Geert Lovink on Fri, 5 May 2006 23:13:12 +0200 (CEST)
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[Nettime-nl] web 2.0 tech circus doet amsterdam aan
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http://xtech06.usefulinc.com/
XTech 2006: âBuilding Web 2.0â â 16-19 May 2006, Amsterdam
Tuesday May 16
09:00
Dojo and the future of the open web
Ajax day St. John 2
Alex Russell (Dojo Foundation)
Ajax is one step along the path of improved user experience, but it's
not yet certain the future will be build on open standards. Find out
why this matters to you, your users, and what the Dojo Foundation is
doing about it.
Get Started with Ruby on Rails
Tutorial Volmer 1
Matt Biddulph (hackdiary), Edd Dumbill (Useful Information Company)
Ruby on Rails is a framework for rapidly and elegantly developing
database-backed web applications. This tutorial provides an overview of
all Rails features, from AJAX to Apache, demonstrating how development
time can be significantly reduced.
XQuery 1.0, XPath 2.0, and XSLT 2.0 Explained
Tutorial Volmer 2
Priscilla Walmsley (Datypic)
This tutorial will provide a detailed technical introduction to both
XQuery 1.0 and XSLT 2.0, and their shared language XPath 2.0. The
XQuery section will provide attendees with a solid understanding of the
syntax of XQuery expressions. The discussion of
Microformats from the Ground Up
Tutorial Volmer 3
Brian Suda (n/a), Ryan King (Technorati, Inc.)
We'll walk attendees through how to implement and publish microformats
and long the way explain the princples and practices we've discovered
while developing microformats.
09:45
The Yahoo! User Interface Library
Ajax day St. John 2
Simon Willison (Yahoo!)
The Yahoo! User Interface Library is a set of utilities and controls,
written in JavaScript, for building richly interactive web applications
using techniques such as DOM scripting, HTML and Ajax.
10:30
Break (30 mins)
11:00
OpenLaszlo as an Ajax platform
Ajax day St. John 2
Max Carlson (OpenLaszlo.org)
This paper discusses the upcoming plans for OpenLaszlo and how they
relate to the Ajax community at large. It includes an overview of the
language, a demo of the current Ajax support, and talks about the
future of OpenLaszlo as a platform.
11:45
Hijax: Progressive Enhancement with Ajax
Ajax day St. John 2
Jeremy Keith (Clearleft)
Ajax is hot topic. Behind the hype lies a technology that can greatly
enhance websites. Those enhancements can and should degrade gracefully.
By applying the principle of progressive enhancement, you can ensure
that no visitor is left behind.
12:30
Break (90 mins)
14:00
Beefy Web App seeks Sexy AJAX stunner for interface fun and maybe more
Ajax day St. John 2
Simon Wistow (n/a)
Coders make apps and Designers make things usable and pretty. Yet never
the twain shall meet - which is a shame because there are good ideas
out there begging for some collaboration. This talk examines why and
what can be done to rectify this.
Introduction to XHTML2 and XForms
Tutorial Volmer 3
Steven Pemberton (W3C/CWI)
XHTML2 gives improved usability, accessibility, structuring,
internationalization, device independence, integration with the
semantic web, and better forms processing. The speaker is the chair of
the W3C groups producing the technologies.
14:45
Developing Enterprise Applications with Ajax and XUL
Ajax day St. John 2
Sebastian SchÃrmann (Mayflower / Thinkphp)
This talk describes the daily experience of developing an Ajax
Framework and Applications for Sixt Car Rental in XUL and Javascript.
It will give you an insight in the practical lessons we learned in the
last 2 Years.
15:30
Break (30 mins)
16:00
Combining E4X and AJAX
Ajax day St. John 2
Kurt Cagle (Metaphorical Web)
ECMAScript for XML provides a way to use XML as a native datatype, and
is being adopted by most major players in the industry. Join Kurt Cagle
as he explores how the use of AJAX and E4X together will simplify
programming web applications.
16:45
AjaX with a Capital X!
Ajax day St. John 2
Mark Schiefelbein (Backbase)
Ajax developers are relying heavily on JavaScript to make web
interfaces richer. But JavaScript has drawbacks. XML technologies such
as XPath and XSLT are a great alternative and can be used efficiently
for managing Ajax-style interactivity.
17:30
Ajax Lightning Demos
Ajax day St. John 2
Simon Willison (Yahoo!)
Rapid-fire demonstrations of Ajax projects and concepts, chaired by
Simon Willison of Yahoo!
Wednesday May 17
09:00
How American are Startups?
Grand Ballroom
Paul Graham (Y Combinator)
Startups are largely an American phenomenon. Why? What is it about
America that makes startups work there? Could Silicon Valley be
replicated in another country?
09:45
Building a Participation Platform at Yahoo!
Grand Ballroom
Jeffrey McManus (Yahoo!)
The Web is moving from a static, one-to-many model to a participatory,
user-centric model, based on user-generated content, social networks
and two-way conversations.
10:30
Break (30 mins)
11:00
Putting the BBC's Programme Catalogue on Rails
Applications Grand Ballroom
Matt Biddulph (hackdiary)
This session will explore the work that went into converting the BBC's
programme catalogue database from an internal green-screen application
into a public Web 2.0 application using Ruby on Rails.
SQL, XQuery, and SPARQL: What's Wrong With This Picture?
Core technologies St. John 1
Jim Melton (Oracle Corporation)
Yet Another Query Language? Am RDF query language, SPARQL, is emerging.
Is XQuery sufficient for querying RDF in its XML incarnation? Is SQL
adequate to query RDF in tuple form? We explore these issues and
position the 3 languages.
Improving the Browser Feed Experience for Users and Developers
Browser technology Foyer Room
Robert Sayre (IconNicholson)
This presentation will discuss improvements in browser handling of
syndication feeds (Atom/RSS), and cover strategies for better
integration with helper applications and online services.
OpenStreetMap: The First Year
Open data St. John 2
Steve Coast (openstreetmap.org)
OpenStreetMap is creating a free geowiki of the world, primarily street
maps at present. Why? Geodata generally isn't free or available.
11:45
Putting IBM databases on Rails
Applications Grand Ballroom
Leon Katsnelson (IBM)
IBM database team (builders of DB2, Informix, and Apache Derby) have
fallen in love with Ruby on Rails, XML and Web 2.0. Come to this
session to learn about the projects we have under way and what this can
do for Ruby on Rails and Web 2.0 enthusiasts.
Using XSLT and XQuery for life-size applications
Core technologies St. John 1
Michael Kay (Saxonica Limited)
This session surveys the strengths and weaknesses of the XSLT 2.0 and
XQuery 1.0 languages when it comes to writing real-life, sizeable
applications for performing data transformations.
Microsummaries in Firefox and on the Web
Browser technology Foyer Room
Myk Melez (Mozilla Corporation)
Microsummaries are regularly-updated compilations of the most important
and timely information on web pages. This talk demonstrates how Firefox
will incorporate microsummaries into its UI, starting with bookmark
labels
Collaborative Atlas: Post geopolitical boundaries
Open data St. John 2
Di-Ann Eisnor (Platial Inc.)
Platial is an initiative to create a collaborative atlas that bridges
people, neighborhoods and nations and enables people to document
experience through geography. When geography can viewed through the
eyes of many, geopolitical boundaries begin to melt.
12:30
Break (90 mins)
14:00
Web 2.0 On Speed
Applications Grand Ballroom
Mark Nottingham (Yahoo! Inc)
Web caching hasn't significantly changed in years, and many believe
it's a casualty of a more dynamic, real-time "Web 2.0". That doesn't
have to be the case. This session shows what's possible right now, and
examines the future of HTTP caching.
Future-proofing your XML data
Core technologies St. John 1
C. M. Sperberg-McQueen (World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)), Eric Miller
(World Wide Web Consortium)
Future-proofing your data requires not only that it be possible to
parse it reliably in the future -- you also have to be able to
understand it. XML helps future proof the syntax of your data; can we
future-proof the semantics, too? How?
XBL2: Delivering on the promise of XML Binding Language
Browser technology Foyer Room
Jonas Sicking (Mozilla Corporation)
As CSS allows stylistic attributes to be added to elements, so XBL
allows behavior to be added. This talk describes the capabilities of
XBL and explains what is new in XBL2.
Treating Digital Broadcast As Just Another API, and other such
ruminations
Open data St. John 2
Tom Loosemore (BBC New Media)
The Internet is not the only source of open data. This session will
look at what happens when you realise that Digital Broadcasts are just
nicely structured APIs. It will include demos of some internal BBC
prototypes.
14:45
Publish-subscribe using Jabber
Applications Grand Ballroom
Ralph Meijer (Jabber Software Foundation)
Jabber, based on the IETF approved Extensible Messaging and Presence
Protocol (XMPP), is a streaming XML technology. This session discusses
the publish-subscribe extensions of Jabber and their applications, like
Atom-over-XMPP and Extended presence.
Markup for Flat-XML Processing
Core technologies St. John 1
Daniel Parker (Economic Technology, Inc.)
As XML technologies make gains in mainstream data processing, the need
grows for markup languages that convert legacy data to XML. This
presentation identifies use cases for flat-XML conversion, and
describes a markup vocabulary that addresses them.
Converging Rich-Client and Web Application Development with Mozilla
XULRunner
Browser technology Foyer Room
Benjamin Smedberg (Mozilla Corporation)
This presentation will demonstrate the convergence of rich-client and
web application development and discuss application deployment using
Mozilla XULRunner.
StreamOnTheFly network
Open data St. John 2
Roland Alton-Scheidl (PUBLIC VOICE Lab & Vorarlberg University of
Applied Sciences)
StreamOnTheFly is an open source and open content media network, fed by
community radio stations, which allows easy exchange of content for
broadcasting and podCasting.
15:30
Break (30 mins)
16:00
XML, REST, and SOAP at Yahoo
Applications Grand Ballroom
Parand Darugar (Yahoo Inc.)
This session will discuss the uses of XML, REST and SOAP at Yahoo!,
focusing on real-life lessons learned from extensive usage over the
past 5+ years in Yahoo! Search Marketing.
Google Data API
Core technologies St. John 1
Frank Mantek (Google)
Google recently released the Google Data API, an Atom based protocol to
retrieve, query and update data on Google properties. The talk
discusses the protocol and libraries, together with sample code, as
well as the planned future of the API.
Canvas, SVG, and More: Rich Graphics Capabilities For Web Applications
Browser technology Foyer Room
Vladimir VukiÄeviÄ (Mozilla Corporation)
This presentation will examine some of the strengths and weaknesses of
the HTML 'canvas' and SVG for adding rich graphical capabilities to web
applications. Future browser graphics capabilities, both 2D and 3D will
also be discuss.
Chopping Up Radio - collaboratively annotating radio programmes
Open data St. John 2
Tristan Ferne (BBC Radio & Music)
A BBC Radio project developing a wiki-like interface for
collaboratively chopping up radio programmes into segments and
annotating and tagging each segment.
16:45
Giving SOAP a REST?
Applications Grand Ballroom
Mark O'Neill (Vordel)
Over the past 18 months, REST Web Services have enjoyed increasing
popularity. Although the theory surrounding REST (REpresentational
State Transfer) is complex, the practice is simple: use
long-established Web technologies instead of SOAP.
Efficient implementation of content models with numerical occurrence
constraints
Core technologies St. John 1
Henry Thompson (University of Edinburgh)
W3C XML Schema allows numerical occurrence ranges in content models, to
e.g. allow between 2 and 10 of some element. A new approach to
implementing such models is described which is time- and
space-efficient, even when such ranges are nested.
Layout algorithm improvements for Web user interfaces
Browser technology Foyer Room
David Baron (Mozilla Corporation)
A discussion of problems with existing standards and potential
improvements in two areas: layout systems for user interfaces (rather
than documents) and mechanisms for reordering content to allow the
author to use good markup and appropriate layout.
The power of declarative thinking
Open data St. John 2
Steven Pemberton (W3C/CWI)
This talk discusses the requirements for Web Applications, and the
underpinnings necessary to make Web Applications follow in the same
spirit that engendered the Web in the first place.
Thursday May 18
09:00
Implementing DITA: Considerations beyond Specialization
Applications Grand Ballroom
Paul Prescod (Justsystems Inc.)
Interested in DITA, the XML-based standard for written communication?
This presentation, based on an actual case study, looks at the planning
and development tasks that are required to implement a DITA authoring
solution.
The Road to Efficient XML
Core technologies St. John 1
Robin Berjon (Expway)
Efficient XML has been the topic of heated discussion in the XML
community, and while things are quieter today much remains to be
debated now that the W3C is working on a format. This talk will cover
the past, present, and future of efficient XML.
Revolutionizing the browser user experience
Browser technology Foyer Room
Ian McKellar (Flock Inc)
This session will present the user interface of the Flock web browser
and describe how the project is attempting to update the browser
experience to enable sharing, collaboration and publishing.
Ignorance is not a defence
Open data St. John 2
Suw Charman (Open Rights Group)
Our digital selves are being increasingly surveilled, tracked and
controlled by government and business alike, while our rights to
privacy and free speech are eroded. What are the most worrying threats,
and how you can protect your digital rights?
09:45
Case Study of an Implementation of XML Authoring Within the Open
University
Applications Grand Ballroom
Sean Scannell (eXiMaL Limited)
Case Study of an implementation of XML authoring in the Open
University. Whilst Case Studies sometimes identify non-transferable
experience, this contains practical information beneficial in guiding
any organisation in the introduction of XML authoring.
XML Offload and Acceleration with Cell Broadband Engine
Core technologies St. John 1
Stefan Letz (IBM Deutschland Entwicklung GmbH), Roland Seiffert (IBM
Deutschland Entwicklung GmbH)
This presentation describes the design, implementation, and evaluation
of a high-performance XML parser on the Cell Broadband Engine processor
architecture as a part of a system architecture for XML offload and
acceleration.
Etna, a wysiwyg XML RELAXNG- and Gecko-based editor
Browser technology Foyer Room
Daniel GLAZMAN (Disruptive Innovations)
Presentation of the new wysiwyg XML editor based on Gecko, and its
underlying implementation of RELAX NG.
An open (data) can of worms
Open data St. John 2
Paul Hammond (BBC)
Open data is not a panacea, and presents as many questions as answers.
Technology can only solve some of these issues, this presentation
outlines some of the other, more fundamental, problems.
10:30
Break (30 mins)
11:00
The Viper Solution: A Data Persistence Model using XML and PHP
Applications Grand Ballroom
Salvador Ledezma (IBM)
This session will focus on a data access and persistence XML model and
API that allows programmers to develop simple web applications that
require a database.
SPARQLing Services
Core technologies St. John 1
Leigh Dodds (Ingenta)
This paper will review the SPARQL specifications and its potential
benefits to Web 2.0 applications. Focusing on the SPARQL protocol for
RDF, the paper will provide implementation guidance for developers
interested in adding SPARQL support to their APIs.
Building Rich, Encapsulated Widgets Using XBL, XForms and SVG
Browser technology Foyer Room
Mark Birbeck (x-port.net Ltd.)
From calendar controls to sliders to maps, the end-user experience is
vastly improved if different types of data have different user
interfaces. This session shows how XBL, SVG and XForms can be used to
produce powerful widgets.
Native to a Web of Data: Designing a part of the Aggregate Web
Open data St. John 2
Tom Coates (Yahoo!)
What are the architectural elements of the emerging web of data; how do
you build services to thrive in this environment? What needs to change
and what needs to return to fundamental principles? How do we bring it
all together to make something awesome?
11:45
Ditching the database: XML and the PHP webapp
Applications Grand Ballroom
David Megginson (Megginson Technologies Ltd.)
How far can a PHP-driven web application get using XML files instead of
a database? This presentation looks at an ongoing experiment using REST
both outside and inside a web application, discussing the pros and cons
of XML as a dynamic storage medium.
Adding SPARQL Support to MySQL
Core technologies St. John 1
Eric Prud'hommeaux (W3C/ERCIM)
SPARSQL gives existing MySQL clients (PHP, DBI, ODBC, JDBC) RDF query
access to MySQL databases. Learn how SPARQL support in MySQL provides
the efficiency of relational databases with the versatility of RDF
query.
Dynamic SVG generation under Firefox 1.5 using JavaScript, XML and XSLT
Browser technology Foyer Room
Thomas Meinike (Merseburg University of Applied Sciences / Department
Computer Science and Communication Systems)
Mozilla Firefox 1.5 came out including a native SVG implementation. In
the context of other technologies like JavaScript, XML and XSLT itâs
possible to create graphical content on the fly. Basic facts and
practical know-how will be presented.
Developing for the Personal InfoCloud
Open data St. John 2
Thomas Vander Wal (InfoCloud Solutions, Inc.)
Thomas will explain his Model of Attraction, to frame the constraints
of developing across devices and platforms. He will use his Personal
InfoCloud to frame digital information convergence for the person so to
design our information for use and reuse.
12:30
Break (90 mins)
14:00
Content modelling at the BBC using RDF and OWL
Applications Grand Ballroom
Brendan Quinn (BBC)
To meet the BBC's requirements for content model management, we built
an OWL ontology in ProtÃgÃ. Users of the tool can export content models
to our CMS from the underlying RDF. Issues include applying the
open-world model to closed-world problems.
Building and Managing a Massive Triple Store: An Experience Report
Core technologies St. John 1
Katie Portwin (Ingenta plc), Priya Parvatikar (Ingenta plc)
The paper will focus on the practical challenges involved in creating
and maintaining a very large triple store. Our repository contains
bibliographic metadata spanning 17 million articles; it has 200 million
triples from a range of vocabularies.
The Intelligent Design of Microformats
Browser technology Foyer Room
Ryan King (Technorati, Inc.)
An overview of Microformats and how they can be enable able publishing
data for the Semantic Web.
Going Horizontal: Comparing Open Data Vocabularies Across Domains
Open data St. John 2
Marc de Graauw (Marc de Graauw IT)
XML-based open standard vocabularies are rapidly developing in - not
across - many vertical domains. Where is the common ground, and what
can be gained by standardization? What works and what doesn't in
building vocabularies?
14:45
UML modeling for XML, a practical example
Applications Grand Ballroom
Marchal Benoit (Pineapplesoft)
The session will discuss the use of UML modeling for XML applications,
including the pros and cons, practical steps, implementation strategy
and project samples.
A high performance RDFS store using a Generic Object Model
Core technologies St. John 1
Bradley Bebee (SAIC), Bijan Parsia (Clark & Parsia, LLC), Bryan
Thompson (SAIC), Michael Personick (SAIC), Martyn Cutcher (Cut the Crap
Software)
High performance databases are required to support the semantic
alignment and query of RDF data. We will present on a new high
performance open-source RDFS store based on a Generic Object Model and
its application to federate and query RDF data.
RDF/A: The Easy Way to Publish Your Metadata
Browser technology Foyer Room
Mark Birbeck (x-port.net Ltd.)
RDF/A is a new, and simpler, way of adding metadata to documents, in
such a way that the document contains its own metadata--making it easy
to turn a home page into a FoaF file or RSS feed.
ODF: Our Document Future
Open data St. John 2
Donna Benjamin (Open Source Industry Australia)
The National Archive of Australia was one of the first govt agencies in
the world to adopt XML formats for the digital preservation of
documents. This presentation examines Australia's part in the Open
Source, Open Data, OpenDocument ecosphere.
15:30
Break (30 mins)
16:00
Search engines for Semantic Web knowledge
Applications Grand Ballroom
Tim Finin (University of Maryland, Baltimore County)
Software agents will need specialized search engines to find relevant
and trustworthy knowledge on the Semantic Web. We discuss the
underlying requirements and OWL and present Swoogle, a crawler-based
indexing and retrieval engine for RDF documents.
Internationalization and Localization of XML: Introducing "ITS"
Core technologies St. John 1
Felix Sasaki (W3C), Sebastian Rahtz (Oxford University), Christian
Lieske (SAP)
Description of a new markup vocabulary called "Internationalization Tag
Set" (ITS), which is used for Internationalization and Localization of
XML documents and schemas.
Standardising Web Applications: Rich Web Clients at W3C
Browser technology Foyer Room
Dean Jackson (W3C)
The W3C Rich Web Client Activity will describe its objectives and
current status, and request community feedback.
Social Bookmarking For Scientists - or The Best Of Both Worlds
Open data St. John 2
Ben Lund (Nature Publishing Group)
This presentation describes Connotea, an experimental service that
marries social bookmarking and tagging with existing academic
information tools. It also highlights a challenge - how best to link
web resources to data about those resources.
16:45
Building the Semantic Web at NASA: People, Organizations, Projects, and
Skills
Applications Grand Ballroom
Kendall Clark (XML.com)
A discussion of the ways in which NASA is using Semantic Web
technologies like RDF and OWL to get a handle on its very complex data
problem.
Managing Multilingual Legislation With XML
Core technologies St. John 1
Werner Donnà (Independent consultant)
Presentation of a system for publishing the European Combined
Nomenclature legislation in twenty languages.
XForms: an alternative to Ajax?
Browser technology Foyer Room
Erik Bruchez (Orbeon, Inc.)
In this presentation, we show how today's hybrid, Ajax-based XForms
implementations fit into the "Web 2.0" landscape by delivering exciting
features beyond the initial promises of XForms and providing an
alternative to low-level Ajax development.
Making Connections: Exploring new forms of semantic browsing
Open data St. John 2
Liz Turner (None)
A look at ways of enriching user experience of complex data sets,
through taxonomy, visualization, imagery and interaction
Friday May 19
09:00
The Ning Playground: A Springboard for new Social Software
Applications Grand Ballroom
Yoz Grahame (Ning, Inc.)
The Ning Playground provides excellent, free opportunities for those
looking to design, develop or host new social applications and web
services. This session covers Ning's many features for developers of
new and existing apps.
Chameleon XML models
Core technologies St. John 1
Uche Ogbuji (Fourthought, Inc.)
Variant XML formats within a domain are often similar core models with
superficial differences in representation. Advanced XML design
practices allow a common model to govern multiple syntactic forms.
Bringing Web 2.0 to Mobile Devices
Browser technology Foyer Room
Michael Smith (Opera Software)
Mobile web browers have in the past lacked the support needed for
enabling use of so-called "rich Internet applications" on mobile
handsets. But the "next generatation" of mobile web browsers has
changed that, dramatically.
Embedded RDF
Open data St. John 2
Ian Davis (Talis Information Ltd.)
Embedded RDF is a pattern for enriching content by interweaving
existing XHTML markup with RDF. The method used requires no new markup
so the XHTML can still be validated, is fully CSS compliant and will
not affect browser behaviour.
09:45
Django: Web development on journalism deadlines
Applications Grand Ballroom
Simon Willison (Yahoo!)
Django is a full-stack Python web framework initially created to handle
the challenges posed by a fast-moving newsroom environment. It has
gained a strong community following in the ten months since its release
as an open-source project.
Treebind: an API to bind them all
Core technologies St. John 1
Eric van der Vlist (DYOMEDEA)
Treebind is a generic Java Open Source API which binds a number of
different hierarchical and graphs data model (XML, RDF, LDAP and Java
objects are currently supported). This presentation is also a unique
opportunity to compare these data models.
Mobile Web Applications
Browser technology Foyer Room
HÃkon Lie (Opera Software)
The web is shifting from being document-centric to being
application-centric. This presentation will describe the opportunities
and challenges in running Web applications on mobile devices.
GeoRSS: Geographically Encoded Objects for RSS feeds
Open data St. John 2
Mikel Maron (OpenStreetMap)
With the huge potential of GeoRSS to leverage the "RSS Ecosystem" for
the Geospatial Web, GeoRSS.org was created with the goals of promoting
interoperability, upwards compatibility with GML, and extending W3C geo
for line and polygon geometries.
10:30
Break (30 mins)
11:00
Slidy - an web based alternative to Microsoft PowerPoint
Applications Grand Ballroom
Dave Raggett (W3C)
Web-based editor and slide presentation tool using XHTML, CSS and
JavaScript
XSieve: extending XSLT with the roots of XSLT
Core technologies St. John 1
Oleg Parashchenko (Saint-Petersburg State University)
XSLT has roots in DSSSL. DSSSL has roots in the Lisp dialect Scheme.
Now, XSieve interweaves both XSLT and Scheme, forming a more powerful
XML processing language. XSieve is one of the successful Google "Summer
of Code" 2005 projects.
Mini Map - A web page visualization method for mobile phones
Browser technology Foyer Room
Andrei Popescu (Nokia Research Center, Nokia Corporation), Roland
Geisler (Nokia), Elina Vartiainen (Nokia Research Center, Nokia
Corporation)
Mini Map is a new Web page visualization method for Web browsers
running on mobile phones. It preserves the original look and feel of
the page, while providing means for efficiently navigating to the
interesting content.
Semantics Through the Tag
Open data St. John 2
David Beckett (Yahoo! Inc)
This paper will discuss tagging unplugged from the tagging services
that build them using a series of RDF models to ask 'What is imporant
about a tag?' and providing ways to go from the tags to what people
think they are about.
11:45
Amazon Web Services: Fueling Innovation and Entrepeneurship
Applications Grand Ballroom
Jeff Barr (Amazon)
Amazon Web Services Evangelist Jeff Barr reviews Amazonâs web services,
including Amazon S3 (Simple Storage Service), Amazon Mechanical Turk,
Amazon E-Commerce Service, Alexa Web Information Service, and Alexa Web
Search Platform.
xfy: XML RAD with IBM DB2 Viper
Core technologies St. John 1
Yukihiko Negoro (Justsystems Inc.)
In this presentation, we will show how xfy and IBM DB2 Viper can
implement UltraRAD for XML applications, and change and accelerate
utilization of information in companies.
Sharing Places â find, remix and share located media with the world
Browser technology Foyer Room
Peter Ferne (Mista)
Sharing Places is a Web 2.0 application which enables and encourages
users to combine GPS tracks, text, photo, video and audio annotations
to author digital mediascapes, tag them and publish them for others to
find, remix and share.
The End of the Open Internet?: Network Service and Security in Web 2.0
Open data St. John 2
Michael Leventhal (Tarari, Inc.)
Does application-aware networking threaten the "open internet" - where
every message is handled equally? Ironically, the very power unleased
by exchanging XML on the internet threatens, in the eyes of some, Web
2.0 goals of openness and innovation.
12:30
Break (90 mins)
14:00
Building Software With Human Intelligence: What Amazon Mechanical Turk
Can Do For You and Your Customers
Grand Ballroom
Jeff Barr (Amazon)
What if computers could make use of people? Jeff Barr will explain how
the Amazon Mechanical Turk API does this, allowing computers to
integrate Artificial Artificial Intelligence directly into their
processing by making requests of humans.
14:45
JavaScript 2 and the Future of the Web
Grand Ballroom
Brendan Eich (Mozilla Corporation)
JavaScript 2 will be finalised in 2007. To help migration an open
source JS2-to-JS compiler is being developed, making JS2 a reality in
2006. This compiler and the new features of JS2 will be demonstrated by
the inventor of JavaScript.
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