Archive for the ‘Web Development’ Category

Web 2.0 – Understanding Wikis

Monday, May 5th, 2008

A tag cloud with terms related to Web 2.Image via WikipediaBlogs work great in some circumstances.  For example, they work well with a singular person pushing out information and getting feedback. However, the person leaving feed back cannot change the original posting.  And there are times when parts of a page need to be edited, and/or new content pages added. Wiki’s are a good Web 2.0 method of solving this problem.

Wiki – Hawaiian for Quick, although I know not how that relates allows anyone (within reason) to modify, add, and update pages to the system.

Wikipedia is the best know wiki with millions of articles in dozens of languages. It allows anyone to make changes, or even add pages and categories.

Wikis are based off of the idea of the wisdom of the crowd. The Wisdom of Crowds: Why the Many Are Smarter Than the Few and How Collective Wisdom Shapes Business, Economies, Societies and Nations, first published in 2004, states that “the aggregation of information in groups, resulting in decisions that, he argues, are often better than could have been made by any single member of the group.” – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wisdom_of_Crowds

Instead of seeing an inaccuracy and reporting it, letting people continue to see it, possibly missing a comment, the person who sees the inaccuracy can go right in and change it.

Wikis are becoming increasing popular for project management and tracking.  In it everything from meeting notes, specifications, documentation, and even library files can be stored in the wiki.  IBM has become one of the best know companies to use wikis to track meetings minutes, events, projects and more.  However other companies from law offices, to consumer stores, have implemented wikis to promote communication and knowledge transfer among their workers.

To make them easier to use by non technical people, many wikis allow standard features like Rich Text Editing (Word like editing), and allowing people to search within the Wiki, without requiring anyone to know anything about HTML, or Wiki markup.

Popularity: 27% [?]

May 1st – RSS Day

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

I’ve waited to post the next article as this news falls so in line with keeping up with Keeping up with other’s blogs. I mentioned using RSS feeds to watch other people’s blogs easier.

Well someone liked RSS so much, they wanted to promote its use more. Thus RSS Day was born.

RSS Icons for Walt Design and Development BlogsI have always provided and RSS feed for people to subscribe to if they want. Additionally, you can also get the same information via e-mail if you don’t have an RSS feed reader. Just use the bright orange icons near the top right of the column to subscribe to our posts.

However, what most people don’t know is that RSS can be used for more than just tracking author’s blogs. Here are some other ways which they can be used.

  • Tracking New Class Offerings – I developed this at my job a while back to inform others on training opportunities that the company offered
  • Managing Meetings – we noticed than classes are really just a meeting time with a specific goal, so why not use them to track meetings too. Google Calendar will allow you to generate an RSS feed which you and other’s can subscribe to.
  • Job Postings – I’m currently developing an RSS feed to allow people to keep up with new job postings on an internal job board
  • News outlets
    • By category
    • Popularity
    • Overall
  • Tracking site changes
  • For Fun (Comics and TV Listings) – I’ve seen several instance’s where this has worked well. So don’t forget in all of this work, to have a little fun.

If you want to see a good video on RSS feeds check out this ~3 minute video:

Popularity: 23% [?]