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Posts Tagged ‘web’

What Would You Do if Google Web Services Stopped Being Free?

Analysis: Google’s introduction of its Chrome Operating System is causing a lot of debate in the high-tech sector, with some pundits mulling whether Google has taken its free software model to the edge in its attempt to battle Microsoft. eWEEK asks readers what they would pay for Google’s Web services.

Google’s introduction of Chrome OS, its Linux-based operating system for netbooks, sparked no shortage
of questions by reporters and bloggers. You can easily tick off a list of 20
questions and that wouldn’t begin to cover the minutiae and the what-ifs.
Long term: Will Chrome OS be…


Call for limits on web snooping

Tim Berners-Lee, AP

Governments and companies should limit the snooping they do on web users.

So said Sir Time Berners-Lee, inventor of the world wide web, who said that growing oversight of browsing could have a pernicious effect.

A greater part of the value of the web lay in the lack of constraints on what people could do with it.

He also warned that attempts to censor what people could say or what they could do online were ultimately doomed to failure.

Open triumph

"When you use the internet it is important that the medium should not be set up with constraints," he said.

The internet, said Sir Tim, should be like a blank piece of paper. Just as governments and companies cannot police what people write or draw on that sheet of paper so they should not be restricted from putting the web to their own uses.

"The canvas should be blank," he said

While governments do need some powers to police unacceptable uses of the web; limits should be placed on these powers, he said.

"It’s a wonderful experiment and I hope it will have consequences for the way TV is produced in the future"

Russell Barnes, Digital Revolution producer

Find out more about Digital Revolution

If people know that where they go online and the terms they look for are under scrutiny it could have all kinds of pernicious effects, he warned.

Repressive regimes, such as China and Iran, that work hard to limit what people can do online would struggle to maintain that control over time, he said.

"The trend over the years is that the internet in the end goes around censorship and openness eventually triumphs," he said. "But it is by no means an easy road."

Sir Tim made his comments during a speech at an event that helped to launch the BBC Two series Digital Revolution.

The four-part series aims to explore the history of the World Wide Web and generate debate about how it is changing the way people live their lives. It aims to debate how the web is changing the nation state, how it affects identity, freedom and anonymity.

Over the next eight months as the programme is being produced, viewers will be encouraged to get involved by sending in questions for interview subjects and being able to produce their own clips using the rushes generated during filming.

Social media researcher and broadcaster Aleks Krotoski will present the series of programmes.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Looking glass

By Ian Hardy
Click reporter, Silicon Valley

Sir Tim Berners-Lee

If you want to find something out these days, one of the first things you will do is type words into a box on the webpages of a search engine.

The result will be an avalanche of websites which contain the words you are looking for, hopefully with the most useful ones at the top of the list.

For much of the past two decades, search results have been triggered by straightforward keyword connections.

It has been an adequate solution, but it is far from perfect says Mike Elgan, a columnist at Computerworld.com.

"Human beings view the world in terms of associations – a classic example in the scientific community is when you say the sentence ‘I saw a bird with a telescope’.

"Human beings instantly know it was you not the bird that was using the telescope. But computers don’t know that," he said.

Human understanding

Search engines have never really understood the precise meaning or true intent of questions or phrases – semantic search is a process trying to improve this.

A new generation of web services is in development to offer results for words and picture searches, and attempt to understand users’ questions.

"The idea is for people to be able to scan it and find interesting things more like a magazine"

Anand Rajaraman,
co-founder of Kosmix

Kosmix is one of a new batch of search engines trying to incorporate human understanding into its complex mathematical computations.

Anand Rajaraman, co-founder of Kosmix, said the site’s goal is to encourage a kind of "serendipity" by displaying information in a visual way.

"The idea is for people to be able to scan it and find interesting things more like a magazine.

"You know how you are scanning a magazine and suddenly something catches your eye serendipitously," he said.

‘Exciting work’

Bing is the latest reincarnation of Windows Live Search and MSN Search which have never been as popular as Yahoo or Google.

To improve it Microsoft bought semantic search company Powerset that uses updated methods to produce their results.

Scott Prevost from Powerset told Click that despite advances, the problems of natural language are not even close to being solved.

"There’s a lot of exciting work that will happen particularly in the next five to 10 years," he said.

Kosmix.com

Also, increasingly search is moving beyond desktops. One recent survey in the US showed the number of search apps downloaded to mobile phones in the past year has doubled.

While a third more searches are being done on mobile web browsers – many devices have GPS and a constant stream of updated information.

Voice search

A search engine of the future will not just return a list of restaurants, for instance, but it will know you are inside a car, what time of day it is, and the traffic conditions.

So when you get to the restaurant, it will be able to guide you to the nearest parking space, and tell you what specific lunch specials are on the menu that day.

But typing on the go can be dangerous and even illegal in some places, so the physical way we search may change over time.

Scott Prevost, from Powerset said that as speech recognition improves, voice input will start to appear more in mobile phone searches.

"With a mobile device it’s easier to say what you want rather than type some keywords," he said.

"People speak in short simple sentences when they know there is a speech recognizer listening to them," he added.

Bing.com

It is a long way from the search engines of the 1990s which were not smart enough to generalise. Often they could only find something if you knew exactly what you were looking for, sometimes down to the exact filename.

Make connections

Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the world wide web, believes search is still in its infancy and that semantics is key to a more powerful internet.

He said it all comes down to the ability to make connections.

"The thing explodes when somebody has the creativity to look at a piece of data that was put there for one reason and realizes that they can connect it with something else".

He added that, for example, someone could "realise something about global warming because we’ve managed to get all of the data out there."

There is a race going on between the established players and the young startups to take search to the next level.

All are aiming to make it highly personalized, intuitive and more integrated into our lives.

Perhaps one day search engines will deliver the most suitable result you were looking for every time.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Innovation@Intel: Confrontational Computing

As if your spouse or colleagues arguing with you isn’t enough, now your web browser can argue with you too (or…argue for you!) Much of the information on the Internet consists of opinions, arguments, and beliefs. Not everything on the web is accurate, and extracting useful and reliable information can be challenging. At the Intel Research Berkeley Lab, researchers have built “Dispute Finder,” a tool that augments existing web browsers and shows you when claims you’re reading are in disagreement with claims elsewhere on the web, overlaying a network of factual claims on top of the existing web. For more information, read about Confrontational Computing on the Intel Research Berkeley Lab web page.

Why we link: A brief rundown of the reasons your news organization needs to tie the Web together

Originally posted at BeatBlogging.org, a resource for journalists using social networks, blogs, and other Web tools to improve beat reporting.
Whenever I talk with news organizations of any size about linking to sources, resources and journalism that originated outside the walls of their newsroom, two questions come up: How and Why.
Well, conveniently enough, I work for [...]

Retraining Wire and Feature Editors to Be Web Curators

If the wire editor and feature editor roles are becoming obsolete for print newspapers, as Steve Yelvington persuasively argues, then those editors should be retrained — or retrain themselves — as web curators. Rather than become obsolete, these editors could become essential to their news organization’s future on the web.
Steve observes:
On the Internet, we have [...]

washingtonpost.com’s Political Browser Uses the News Judgment of Journalists to Filter the Political Web

washingtonpost.com has launched a new politics page called Political Browser, which features, wait for it… links to the most important and interesting political news around the web. That’s right, the Washington Post, one of the paragons of original political reporting, has dedicated a page to help you find the best of OTHER news organization’s political [...]

Evolution of the Newswire on the Web

Jeff Jarvis has post today worth reading, about the emergence of the web as the new newswire and the trend away from traditional newswires like AP:
The old syndication model in the old content economy just won’t work today when all the world needs is one copy of a story up in the cloud with links [...]

Publish2: The Web’s Newswire

The web has become the vanguard of reinventing news distribution in the digital age. And while newspapers have often lagged in seizing new opportunities on the web, they have a golden opportunity to lead the charge in reinventing a foundation of the news ecosystem — the newswire.
Newswires have traditionally been based on a number of [...]

How Newsrooms Throw Away Value By Not Linking To Sources On The Web

A lot of research can go into a piece of reporting, and in print the value of that research can only be passed on through brief quotes or references. But on the web, no longer limited by finite column inches, newsrooms can create huge value for readers by providing links to the source material that [...]

Connecting The Dots Of The Web Revolution

For several days my brain has been connecting the blogstorm over AP trying to dictate how much of their content can be quoted on the web with the “quote” that Nick Carr lifted from one of my blog posts in his Atlantic article — I finally figured out why. The problem with the AP isn’t [...]

What Magazines Still Don’t Understand About The Web

Since I already drilled a nerve with What Newspapers Still Don’t Understand About The Web, which is on its way to becoming one of my most linked posts ever — and since everyone loves a sequel — I thought I would do a follow up for magazines. The lessons, of course, apply to every [...]