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Informal Learning Flow is a content hub started by Jay Cross that collects and organizes the best information on the web around informal learning. We hope this will help you find good stuff, learn and stay current.
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54 Articles match "2006","API"
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SXSW 2010 for Marketers & Online Strategists
In 2006, S. Originally called "Web applications 1.0", it brings new semantics, JavaScript APIs for drag and drop, offline storage, generating images, plugin-free video and form validation. Navigating SXSW is overwhelming to say the least! To help you out ReadWriteWeb has been breaking the events, panels and parties down into vertical reviews.
ReadWriteWeb
- Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Foursquare Just Made Your Location History A Lot More Interesting
That’s because before Foursquare, co-founder Dennis Crowley ran a similar service called Dodgeball, which Google bought in 2006 , and deadpooled last year . While this location history + friends isn’t yet in the API, it definitely will be, he notes. As has been made abundantly clear to me over the past two weeks, just about every location-based service is planning big things for the SXSW festival , which starts later this week in Austin, Texas. A
TechCrunch
- Sunday, March 7, 2010
Mashery Plugs Its APIs Into $5.5 Million In New Funding From Cisco, Others
These days, APIs are a must for just about every web service. It’s no longer enough to simply be a web site, everyone wants to be a platform, and APIs are the hooks that enable that by way of data. Since 2006, Mashery has existed as a company to both enable APIs for companies and manage them. And today that vision is being rewarded again with a $5.5 million Series C round of funding.
TechCrunch
- Wednesday, February 24, 2010
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The Best Web 2.0 Software of 2006
Looking back over 2006 it's clear that we've experienced one of the most remarkable growth surges in Web application history. The net result is that 2006 brought us some of the best online applications ever created and you can see the results for yourself below. Note : The site did not have to launch in 2006 to make this list, it just had to provide the best offering in a given category during the calendar year. The Best Web Literally hundreds of Web sites and applications were launched this year and brought to our attention via the popular review sites like Michael Arrington's TechCrunch , Pete Cashmore's Mashable , and Emily Chang's eHub .
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The Best Web 2.0 Software of 2006
Looking back over 2006 it's clear that we've experienced one of the most remarkable growth surges in Web application history. The net result is that 2006 brought us some of the best online applications ever created and you can see the results for yourself below. Note : The site did not have to launch in 2006 to make this list, it just had to provide the best offering in a given category during the calendar year. The Best Web Literally hundreds of Web sites and applications were launched this year and brought to our attention via the popular review sites like Michael Arrington's TechCrunch , Pete Cashmore's Mashable , and Emily Chang's eHub .
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Profitably Running an Online Business in the Web 2.0 Era
applications and open APIs . But the biggest question that comes up is that if you let your users generate most of your content and then expose it all up via an API, how can a profitable business be made from this? This has been the question from the outset, and though you can build enormously successful sites in terms of numbers of users and amounts of content using Web 2.0 Turn applications into platforms and get 5, 50, or 5,000 additional uses ( Amazon has over 50,000 users of its line of business APIs) for example. One of the things I'm doing this week is preparing for a presentation at Web Builder 2.0 on how to monetize mashups in Las Vegas next week.
Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog
- Wednesday, November 29, 2006
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Going Beyond User Generated Software: Web 2.0 and the Pragmatic Semantic Web
The vision is stunning and futuristic yet and the rich fabric of the Web today, with hundreds of open APIs and even vaster reservoirs of content and raw data, now opens the door to the possibility. I was traveling most of last week and so was unable to weigh in on the Web 3.0 mini-tempest that occurred when John Markoff published his exploratory piece in the NY Times last Sunday.
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Twitter: A Marketer's Duct Tape
How did this seemingly trivial application created in two weeks by Jack Dorsey back in March 2006 as a way for him to know what his friends were doing grow into this global phenomenon? The interfaces to the capability are simple and well defined in their Applications Programming Interface (API), which makes it easy to plug into their messaging capability.
Tags: Communication Marketing Duct tape is universally useful because it is incredibly simple, almost infinitely flexible , easily available, and cheap. Twitter shares all these attributes.
HarvardBusiness.org
- Thursday, April 9, 2009
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Profitably Running an Online Business in the Web 2.0 Era
applications and open APIs . But the biggest question that comes up is that if you let your users generate most of your content and then expose it all up via an API, how can a profitable business be made from this? This has been the question from the outset, and though you can build enormously successful sites in terms of numbers of users and amounts of content using Web 2.0 Turn applications into platforms and get 5, 50, or 5,000 additional uses ( Amazon has over 50,000 users of its line of business APIs) for example. One of the things I'm doing this week is preparing for a presentation at Web Builder 2.0 on how to monetize mashups in Las Vegas next week.
Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog
- Wednesday, November 29, 2006
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Web 2.0 Summit: Leading Players Facing Challenges, Push for Openness
Openness can also take many forms, from syndicating content to providing well-defined and monetized Web service APIs, and if you don't provide a technical and legal basis for doing so, challenges will only increase as the limited numbers of ways that content and services will reduce the number of overall business opportunities available. Summit discussions and other known best practices... Liberate content and services via a public, open API. It's the final day of the three day long Web 2.0 Summit , the leading confab for the Web 2.0
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The Best Web 2.0 Software of 2006
Looking back over 2006 it's clear that we've experienced one of the most remarkable growth surges in Web application history. The net result is that 2006 brought us some of the best online applications ever created and you can see the results for yourself below. Note : The site did not have to launch in 2006 to make this list, it just had to provide the best offering in a given category during the calendar year. The Best Web Literally hundreds of Web sites and applications were launched this year and brought to our attention via the popular review sites like Michael Arrington's TechCrunch , Pete Cashmore's Mashable , and Emily Chang's eHub .
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Going Beyond User Generated Software: Web 2.0 and the Pragmatic Semantic Web
The vision is stunning and futuristic yet and the rich fabric of the Web today, with hundreds of open APIs and even vaster reservoirs of content and raw data, now opens the door to the possibility. I was traveling most of last week and so was unable to weigh in on the Web 3.0 mini-tempest that occurred when John Markoff published his exploratory piece in the NY Times last Sunday.
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A New Website, Part Six - Drupal Modules
Blog API The Blog API is a way for applications to submit content to the Drupal website directly. I will have may, many uses for the Blog API. I look at the Blog API settings and see that I can enable posting of each of my three major content types: Blog Post, page and story. There are some links to background The Front Page Before getting started for today, I wanted to resolve something that had been annoying me. Ever since I installed Drupal, it has been showing me a list of things I need to to to get set up on the front page of my website.
Half an Hour
- Saturday, November 18, 2006
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