Microsoft platform tops Web 2.0 developer survey

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

The survey, conducted by US market research firm Evans Data Corp, ranked Microsoft’s MSN/Live developer package above other offerings from Google, Yahoo, Facebook and eBay according to user satisfaction.

However, Australian web developer and co-founder of the Web Directions conference John Allsopp told ZDNet.com.au on Wednesday that the survey “doesn’t say anything meaningful at all”.

Allsopp added that the nature of Web 2.0 development and its accompanying technologies isn’t suited to this type of assessment, as developers don’t tend to compartmentalise which programs they use to Web Development build applications.

“It’s a misleading thing,” he said. “Web 2.0 is all about mashing and mixing things up to create something new, and using a whole lot of different programs to do it.”

“One of the criticisms of a lot of these technologies is that they’re tied to a certain property, such as Facebook, meaning you have to use their platform to build applications for their site,” he said.

Stewart Smith, president of the Australian Linux Foundation, echoed Allsopp’s sentiments, saying many of the Web Development programs “really aren’t as open as they’d have you believe”.

“People who really care about writing their own applications won’t be doing it for someone else’s platform, they’ll be writing them for their own sites, using a variety of things,” he said.

Allsopp said technologies are “still in their infancy”, and for many large companies, such as Google and Microsoft, “it’s still a pretty novel way of doing things… to open up and let other people start building things for you”.

“A lot of companies are still coming to grips with that, but I think that, over the next year or two, all of these programs are going to Web Development become more sophisticated and usable,” he said.

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Fiften years of the web

Saturday, May 3rd, 2008

On that date Cern, put the web in the public domain, “thereby ensuring that the world would have a single system for accessing the Internet, instead of a Microsoft Web, a Macintosh Web and who knows, perhaps even an Amstrad Web,” argues Gillies, who by the way is director of communications for Cern.

Cern’s Tim Berners-Lee recognized the need to manage the data on the web in a simpler way than the complex protocols that had limited the Internet to academics and government bureaucrats.

Encouraged by his bosses, he created the first browser on a NeXT computer using URLs, HTML and HTTP protocols.

Berners-Lee went on to head up the MIT-based World Wide Web Consortium that sets global standards for the web. Recently, he said that even after 15 years of existence and 165 million websites around the world the web is “still in its infancy.”

Berners’Lee argues that the web’s ability to engender collaboration could one day see the web being used to help manage the planet.

“What’s exciting is that people are building new social systems, new systems of review, new systems of governance.

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Yahoo Opens Research Lab in Israel

Monday, April 7th, 2008

The internet giant Yahoo has announced the launch of a new research lab in Haifa, Israel. The Yahoo Research Israel Lab, Yahoo first in the region, will be led by Dr. Ronny Lempel, an information organisation and retrieval expert who will report directly to Dr. Ricardo Baeza-Yates, vice president of Yahoo Research.

This will focus on boiling down complex technology problems into simple solutions to change the game in Web search, says the company. Yahoo recently opened Yahoo Labs - Bangalore and appointed eminent scientist Dr. Rajeev Rastogi to head the new India lab. “Search is still in its infancy,” said Prabhakar Raghavan, head of Yahoo! Research. “At Yahoo, we are working on the hard core science that can lead to search experiences that are significantly beyond the current art.” He added that Ronny Lempel was a great addition to the Yahoo! team that they have assembled to develop a new approach to Web search.

Lempel previously worked at the Information Retrieval Group at IBM’s Haifa Research Lab, focusing on research and development for enterprise search systems. “Israel is fertile ground for incredibly talented technologists, researchers and engineers” Lempel said. “I look forward to building the Haifa team with the best talent this region has to offer.”

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Yahoo Opens Research Lab in Israel

Saturday, April 5th, 2008

The internet giant Yahoo has announced the launch of a new research lab in Haifa, Israel. The Yahoo Research Israel Lab, Yahoo first in the region, will be led by Dr. Ronny Lempel, an information organisation and retrieval expert who will report directly to Dr. Ricardo Baeza-Yates, vice president of Yahoo Research. This will focus on boiling down complex technology problems into simple solutions to change the game in Web search, says the company. Yahoo recently opened Yahoo Labs - Bangalore and appointed eminent scientist Dr. Rajeev Rastogi to head the new India lab. “Search is still in its infancy,” said Prabhakar Raghavan, head of Yahoo! Research. “At Yahoo, we are working on the hard core science that can lead to search experiences that are significantly beyond the current art.” He added that Ronny Lempel was a great addition to the Yahoo! team that they have assembled to develop a new approach to Web search. Lempel previously worked at the Information Retrieval Group at IBM’s Haifa Research Lab, focusing on research and development for enterprise search systems. “Israel is fertile ground for incredibly talented technologists, researchers and engineers” Lempel said. “I look forward to building the Haifa team with the best talent this region has to offer.”

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