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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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109 Articles match "2007","API"
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The Latest from Informal Learning Flow
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Motally Nabs Nielsen Exec John Forese To Lead Mobile Analytics Startup
Telephia was eventually acquired by Nielsen in 2007. The startup just launched an analytics platform for mobile game developers, rolled out an extension of their mobile analytics to include content developed on Apple’s iPad and released a flexible API.
Mobile analytics startup Motally is bringing in a seasoned analytics executive, John Forese, as the startup’s new CEO. Forese was previously Nielsen Mobile’s Senior Vice President of Product Management.
TechCrunch
- Thursday, March 18, 2010
Network as a Service: Open Source Enables Efficient Cloud Hosting
For the data center manager that wants to go into the core network engines innovate, there comes a need for APIs, SDKS, and open access libraries.
Cisco Open IOS in 2007 a model towards compartmentalizing and opening IOS, as part of it's overall movement into a more software based organization.With the complex series of network enhancements and feature sets, it will be interesting to see how Cisco views "open" vs. "customizable" To keep up with the growth of cloud computing and virtualization, networks keep evolving. But unlike Twitter's Trending Topics, IT budgets don't scale
ReadWriteWeb
- Tuesday, March 9, 2010
India’s Twitter SMS GupShup Gets An App Store
Launched in April 2007, SMS GupShup (spawned from Webaroo ) serves 26 million users across India. Called AppShup, the app store allows developers to use the platform’s API to create and connect their apps to the GupShup stream, allowing developers make small SMS applications and widgets. Releasing an API and launching an App Store makes sense for SMS GupShup. Fresh off a $12 million investment, SMS GupShup , a Twitter-like service in India that is primarily accessed via SMS, is launching an App Store. The store aims to expand SMS GupShup’s ecosystem by
TechCrunch
- Wednesday, March 3, 2010
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The Best from Informal Learning Flow
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Why the Semantic Web Will Fail
A few of key things today: - Yahoo is forcing people to give up their Flickr identities and to join the mother ship, and - MySpace is blocking all the widgets that aren't supported by some sort of business deal with MySpace - the rumour that Google is turning off the search API And that's when I realized: The Semantic Web will never work because it depends on businesses working together, on them cooperating . But the big problem is they believed everyone would work together: - would agree on web standards (hah!) - would adopt a common vocabulary (you don't say) - would reliably expose
Half an Hour
- Tuesday, March 20, 2007
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The 6 essential things you need to know about Google's OpenSocial
At least, that is, the other social networking sites that support OpenSocial's API . Social networking site APIs aren't anywhere as complex as say, the Windows APIs, but we've seen this before with platforms such as Java, where the development model can't support the full capabilities of the underlying operating systems. Finally, most of the really popular development platforms, including Ruby on Rails, can support the server-side API. I've spent the last few days keeping track of the seemingly endless stream of news and blog coverage about Google's new OpenSocial model for social networking applications.
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Facebook as a Learning Platform
Facebook provides an API that gives you access to friends, groups, etc. Facebook seems to be coming up everywhere the past few weeks. The most recent, which finally got me to post, was a Stephen Downes post - I'm Majoring in Facebook, How about You? He points us to a Fortune Magazine article that describes a Stanford class being offered by BJ Fogg that studies Facebook as a platform: "Facebook is the most convenient and respectable way to
eLearning Technology
- Monday, October 15, 2007
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Web 2.0 Software Models Evolve as the Conference Season Begins in Earnest
Expo in San Francisco right in the middle of April. In fact, there are a great many aspects to the way that the Web is changing and evolving in early 2007 and Ajax is only one of the elements of Web 2.0, Even more intriguing, we are seeing the emergence of genuine open Web component models such as what NetVibes has come up with recently with their cross platform widget API , known as the Universal Widget API, encouraging open, cross site widget compatibility. I'm here in New York City this morning at the start of the AjaxWorld Conference and Expo which I'm the technical chair for this year.
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Web 2.0 Software Models Evolve as the Conference Season Begins in Earnest
Expo in San Francisco right in the middle of April. In fact, there are a great many aspects to the way that the Web is changing and evolving in early 2007 and Ajax is only one of the elements of Web 2.0, Even more intriguing, we are seeing the emergence of genuine open Web component models such as what NetVibes has come up with recently with their cross platform widget API , known as the Universal Widget API, encouraging open, cross site widget compatibility. I'm here in New York City this morning at the start of the AjaxWorld Conference and Expo which I'm the technical chair for this year.
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An Aha Moment - del.icio.us as Indicator of Valuable Content - Importantly My Content
or someone producing a widget using their API that would be able to produce the most bookmarked pages from a given domain (mine) over a given period of time (e.g., I saw a post by Ray Sims that quoted Bill Ives writing: Putting my blog posts into del.icio.us also allows me to see who else tagged these posts to determine the ones that others found useful enough to tag in del.icio.us.
eLearning Technology
- Monday, April 2, 2007
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Social Network Portability
Posted to the social-network-portability list, August 21, 2007. Then my application accepts your comment and sends it to your blog software's API. From what I've been seeing thus far (and it has been great discussion) I'm seeing a set of three basic functionalities that need to be offered. First, social network portability Not coincidentally the name of this list.
Half an Hour
- Tuesday, August 21, 2007
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The 6 essential things you need to know about Google's OpenSocial
At least, that is, the other social networking sites that support OpenSocial's API . Social networking site APIs aren't anywhere as complex as say, the Windows APIs, but we've seen this before with platforms such as Java, where the development model can't support the full capabilities of the underlying operating systems. Finally, most of the really popular development platforms, including Ruby on Rails, can support the server-side API. I've spent the last few days keeping track of the seemingly endless stream of news and blog coverage about Google's new OpenSocial model for social networking applications.
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Really Simple People
Posted to the social-network-portability mailing list, December 14, 2007. So you could add API for messages and comments, iTunes playlists, more... I understand why things in the OpenID space and the social network portability space have become so complicated so quickly. Ben Werdmuller wrote: I would argue, strongly, that user data needs a more flexible, permissive format: an RSS for people, rather than something rigid and RDF based. Where it makes sense to add extra format detail to a field, like locations or contact details, it should let you do so.
Half an Hour
- Friday, December 14, 2007
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The 6 essential things you need to know about Google's OpenSocial
At least, that is, the other social networking sites that support OpenSocial's API . Social networking site APIs aren't anywhere as complex as say, the Windows APIs, but we've seen this before with platforms such as Java, where the development model can't support the full capabilities of the underlying operating systems. Finally, most of the really popular development platforms, including Ruby on Rails, can support the server-side API. I've spent the last few days keeping track of the seemingly endless stream of news and blog coverage about Google's new OpenSocial model for social networking applications.
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