EmTech Lesson For Review3
EmTech Lesson For Review3
•STATIC
•DYNAMIC
static website
• A static website is one that has web
pages stored on the server in the format that is
sent to a web browser.
• Simple forms or marketing examples
of websites, such as classic website, a five-
page website or a brochure website are
often static websites.
Dynamic websites
• A website with dynamic content refers to how
its text, images and other information are
displayed on the web page, and more
specifically how its content changes at any given
moment.
• The web page content varies based on certain
criteria, either pre-defined rules or variable user
input.
Web 2.0 Dynamic Web Pages
• The internet has been a vital tool to our modern
lives that is why it is also important to make the
best of the Internet.
• When the WWW was invented, most web pages
were static. (also known as flat page or
stationary page) in the sense that the page is “as
is” and cannot be manipulated by the user.
•Web 2.0 is a term coined by Darcy
DiNucci on January 1999. In her article
titled “Fragmented Future” she wrote.
• “The Web we know now, which loads into a
browser window in essentially static screenfuls,
is only an embryo of the Web to come. The first
glimmerings of Web 2.0 are beginning to appear,
and we are just starting to see how that embryo
might develop.”
by Darcy DiNucci
KEY FEATURES OF WEB 2.O
• Includes:
1. Folksonomy
2. Rich User Experience
3. User Participation
4. Long Tail
5. Software as a Service
6. Mass participation
Folksonomy
•Allows users to categorize and
classify/arrange information freely
chosen keyword (e.g. tagging). Popular
social networking sites.
Rich User Experience
• Content is dynamic and is responsive to
user’s input. An example would be a
website that shows local content. In the
case of social networking sites. When
logged on, your account is used to modify
what you see in their website.
User Participation
• The owner of the website is not the only
one who is able to put content., Others are
able to place a content of their own by
means of comments. Reviews, and
Evaluation. Some Websites allow readers to
comment on an articles., participate in a
poll. Or review a specific product (e.g.
Amazon.com, online stores)
Long Tail
• Services that are offered on demand rather than
on a one-time purchase, In certain cases, time-
based pricing is better that files size-based
pricing or vice versa. This is synonymous to
subscribing to a data plan that charges you for
the amount of time you spent in the internet, or
a data plan that charges you for the amount of
bandwidth you used.
Software as a Service
• Users will subscribe to a software only when
needed rather than purchasing them.
• This a cheaper option if you don not always
need to use a software. For instance, Google
Docs is a free wed-based application that
allows the user to create and edit word
processing and spreadsheet documents
online.
• When you need a software, like a Word
Processor, you can purchase it for a one-
time huge amount and install if in your
computer and it is yours forever.
• Software as a service allows you to “rent” a
software for a minimal fee.
Mass Participation
•Diverse information sharing through
universal web access. Since most users
can use the Internet, Web 2.0’s content
is based on people from various
cultures.
Web 3.0 and the Semantic Web
• The Semantic Web is a movement to led by
the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C).
The W3C standard encourages web
developers to includes semantic content in
their web pages.
•The term was coined by the
Inventor of the World Wide Web
Tim Berners-Lee. Lee also noted
that the Semantic Web is a
component for Web 3.0
The Semantic Web
• is an extension of the Web through standards by
the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). The
standards promote common data formats and
exchange protocols on the Web, most fundamentally
the Resource Description Framework (RDF).
• According to the W3C, "The Semantic Web provides a
common framework that allows data to be shared and
reused across application, enterprise, and community
boundaries".
Web 3.0 Is yet to be fully realized because
of several problems:
• Compatibility – HTML files and current web
browsers could not support Web 3.0
• Security – The user’s security is also in question
since that machine is saving his her preferences
• Vastness – The world Wide Web already contains
billions of web pages.
• Vagueness – Certain words are imprecise. The
words “old” and “small” would depend of the
user.
• Logic – Since machines use logic., there are
certain limitations for a computer to be able to
predict what the user is referring to at a given
time.
TRENDS in ICT