sending spam, etc.)
2.6 million – Amount of malicious code threats at the start of 2009 (viruses, trojans, etc.)
921,143 – The number of new malicious code signatures added by Symantec in Q4 2009.


Data sources: Website and web server stats from Netcraft. Domain name stats from Verisign and Webhosting.info. Internet user stats from Internet World Stats. Web browser stats from Net Applications. Email stats from Radicati Group. Spam stats from McAfee. Malware stats from Symantec (and here) and McAfee. Online video stats from Comscore, Sysomos and YouTube. Photo stats from Flickr and Facebook. Social media stats from BlogPulse, Pingdom (here and here), Twittercounter, Facebook and GigaOm.


(via http://royal.pingdom.com)

24 de jan. de 2010

Social search



Sobees, a plataforma que permite gerenciar várias contas de redes sociais em tempo real, anuncia agora um sistema de busca nos mesmos moldes, baseado no Microsoft Silverlight. 


Para pesquisar, basta acessar a URL http://search.sobees.com e digitar uma tag qualquer na caixinha em branco para o aplicativo vasculhar Twitter, Friendfeed, Facterylabs, OneRiotFacebook, MySpace, FriendFeed e LinkedIn.  


Os resultados aparecem em formatos de links para notícias (Bing, Google, New York Times e Yahoo), fotos (Bing, Flickr, Google e Yahoo) e vídeos (Bing, Google e Youtube). 

23 de jan. de 2010

O novo You Tube






Vale reproduzir o comentário de Marcio Machado no Blue Bus sobre as mudanças na rede de compartilhamento de vídeo comandada pela Google. User-Friendly é a palavra da vez: 


"A página ficará mais limpa destacando ainda mais o vídeo em exibição. Saem as estrelinhas de ranking e entra um botão de 'gosto' ou 'não gosto' (como no Vimeo). Compartilhar via Twitter ou Facebook também será mais fácil através de botões em um painel de controle abaixo de cada vídeo. Outra feature bacana é que a pesquisa agora é simultânea e não interrompe a exibição de vídeos. E você pode selecionar a resolução do vídeo que está assistindo, com uma qualidade cada vez mais próxima da TV. 

Recomendo selecionar a resolução de 720p em fullscreen só para ter uma idéia melhor de onde isso tudo pode chegar...) 


E as novidades não param por aí. Fazer playlist de vídeos está também bem mais fácil. Acesse youtube.com/disco, coloque o nome do artista de sua preferência e pronto. Rapidinho você consegue montar uma lista com os melhores vídeos dos Beatles, por exemplo. User-Friendly é a palavra da vez.

Facilidade de uso, alta distribuição, qualidade de imagem e cada vez mais novos canais de conteúdo relevante e programação... USD 1,65 bi foi na verdade uma pechincha."

22 de jan. de 2010

Diário de S.Paulo tem nova interface



Já está no ar o novo redesenho do Diário de S.Paulo. Dividido em canais e com destaque para serviços, o jornal muda o formato de exibição de imagens, nos moldes da economist.com. A versão impressa, em flip, está aberta, por enquanto. Com navegação intuitiva, trata-se de um dos poucos jornalões que não apontam o dedo indicador ao leitor.  

Good copy bad copy



















(via @digital_cultura)


21 de jan. de 2010

Design Trends




"Sketchy and large background styles are fading out. Serif fonts and texturized background will be popular" + 

20 de jan. de 2010

Vem aí a versão 3.0 do wordpress

Quem usou dreamweaver e teve de tomar muito cuidado para não dar um comando errado e desmontar uma interface?

Ainda bem que os sistemas de publicação (CMS) estão mais intuitivos e, portanto, fáceis de operar. Quem trabalha com blogger, wordpress e redes sociais, como Facebook e You Tube, sabe o que isso significa.

Com a proposta de facilitar ainda mais o do it yourself, vem ai a versão 3.0 do wordpress, chamada Multisite Settings. O novo formato entra no ar em abril. Conheça as novas configurações.



Marketing no Facebook




Loja de móveis usa o Facebook como background para anunciar nova unidade em Malmö, Suécia. Interessante a abordagem: as características da rede social, com mais de 350 milhões de usuários, são o ponto forte para vender o produto.


Um vídeo postado no You Tube mostra que a idéia é criar engajamento e propagar informação para além das fronteiras de Malmö, sem deixar a marca perder-se na rede.

Video game statistics



Para quem estuda ou cobre video games
(via http://www.vizworld.com)

18 de jan. de 2010

Cultura da mobilidade





Edição número 40 da revista Famecos traz o artigo Cultura da mobilidade, assinado por André Lemos (Facom/UFBA).

17 de jan. de 2010

Urban Screens




Mais um livro do mestre Geert Lovink:


about the book: The Urban Screens Reader is the first book to focus entirely on the topic of urban screens. In assembling contributions from a range of leading theorists, in conjunction with a series of case studies dealing with artists’ projects and screen operators’ and curators’ experiences, the reader offers a rich resource for those interested in the intersections between digital media, cultural practices and urban space.


contributors: Simone Arcagni, Alice Arnold, Giselle Beiguelman, Liliana Bounegru, Kate Brennan, Andreas Broeckmann, Uta Caspary, Sean Cubitt, Annet Dekker, Jason Eppink, Ava Fatah gen. Schieck, Mike Gibbons, M. Hank Haeusler, Bart Hoeve, Erkki Huhtamo, Karen Lancel, Hermen Maat, Meredith Martin, Scott McQuire, Julia Nevárez, Sabine Niederer, Shirley Niemans, Nikos Papastergiadis, Soh Yeong Roh, Saskia Sassen, Leon van Schaik, Jan Schuijren, Audrey Yue.


download


(via desvirtual)

Institutions vs. collaboration

16 de jan. de 2010

Para anotar




Não é novidade que o design de web deve ser funcional, simples e inteligente. Mas vale anotar as dicas do noupe.com sobre arquitetura da informação, tipografia, base de dados e design informacional, entre outros. Trata-se de excelente fonte de pesquisa para projetos digitais. 

15 de jan. de 2010

Google Earth para compor



Uma parceria de uma empresa de Montain View com a rede de satélites GeoEye permite atualizar via Google Earth as imagens do Haiti, onde um terremoto devastou a cidade e matou milhares de pessoas.

14 de jan. de 2010

Combined relevance



Dan Zarella, um dos mais influentes estrategistas de marketing viral e de mídias sociais, fez uma pesquisa que corrobora quase tudo o que se tem dito por aí sobre recomendação em redes sociais. Intitulado Combined relevance, o estudo mostra que as pessoas compartilham conteúdo na rede por "relevância". Vale a pena ler o que Zarella tem a dizer:


"I did a survey a little over a year ago where I asked people why they shared content online, both one-to-one (as emailing or IM’ing a link to a single person) and broadcast (like Tweeting a link to thousands of followers). In both cases the faraway most common answer was relevance. Respondents often said things like “I saw some thing and it made me think of one of my friends,” or “It seemed right up…"

13 de jan. de 2010

Mobile trends 2020




View more documents from rudydw.

Brasileiro entre os melhores do minimalismo



Faz parte dos 40 belíssimos designs de web minimalistas o trabalho do brasileiro Lucas Hirata. Responsável por projetos da Globo.com, como o G1, o traço de Hirata ajuda a compor essa interessante lista do Six Revision, que enfatiza a simplicidade e tons neutros, sem usar elementos supérfluos.


Vale a pena conferir as interface propostas. 

12 de jan. de 2010

Browser Size



Muito bacana a ferramenta do Google que mede o interesse do leitor em uma interface. Os dados são baseados em navegação e ajudam a melhorar a navegação e a exibição de conteúdo na web. 


Para testar, basta digitar uma URL na famosa caixinha do Google e, em segundos, aparece uma espécie de mapa do calor, com o rastro do usuário. 

11 de jan. de 2010

The Smashing Book




Smashing Magazine, a bíblia do design digital, acaba de lançar o Smashing Book, uma compilação da produção diária da revista na web. São mais de 300 páginas, divididas em dez capítulos, de autorias diferentes, com pontos de vista sobre design, sistemas de publicação, base de dados, tipografia, uso de cor e SEO, entre outros.

Mark Zuckerberg: "The Age of Privacy is Over"

Para pensar a semântica na web


TextWise Similarity Search Demo from TextWise on Vimeo.

10 de jan. de 2010

Search user interface



Está na rede Search User Interface, da professora Marti A Hearst (Universidade de Berkeley). Hearst pesquisa interface em buscas, redes sociais/ blogs e uso de textos, tags e algoritmos na composição de mídias digitais. 

9 de jan. de 2010

8 de jan. de 2010

Informavores?

Ao ser perguntado "Como a internet muda a forma como você pensa?", Frank Schirrmacher, editor e co-publisher do Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, disse que a tecnologia modificou o comportamento das pessoas, a forma como elas se relacionam, conversam e pensam, e perguntou: "Estamos nos transformando em novas espécies - informavores?"

Jornalistas, especialistas em tecnologia, pesquisadores e profissionais de web deram sua opinião ao The Edge Annual Question — 2010. Vale a pena anotar o que eles pensam:

Playwright Richard Foreman asks about the replacement of complex inner density with a new kind of self-evolving under the pressure of information overload and the technology of the "instantly available". Is it a new self? Are we becoming Pancake People — spread wide and thin as we connect with that vast network of information accessed by the mere touch of a button.

Technology analyst Nicholas Carr wrote the most notable of many magazine and newspaper pieces asking "Is Google Making Us Stupid". Has the use of the Web made it impossible for us to read long pieces of writing?

Social software guru Clay Shirky notes that people are reading more than ever but the return of reading has not brought about the return of the cultural icons we'd been emptily praising all these years. "What's so great about War and Peace?, he wonders. Having lost its actual centrality some time ago, the literary world is now losing its normative hold on culture as well. Is the enormity of the historical shift away from literary culture now finally becoming clear?

Science historian George Dyson asks "what if the cost of machines that think is people who don't?" He wonders "will books end up back where they started, locked away in monasteries and read by a select few?".

Web 2.0 pioneer Tim O'Reilly, ponders if ideas themselves are the ultimate social software. Do they evolve via the conversations we have with each other, the artifacts we create, and the stories we tell to explain them?

Frank Schirrmacher, Feuilleton Editor and Co-Publisher of Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, has noticed that we are apparently now in a situation where modern technology is changing the way people behave, people talk, people react, people think, and people remember. Are we turning into a new species — informavores? — he asks.

W. Daniel Hillis goes a step further by asking if the Internet will, in the long run, arrive at a much richer infrastructure, in which ideas can potentially evolve outside of human minds? In other words, can we change the way the Internet thinks?

Cidade dos signos


N Building from Alexander Reeder on Vimeo.

How journalists can use augmented reality









via guardian.co.uk

The State of Information Visualization




Para o bookmark:


2009: What Was
Until May 2009, the biggest issue in visualization was access to good data. There were a few standard data sets, and when working with companies we would sometimes get some of their data (which we were not able to share, of course); but comparing visualizations without interesting test data was difficult.


2010: What Will Be
Looking forward, what can we expect from the new year? One product that will have a big impact is Tableau Public. Currently in beta, it will be released in early 2010. It's a fully functioning version of Tableau Desktop, but it can only save its data to Tableau's public server (and there are limits on dataset size and data sources). Unlike Protovis, Tableau Public is server-based, with an embedding mechanism that only requires JavaScript. Like Protovis, Tableau offers the possibility to combine different visualizations into a view, with linking between them. The setup is much easier though, and requires no programming.


+ no eagereyes

7 de jan. de 2010

Design para tocar



Lançado em dezembro passado, o Times Skimmer, do The New York Times, aposta em uma nova interface: tablet e telas sensíveis a toque. O jornal americano tem feito experiências bastante interessantes com a web, como o TimesPeople e o TimesReader.

A nova cara do Terra



O portal Terra redesenhou sua interface, e o resultado é um desenho limpo, com menos redundância nas chamadas de textos e ícones, conteúdo mais organizado e maior valorização de imagens.

Muito bom.

Clique, replique e multiplique


Five Predictions on Collaborative Computing

  • 2010 will be another year of growth for the industry
  • Engagement analytics will replace Web analytics
  • Platform, not application
  • Collaboration will replace social 
  • Enterprise search technology will grow

6 de jan. de 2010


5 de jan. de 2010

360 graus no G1



Não é novidade o uso de tecnologia para editar fotos em 360 graus, mas o G1 traz um ponto de vista diferente ao mostrar nesse formato os estragos causados pelas chuvas em São Luiz do Paraitinga, interior de São Paulo.

4 de jan. de 2010

Uma nova cara para o Facebook?


via TechCrunch

Tecnologias para esquecer





Máquinas de Fax
Acendedores de cigarros em carros
WWW
Cartões de visita
Locadoras de filmes
Controles remotos
Telefones fixos
CDs de música
Rádio via satélite                                                                                             


Mídias sociais: o que vem por aí