Tarea #2: Hacia un website completo
El propósito de esta Tarea #2, además de completar y llegar al fondo de la actividad de la Semana #4, es llegar a
CMU 260 | Digital Storytelling | 2023 | Sagrado
El propósito de esta Tarea #2, además de completar y llegar al fondo de la actividad de la Semana #4, es llegar a
Para esta tarea deberás preparar un articulo y publicarlo en un post de tu website (blog) personal. También, deberás poner las etiquetas (tags)
Taller del 29 de marzo de 2019 EDP University – HETS #Web30 #Web30 Thirty years ago, an unimaginably powerful tool was invented by Sir Tim Berners-Lee here, at CERN. https://t.co/hiP5QERJ5T — CERN (@CERN) March 12, 2019 I’m taking a … Sigue leyendo →
Eat the Data: Reclaim the web, #CNIE2014 keynote by @brlamb expertly DJd by @draggin flickr photo by giulia.forsythe shared under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-SA) license In a previous post (The forgotten Encyclopedia) I wrote that Encyclopedias pursued a closed-world model … Continue reading →
The post Closed Worlds and the Open Web appeared first on Skate of the web.
Sometimes, the Web feels too big. Like this planet, it instills in me a sense of impossibility: I’ll manage to know but a tiny bit of its wonders. And so I skate through it, sometimes getting tired of the browsing, … Continue reading →
The post I found some Visual Thinkery on the open Web appeared first on Skate of the web.
The first Web page was published by Tim Berners-Lee almost 26 years ago. Again, I find this Web a quasi magical creation, made of legend and human ingenuity. Of course, built from the shoulders of people who contributed great ideas, … Continue reading →
**Give anyone the power to share anything with anyone.** That’s what the (open) Web does, Mr. Zuck. And yes, this is but another hint at the FB issue: Conquering the Web. FB is in fact becoming the Web for something … Continue reading →
danah boyd‘s piece It’s not Cyberspace anymore resonates strongly. I feel what she wrote, and the short article will be material for my class of New Media inf115, which has a subtitle of Reclaiming the Web. This week EFF members celebrate … Continue reading →
Es tiempo que conozcamos más sobre la historia y el valor de la Web. Como verán, concer la evolución de esta extraordinaria tecnología
I just finished reading a nice book, a noir first from a relatively unknown new French author with an English name, Julia Deck. Book title is Viviane Élisabeth Fauville (in english, it’s Viviane) and it’s a “beautiful” story of the … Continue reading →
Thus is written on Volume 16 on Shelf 2 of Wall 2 (of a numbered Hexagon), at page 115 (of 410 —all volumes have equal length). And thus is written there and has always been written since the beginning of time. … Continue reading →
The quasi-last class in my New Media course was the occasion to close a discourse begun with the article The Web We Lost by Anil Dash. The message was essentially that it is quite difficult, for people who were not … Continue reading →
This post is inspired in way by Anil Dash’s article “The Web We Lost“, a concept I find very troublesome and that I am sharing with my students of #inf115 (New Media & Social Nets). But there’s one extra reason … Continue reading →
The World Wide Web is 25 today, March 12, after being born out of the mind of the visionary Tim Berners-Lee at CERN. It is outstanding, and I am not stopping to shout it everywhere I go, that Berners-Lee and … Continue reading →
Thus, He spoke, at last. When asked today (November 2, 2013) by The Financial Times about his thoughts on priority between malaria vaccination and Internet connectivity he replied: As a priority, it’s a joke. […] Take this malaria vaccine, [this] … Continue reading →