Saturday, August 2, 2008

What's new for web development

Well It may not be literally new, but as any web technology introduced, it takes for something really cool and new time to be widely used (such as web standards, ). So I've been reading about this and you might want to take some time (a lot actually... I haven't research them all but this post will help us all with some kind of guide for further reading).

Adoble Flex
http://learn.adobe.com/wiki/display/Flex/1a.+Learning+Points

SQLite
http://www.sqlite.org/

Adobe Air.
http://www.adobe.com/products/air/comparison/

Silverlight
http://www.silverlight.net

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Tuesday, July 29, 2008

My choice for best web applications

  1. Photsynth: It needs an active x pluggin for Internet Explorer, but it's like using something from the future now. The way the navigation goes through the 3d environment is great and the way I order photos in a 2d model is superb.
  2. Google Maps - Live Maps: the entire map can be seen as a gigapixel image, street view is truly useful and the directions tools that both sites offer are a great way to show how web 2.0 apps are afecting nowadays rutine.
  3. Google Reader: the best way to keep you updated, it has a high performance and forget about having to check manually every feed either in your browser or surfing page by page. In 5 minutes I can overview more than 80 feeds. Apart from the mail web systems, I thinks this is the most useful web software available for professionals.
  4. Yahoo: the ultimate usability portal, well studied components which give the user a lot of information in one page.
  5. Flickr: great community where people can actually know the whole world with high quality photos taken from great photographers. It has great sense of usability (yahoo trademark), and you can spend a whole afternoon using it in conjunction with the apps described at point 2.
  6. Microsoft's Hotmail: It's fast to manage, I can do a lot of things faster than If I were using gmail or yahoo mail, it's very intuitive with the "right click" options.
  7. iGoogle: the extensions and the widgets offered are great, you can actually set your internet "dashboard" here.
  8. Youtube: the ultimate web 2.0 site. Huge community, huge traffic, and very entertaining site.

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Wednesday, July 23, 2008

IE8 Beta: Trustworthy Browsing

IE8 Team is about to post some articles about the end-user experience improvements that are going to be available in Internet Explorer 8. The first of those posts is about some basic definitions:

  • Security is often where the trust discussion begins. Narrowly, security in this context means “as the user browses the web, the only code that runs on the user’s machine is code that the user allows to run".
  • Reliability is relatively simple: the browser should always start, find the Internet, and show web sites without crashing.
  • Business practices guide decisions we make in designing and distributing our products. The key principle here is respecting user choice. For example, when a user installs a new version of IE, IE respects the user’s choice of default search engine

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Friday, March 21, 2008

Webmaster links

Here some important links for anyone who manages site content and positioning.
Plus the google analytics offers reports and nice stats, most of the webhosting companies offers this in their plans, but still google provides some benefits such as "benchmarking".

Two important tasks is to provide a sitemap and to define the robots file:
  1. From sitemaps.org:
    Sitemaps are an easy way for webmasters to inform search engines about pages on their sites that are available for crawling
    Sitemaps have wide adoption since google, microsoft and yahoo are using it as defined in sitemap protocol.
  2. Robots file: it is used to exclude some files from crawling. this is called The Robots Exclusion Protocol.

Hope this is useful for you.

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