Archive for the ‘Web 3.0’ Category

Learn HTML5 Video From The “Reel” Masters

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Learn HTML5 Video From The “Reel” Masters

Who better to learn about HTML5 video from than the developer at Opera who was in charge of developing the HTML5 video tag standard in the first place? How about the creator of the most popular open source video player in the world, the JW Player? Sit in with us and you’ll truly, Learn from the Masters.

JW is best known for his versatile and stable Flash player for video online. He’s also been the driving force behind JW Player, LongTailVideo and BitsontheRun. If anyone knows about hosting, embedding and playing video in a browser, it’s him.

Opera was one of the first browsers to announce HTML 5 tag support and that means they know what they’re doing. As a core developer for Opera being responsible for HTML 5 support and compatibility Philip Jagenstedt knows what it takes to properly display video using HTML 5.
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Motivational Speaker Taps Web 3.0 Design with W3C-Compliant HTML5 Video from Miami Web Design Firm

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Motivational Speaker Taps Web 3.0 Design with W3C-Compliant HTML5 Video from Miami Web Design Firm
Is the “World’s Most Interesting Man” the actor in the Dos Equis commercials, or a real-life motivational speaker and best-selling author named Joachim de Posada? Watch his Web 3.0 videos and decide.

Dr. Joachim de Posada, CSP was declared the Most Distinguished Hispanic Speaker by the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce in 2007, recognized as one of America’s 25 Hot Speakers by the National Speakers Association in 2009, and a video of his latest presentation at TED U has gone viral with over a million hits and counting. Fluent in Spanish and English, Dr. Posada is the Latino speaking sensation who has entertained, educated and enthralled audiences in over 60 nations.

A prolific writer as well as professional speaker, Posada’s best-selling success and self-improvement books have been translated into many languages for millions of inspired readers and dedicated followers around the globe. And now, thanks to his new “Web 3.0 Ready” website by Bruce Arnold’s Miami web design boutique, WebReDesignMiami.com, web surfers can experience Posada online like never before:
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How Web 3.0 is going to transform the way we blog

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

How Web 3.0 is going to transform the way we blog

The World Wide Web is an interesting paradox. It’s made with computers, but for the people. The sites we visit every day use natural language, images and page layout to present information in a way that’s easy for us to comprehend. Even though they are central to creating and maintaining the Web, the computers themselves really can’t make sense of all this information. They can’t read, see relationships or make decisions like we can.

Web 3.0 is the new generation of the World Wide Web, through which Web 2.0 technology joins hands with the Semantic Web, making it possible for humans as well as machines to access and use the information stored in the Web. With Web 3.0, machines will be able to perform tasks requiring human intelligence, reducing our time and effort on the Internet dramatically. We will be able to get results seamlessly without having to break our heads pointlessly for hours.

Web 2.0 & Web 3.0

What we have been experiencing until now, (of course in the latter part of the decade) can be termed as Web 2.0. Tim Berners Lee, the man who invented the world wide web (WWW) argues that it is more of a marketing term rather than a technical term. Be that as it may, it completely revolutionized the way we interacted with web pages. It specialized in making the net usage collaborative by allowing the people to interact with the data and contribute their views through concepts such as wiki, blogs, social networking sites, etc. Examples: Wikipedia, Blogger, Twitter, Digg, Technorati, Del.icio.us, StumbleUpon, Myspace, Facebook, Flickr, and many more.
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Working with Microsoft Silverlight on PHP

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

Working with Microsoft Silverlight on PHP

Microsoft Silverlight, now at version 3.0, is a great way to create rich web applications that run on Windows, Mac OS and Linux. It provides an engaging, rich, safe, secure, and scalable cross-platform experience. Best of all you can run it off any web server (IIS, Apache for e.g.) and it can be called from any PHP website! Our team has released some helper samples to get you started. You can find the project on the Samples for PHP with Silverlight web page, and the project source can be found on Codeplex. The project includes sample HTML and PHP scripts.

How it works? Silverlight content is embedded into an HTML or PHP web page and in turn is transferred to the client browser where it is displayed by the Silverlight runtime (plugin) installed on the client computer. The architecture is shown on the right.

You will first create a Silverlight application file (.xap). We have provided a sample file, HelloPHPDevelopers.xap within the download or you can also create one for yourself by using another tech bridge we have, Eclipse Tools for Silverlight. Our colleague Steve Sfarz in France has a great post up on his site describing how to get started with it and create your own .xap file. This file is essentially a packaged archive or .zip file (try changing .xap to .zip and browse into it) with a collection of libraries that you have compiled for your application. If you follow the directions on the site you will end up with a button on a form with some custom actions.

You will then copy the .xap file you have created to a directory within your web site where you plan to host the Silverlight content. You will then want to create a custom HTML or PHP page that includes the following code in it’s body

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Firefox improves, but still loses its edge

Monday, July 20th, 2009

Firefox improves, but still loses its edge

The war of the Web browsers has taken another turn with the release of a major new version of Mozilla Firefox, the No. 2 browser in market share, but No. 1 in the hearts of many of the most knowledgeable computer users.

This new edition of Firefox is the third big new browser release this year, following new editions of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer and Apple’s Safari. Unlike Firefox, these two browsers come bundled with the two major computer platforms, Windows and Mac. By contrast, Mozilla must convince users to download Firefox, which comes in essentially identical versions for both systems. And it has done a reasonably good job, garnering by most estimates around 23 percent market share, versus between 60 percent and 70 percent for IE, which is by far the leader. Meanwhile, Google — a former Firefox supporter — has joined the battle with its nascent Chrome browser, which so far runs only on Windows, but is due on the Mac one day and is to morph into a whole new operating system next year. And there are other very capable browsers with small user bases, the most notable of which is Opera.

I’ve been using Firefox since its inception years ago, and have been testing this latest iteration, version 3.5, since it emerged June 30. I can continue to recommend it as a fine way to surf the Web. The new version is improved, and worked very well for me on both my Windows and Macintosh computers.

But, in this round of the war, Mozilla’s product no longer stands out as clearly superior, for two reasons. First, Firefox has lost its traditionally biggest advantage: greater speed than its rivals. While Firefox 3.5 is about twice as fast as the previous version 3.0, and handily beat Internet Explorer 8 in my tests, it lagged behind both Safari 4.02 and the beta edition of Chrome 2.0 a bit in most test scenarios. Overall, Safari was fastest in most of my tests, both on Mac and Windows (yes, Apple makes a little-known version of Safari for Windows).

In fact, Mozilla no longer is claiming to be the fastest browser. It now prefers to say it is one of what it calls the “modern” browsers, along with Safari and Chrome, whose under-the-hood technologies make them better at handling a growing breed of sophisticated Internet-based applications that mimic traditional computer programs like photo editors and word processors and spreadsheets.

Second, this version of Firefox has relatively few new features, and some of them are merely catch-ups to those introduced earlier by Microsoft and Apple. Most notable among these is a private browsing mode, first popularized in Safari, and greatly expanded in IE, which allows you to traverse Web sites without leaving traces on your computer to show what you’ve been doing.

Mozilla says its main goal from now on will be to turn Firefox into the ideal platform for running Web-based applications. It shares the belief, also fervently embraced by Google, that consumers will gradually migrate away from programs stored on their computers’ hard disks to those stored in “the Cloud,” the industry’s term for the servers that run the Internet.

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