Sony Ericsson W580i User Guide
Short Description
Some of the contents in this manual may differ from your phone depending on the software of the phone or your service provider. . 2007 AT&T Knowledge Ventures. All rights reserved. Subsidiaries and affiliates of AT&T Inc. provide products and services under the AT&T brand.
Website: www.wireless.att.com | Filesize: 9088kb
No of Page(s): 169
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Nokia 6630 Manufacturer Guide
Short Description
This wireless device is a 3GPP GSM Release 99 terminal supporting GPRS service, and is designed to support also Release 97 GPRS networks. However, there may be some compatibility issues when used in some Release 97 GPRS networks. For more information, contact your service provider. This device supports WAP 2.0 protocols (HTTP and SSL) that run on TCP/IP protocols. Some features of this device, such as MMS, browsing, e-mail and content downloading via browser or over MMS, require network support for these technologies.
Website: www.roadpost.com | Filesize: 5034kb
No of Page(s): 120
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What Powers Web2.0 Mashups
Short Description
About this talk
1. Hackday
2. Yahoo! Developer Network
3. Web Services - XML and beyond
4. Real World Mashups
5. Authentication Web Services
6. Developer Candy
Website: 2006.xmlconference.org | Filesize: 2781kb
No of Page(s): 47
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Mashing Up with Google Mashup Editor and Yahoo! Pipes
Short Description
Mashups: A web application that combines data from more than one source into an integrated experience.
- RIA = Rich Internet Applications
- Combine multiple data feeds
- Often read-only
- User developed
- Access services over Internet
- Ad-hoc, easy to change
- Mashups on mashups
Website: softwaresummit.com | Filesize: 1019kb
No of Page(s): 19
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The RDF Book Mashup From Web APIs to a Web of Data
Short Description
1. Web APIs and Mashups
2. The RDF Book Mashup
3. Use Cases
1. Annotate HTML Pages with Book Mashup Data
2. Enrich other Data Sources with Book Mashup Data
3. Form a Part of the Emerging Web of Data
Website: www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de | Filesize: 1340kb
No of Page(s): 13
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Mashups Interoperability and eInnovation
Short Description
Web services have been wildly hyped for a long while now. Web services, and more specifically mashups, on which we focus here, are an area of enormous innovation. That innovation is manifested through new business models, new technologies, and clever new ways to use and share data. It’s also an area where interoperability is the name of the game; the notion that people, data, and code can interact with other people, data, and code is the starting point for these services. The word “interoperable” is often in the definition of what a Web service is. The focus of this case study is the relationship between innovation in Web services applications and the interoperability (or interoperability potential) that we see. We conclude that the connection between interoperability and innovation is plain in this context. A wide variety of mashups that are useful to individuals, enterprises, and society as a whole have been enabled by interoperability in Web services, and could not exist without it. The drivers of interoperability have been market demand, private ordering, and work done in standards bodies. But the system by which it has come to pass is currently unstable, in the sense that a lawsuit or withdrawal of interoperable interfaces by a key stakeholder could set back innovation considerably. We consider several options for creating greater sustainability over time, such as license interoperability, open standards, and back-up in the form of traditional law enforcement.
Website: cyber.law.harvard.edu | Filesize: 534kb
No of Page(s): 36
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Mashups Emerging Application Development Paradigm for a Digital Journal
Short Description
The WWW is currently experiencing a revolutionary growth due to its increasing participative community software applications. This paper highlights an emerging application development paradigm on the WWW, called mashup. As blogs have enabled anyone to become a publisher, mashups stimulate web development by allowing anyone to combine existing data to develop web applications. Current applications of mashups include tracking of events such as crime, hurricanes, earthquakes, meta-search integration of data and media feeds, interactive games, and as an organizer for web resources. The implications of this emerging web integration and structuring paradigm remains yet to be explored fully. This paper describes mashups from a number of angles, highlighting current developments while providing sufficient illustrations to indicate its potential implications. It also highlights the role of mashups in complementing and enhancing digital journals by providing insights into the quality academic content, extent of coverage, and the enabling of expanded services. We present pioneering initiatives for the Journal of Universal Computer Science in our efforts to harness the collective intelligence of a collaborative scholarly network.
Website: www.jucs.org | Filesize: 97kb
No of Page(s): 12
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