Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category

Your website as a graph

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

(This really should be your webpage as a graph. See below)

Just read an amazing post of a bunch of different data visualisation techniques and I spotted this one to visualise your website as a graph.

So I did a couple, here is ZoomIn

zoomin-graph.jpg


And here is Trade Me.

tm-graph.jpg


As you can see the trade me tree is a lot more dense!

You can build your own tree, visit the website as graph site and make your own !

What do the colors mean?
blue: for links (the A tag)
red: for tables (TABLE, TR and TD tags)
green: for the DIV tag
violet: for images (the IMG tag)
yellow: for forms (FORM, INPUT, TEXTAREA, SELECT and OPTION tags)
orange: for linebreaks and blockquotes (BR, P, and BLOCKQUOTE tags)
black: the HTML tag, the root node
gray: all other tags

Wikia sets its sights on Google

Wednesday, August 1st, 2007

Search is part of the fundamental infrastructure of the Internet. And, it is currently broken.” – Jimmy Wales


Wikia has officially entered the search market, when they announced at OSCON that they were purchasing grub from Looksmart. Can they succeed where Yahoo, Microsoft, Ask and Altavista etc have failed?

From the press release…

“The desire to collaborate and support a transparent and open platform for search is clearly deeply exciting to both open source and businesses. Look for other exciting announcements in the coming months as we collectively work to free the judgment of information from invisible rules inside an algorithmic black box.”

If you’re interested you can find out more from Search Wikia page

With an open source search engine, all sorts of applications and mashups will be possible. That begs the question? Who do you trust more Google or Wikipedia ?

SOA and Web 2.0

Wednesday, July 18th, 2007

Here’s a good article from e-week about Web 2.0 and SOA. It illustrates how “Web 2.0” principles are being used to reshape how companies are looking at the design of internal applications and services.

From the article, it talks about how H&R Block are re-designing a number of applications as web services.

Dan Cahoon was looking for a way to streamline staffing operations at tax company H&R Block, the nation’s largest seasonal employer. Rather than use traditional desktop-based software for the job, the senior systems architect at H&R Block was able to deliver SOA-connected AJAX portlets to more than 12,000 branch offices for temporary work spaces to meet the company’s staffing needs.

Cahoon’s example illustrates the growing trend of merging Web 2.0 technologies with SOA (service-oriented architecture) to address issues normally handled through PC-based software, resulting in faster, cheaper and more flexible solutions….

And the business people can start to build useful applications from other data feeds, ala popfly / yahoo pipes.

….This trend touches on RIAs (rich Internet applications), mashups, AJAX, RSS, REST (Representational State Transfer) and other Web 2.0 areas. Now being referred to as Enterprise 2.0, the Web 2.0 technologies are helping to create rich interactive front ends to SOA back-end systems. In addition, line-of-business users who typically are nondevelopers can take services and build mashups without IT involvement—a potential boon for productivity but also a possible problem without proper governance.

This also raises some important questions about SOA, webservices and a like. We’re going to need to figure out ways to evaluate the capabilities of the different services. As SOA are evolving very quickly, it will be really hard to pick the right services and frameworks to achieve the objectives.

Food for thought.

Here's another use for your iPhone…

Saturday, July 7th, 2007

Google have released an open source app called telekinesis to convert an iPhone into a remote controller for your mac.

Now you can use your iPhone for :

* Stream music and videos from your computer (0.9.8) learn how
* Screen capture with mouse click and basic typing support
* Simple iTunes Remote control
* Browse your files
* Run applescript remotely
* iSight image capture
* Easily create and add more apps

Hey Rod, now you can use your ordered iPhone for more than use listening to music and browsing Xero 😉

Article on 5 ways to optimise Rails AJAX

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

Here’s a good post from the Vitamin site on 5 ways to optimise in  AJAX for Ruby on Rails.

Enjoy.

How to survive getting Digg'd…

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

Here is a really interesting post about how Andre Gunter survived 100,000 instant visitors on a small budget.

His site is hosted on a Virtual Private Server (VPS) with 256MB guaranteed RAM and 1GB burstable RAM. Its not designed to scale ! Andre outlines some of the tips and tools that he used to survive 100k visitors over 1 day.

He leverages using caching and redirecting content to other services. Its a great read and illustrates that you can improve performance with some subtle changes to your software infrastructure.

iTunes now 3rd biggest music retailer in US

Monday, June 25th, 2007

iTunes became the 3rd biggest music retailer in US behind Walmart and Best-buy. (It over took Amazon in January) Wow!

I wonder if anyone has any figures for NZ iTune sales. We now buy our music via iTunes, our CD purchases have all but dried up.

This re-iterates the acceptance of digital content as a medium and the need for Music companies to fully embrace digital media.

Still waiting for more selection on iTunes NZ and hanging out for iTunes movies, I’d like to be able to download movies rather than buy the DVD. 🙂

Clock is still ticking for the NZ music retailers…

Sage advice in thinking about the Amazon EC2 / S3 disaster planning

Monday, June 25th, 2007

Artur Bergman (who has recently joined O’Reilly radar and gave a kick-ass talk about his experiences in scaling live journal at foo camp.) offers some sage advice for those people that are comptemplating using EC2 and S3.

Artur seriously knows his stuff, and he lists some points that you should consider when using EC2 or S3, but the principles hold for any other webservice. To cut a long story short, read the small print of your service agreements and figure out your worse case scenario and how you can mitigate those risks.

Introducing alcheMo

Tuesday, June 19th, 2007


 

The team from innaworks have officially launched alcheMo, their J2ME to Brew porting solution. This tool will help streamline the mobile development process to support multiple phone platforms through their translator. This will help save companies save mega-bucks in development costs.

Kudos to Stephen and the team for another kick mobile development product!

Links to 100 CSS resources

Monday, June 18th, 2007

Nahum sent through this link to a post on 100 free CSS resources.

The list includes a number of tools that will help you with your website optimisation.

Enjoy!


http://www.canakkaleruhu.org http://www.vergimevzuati.org http://www.finansaldenetci.com http://www.securityweb.org http://www.siyamiozkan.org http://www.fatmaozkan.com http://www.sgk.biz.tr http://www.denetci.gen.tr http://www.bagimsizdenetim.biz.tr http://www.mevzuat.biz.tr http://www.security.biz.tr http://www.sorgulatr.com http://www.kanunlar.biz http://www.prsorgu.net http://www.sirabul.com http://www.emekliol.org http://www.coklupagerank.com http://www.coklupagerank.net http://www.coklupagerank.org http://www.prsorgu.org http://www.scriptencode.com http://www.sirabul.net http://www.sirabul.org http://www.sitenizanaliz.com http://www.seoisko.com http://www.seomavi.com http://www.scriptencode.net http://www.scriptencode.org