Archive for May, 2011
Web Design
Web 2.0 has numerous definitions. Tim O’Reilly regards Web 2.0 as business embracing the web as a platform and using its strengths (global audiences, for example).O’Reilly — What Is Web 2.0 O’Reilly considers that Eric Schmidt’s abridged slogan, don’t fight the Internet, encompasses the essence of Web 2.0 — building applications and services around the unique features of the Internet, as opposed to building applications and expecting the Internet to suit as a platform (effectively “fighting the Internet”).
In the opening talk of the first Web 2.0 conference, O’Reilly and John Battelle summarized what they saw as the themes of Web 2.0. They argued that the web had become a platform, with software above the level of a single device, leveraging the power of the “Long Tail”, and with data as a driving force. According to O’Reilly and Battelle, an architecture of participation where users can contribute website content creates network effects. Web 2.0 technologies tend to foster innovation in the assembly of systems and sites composed by pulling together features from distributed, independent developers (a kind of “open source” development and an end to the software-adoption cycle, the so-called “perpetual beta”). Web 2.0 technology encourages lightweight business models enabled by syndication of content and of service and by ease of picking-up by early adopters.
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Web Designing- Plays an Imperative Role in every business objective by aiming and generating potential leads
Website designing can easily be defined as a specific skill of presenting contents, which are mainly hypertexts, usually delivered to any end user while using the World Wide Web with the help of a web browser or any other web enabled software such as internet television clients, micro blogging, auto blogging clients or as RSS readers.