Saturday, June 21, 2008
Web 2.0 - Snippets
Web 2.0: Part 1- RSS/Atom
For close to two years, I have been seeing the 'RSS' or 'Atom' logo popping up on many web pages that I visit, however I never bothered to click those links or learn about how to use them. When tried to do it once, it sounded too technical as it threw some coded web pages at me, possibly there was not much training offered in those pages on how to use the feeds at that point of time. Obviously I shied away from those for a long time. When the phenomenon was getting more rampant on the web, I finally decided to take that extra step and learn about them. Later, I discovered new ways to track huge amounts of online content in one go with really cool looking RSS/Atom aggregators . Today, RSS/Atom is an exciting piece of technology which I use every day for my work and and as well as learning.
Some of the examples of RSS/Atom feed generators or aggregators are:
Pageflakes.com
iGoogle.com
my.live.com (Microsoft)
my.Yahoo.com
rojo.com
netvibes.com
bloglines.com
The above are essentially Ajax coded and web based tools which are easy to use and highly customizeable.
There are numerous other feed aggregators available based on client software as well. A few of them are integrated into eMail client and a few are offered as part of web browsers. Some of them are Windows Internet Explorer, newsfirex.com, rssowl.org, Opera-M2, Microsoft Outlook etc.
Web 2.0 : Part 2 - Social Bookmarking
To be honest I got to learn about social bookmarking from Deloitte.com while looking for some industry reports, probably because it was one of the first web sites I browsed in the corporate arena which had the bookmarking buttons on the homepage. Later on I discovered that Deloitte was the first of the big four to even put tools like this on their home page. When I landed on the homepage, I noticed a little colorful icon which read 'Bookmark'. This was coming from an Internet service that groups numerous bookmarking tools onthe web into a pop-up menu which lets the web page viewer
bookmark the page in their favorite bookmarking tool. Delicious, Reddit, Digg, Furl, Twitter, StumbleUpon, Technorati, Slash Dot, Magnolia, Fark,... the list is long. What are these? Initially, when I looked at them they sounded like brand names of some software products or consumer products that were getting advertised on the Internet. But no, all these are tools that help you bookmark
and share your favorite web sites. Until recently bookmarking was limited to web browsers such as IE, Firefox, Opera etc. They all had one huge drawback, the bookmarks could be accessed only on the machine that they were bookmarked on. Moreover if the system is formatted or if it crashes, all the tens and hundreds of bookmarks go with it leaving the user with no way to retrieve them. Online bookmarking provided the answer to these limitations. The extended feature of these tools is that your bookmarks can be shared and you can access the favorites of others in your areas of interest.
The use of social bookmarking tools became rampant in early 2008 with the corporate and news companies vying for online visibility. Companies and news sites got creative and offered the best content and products in the most innovative ways. The question raised was, "How do we get popularity using tools other than advertising and search engine listings of Google, Yahoo etc?"
Bookmarking is one of the cheaper ways to reach more people in the shortest time. It works similar to 'word-of-mouth', but in this case the good word passes to other people by just one gesture, "Bookmarking".
While this is an Internet phenomenon, how could it work in the corporate environment/information portals or databases especially in a services organization?
Organizations are structured around work areas of functions. If bookmarking tools are implemented within corporate Intranets, good quality content or document links related to those work areas or functions could be easily traced based on their relevance categorized by keywords or tags that people commonly use to organize their favorite links or documents. These tools could well reduce the effort or time that people take to find relevant information within corporate databases or portals.
In a scenario where most large organizations are spread across vast geographic areas and where there are thousands of employees at work, information is seldom easily accessible. All the information that one would require is scattered in various locations within the company's Intranet. If a bookmarking tool that groups people according to expertise to form interest groups(Communities) or the type of work they specialize in, it could index the favorite places that people go to first for specific pieces of information. And most bookmarking tools allow these links to be shared across the network, the best hence practice of finding the right information by popular vote can be achieved by this.
Web 2.0 : Part 3- Podcasts
I would like to give an account of my experience with the Web 2.0 revolution. I was thrilled by my first experiences with Pod Casts more than 2 years ago, thanks to Deloitte's Consulting - 'Pod Casting Series' which was a little later given a boost by an internal marketing campaign with a tag line, 'Think.Commit.Do'. In my experience, this is one of the most motivating campaigns that an Organization carried had out to completely focus on client service which is the motto of any professional services firm. I was just amazed by the audio visual that promoted the campaign which went like a 'Dolby Digital' commercial. These campaigns surely had a deep impact on people and the way they learned about clients and their industries.
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2 comments:
hey..great write up..guess u can pool in these articles under "knowledge management" and get them published as a book or atleast as a weekly series in a local newspaper or magazine
hi
wel said....i too read about the online bookmarking and share options while studying for my course on technology management in companies....knowledge sharing has become easier with such tools
great write up vivz
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