2. • How many of you use social media websites?
• What is the most popular social media site?
• Who among your member use internet to get
News?
• Who among your members use iPhones or
Android phones?
• Who among you here are familiar with assistive
media?
3. Internet
- is often called the Information Superhighway.
- become a major source of information.
- major means of communication and platforms
for information-based services.
- electronic mail or e-mail
- Internet relay chat (IRC) or chat
- Online games, Social Network & blogging
- and World Wide Web (WWW)
4. Internet
- It is simply the net, it is a large computer
network that is made up of thousand network
worldwide.
- ARPANET (Advance Research Projects Agency
Network) launched by U.S. department of
Defense ARPA (advance research project
agency) in 1969 to enable scientist to share
information and computer resources.
- It is owned by private companies or funded by
government of some countries.
- Philippines are linked to the US-japan
backbone in terms of using internet.
5. World Wide Web (WWW)
• It is one of the services available on the
Internet that allows you to get information
about anything and everything ( text, image
and more) from any web site anywhere in the
world to your computer.
• It is a very huge informal network---
The first billion was reached in 2005.
The second billion in 2010. The third
billion in 2014. And as of 2016 3 billion
where using the net.
• Asia is the large user of the world internet
with 1.8 billion as of 2016.
6. WEB 2.0
- include social networking websites, self-publishing
platforms (e.g., WordPress' easy-to-use blog and website
creation tools), "tagging" (which enables users to label
websites, videos or photos in some fashion), "like"
buttons (which enable a user to indicate that they are
pleased by online content), and social bookmarking.
Users can provide the data that is on a Web 2.0 site and
exercise some control over that data. These sites may
have an "architecture of participation" that encourages
users to add value to the application as they use
it. Users can add value in many ways, such as by
commenting on a news story on a news website, by
uploading a relevant photo on a travel website, or by
adding a link to a video or TED talk which is pertinent
to the subject being discussed on a website
7. WEB 2.0
- One of the most significant differences
between Web 2.0 and the traditional World
Wide Web (WWW, retroactively referred to as
Web 1.0) is greater collaboration among Internet
users, content providers and enterprises.
Originally, data was posted on Web sites, and
users simply viewed or downloaded the content.
Increasingly, users have more input into the
nature and scope of Web content and in some
cases exert real-time control over it.
8. WEB 3.0
• a phrase coined by John Mark off of the New
York Times in 2006, refers to a supposed
third generation of Internet-based services
that collectively comprise what might be
called ‘the intelligent Web’ — such as those
using semantic web, micro formats, natural
language search, data-mining, machine
learning, recommendation agents, and
artificial intelligence technologies — which
emphasize machine-facilitated understanding
of information in order to provide a more
productive and intuitive user experience.”
10. - is a nonprofit Internet-based radio reading
service, Internet-delivered audio reading to
serve people with visual and reading
impairments.
- Founded in Ann Arbor, Michigan in 1996
by David Erdody as a nonprofit
organization and with volunteer readers began
producing and distributing spoken-word
recordings of otherwise inaccessible materials
on audio cassette to participating libraries of
The Library of Congress-National Library
Service for the Blind and Physically
Handicapped.
Assistive Media
11. Individually, do the following:
• Identify a community problem that need to be
addressed in terms of technology
empowerment.
• Develop a plan using a chosen platform to
address the problem.
Notes de l'éditeur
Arpanet is its predecessor/beggings
The phrase "Web 2.0" was coined back in 2003 by Dale Dougherty, Vice President at O'Reilly Media, which became popular in 2004. If the next fundamental change happened in roughly the same time span, we should have officially broken into Web 3.0 sometime in 2015. Indeed, we're already seeing it with what people are calling "The Internet of Things" and smart home appliances connected to wireless networks. Most people generally have some idea that Web 2.0 is an interactive and social web facilitating collaboration between people. This is distinct from the early, original state of the web (Web 1.0) which was a static information dump where people read websites but rarely interacted with them.
If we distill the essence of change between Web 1.0 and Web 2.0, we can derive an answer. Web 3.0 is the next fundamental change both in how websites are created and more importantly, how people interact with them.
Web 3.0 as a Marketing Term
Sadly, this is probably the most likely way that we'll be using the term 'Web 3.0' in the future. Web 2.0 has already achieved monumental buzz, and '2.0' has already been attached to Office 2.0, Enterprise 2.0, Mobile 2.0, Shopping 2.0, etc. As the Web 2.0 buzz declines, we will probably be seeing websites popping up claiming to be 'Web 3.0' hoping to create a new buzz.
The Artificially Intelligent Web 3.0
Many people ponder the use of advanced artificial intelligence as the next big breakthrough on the web. One of the chief advantages of social media is that it factors in human intelligence.
For example, social bookmarking as a search engine can provide more intelligent results than using Google.
You're getting websites that have been voted on by humans, so you have a better chance at hitting a good website.
However, because of the human factor, the results can also be manipulated. A group of people could vote for a particular websites or article with the intent of making it more popular. So, if artificial intelligence can learn how to separate the good from the bad, it could produce results similar to social bookmarking and social news siteswhile eliminating some of the bad elements.
The Web 3.0 Semantic Web
There is already a lot of work going into the idea of a semantic web, which is a web where all information is categorized and stored in such a way that a computer can understand it as well as a human. Many view this as a combination of artificial intelligence and the semantic web. The semantic web will teach the computer what the data means, and this will evolve into artificial intelligence that can utilize that information.
The World Wide Virtual Web 3.0
This is a bit more of a far-fetched idea, but some have speculated that the popularity of virtual worlds and massively online games like World of Warcraft might lead to a web based on a virtual world. Kinset created a virtual shopping mall where users can walk into different stores and see the shelves populated with products. It isn't a far stretch to see this expanded into an idea where users can interact with each other and walk into a wide variety of buildings, some of which might not even sell anything.
However, the idea that the entire web would evolve into one single virtual world with buildings, shops, and other areas to explore and people to interact with — while not unbelievable in a technological sense — has more than just technological hurdles to overcome. The virtual web would need to get the major websites on board and agreeing to standards that would allow multiple companies to provide clients which, no doubt, would lead to some clients offering features that other clients don't offer and fierce competition between clients.
It would also increase the time it took to bring a website into the virtual web since the programming and graphic design would be much more complex. This extra expense would probably be too much for smaller companies and websites.
This virtual web presents a few too many obstacles, but it should be kept in mind as a possible Web 4.0.
The Ever-Present Web 3.0
This isn't as much of a prediction of what the Web 3.0 future holds as it is the catalyst that will bring it about. The ever-present Web 3.0 has to do with the increasing popularity of mobile internet devices and the merger of entertainment systems and the Web.
The merging of computers and mobile devices as a source for music, movies, and more puts the internet at the center of both our work and our play. Within a decade, internet access on our mobile devices (cell phones, smartphones, pocket PCs) has become as popular as text messaging. This will make the Internet always present in our lives: at work, at home, on the road, out to dinner, wherever we go, the Internet will be there.
This may very well evolve into some interesting ways in which the Internet will be used in the future.