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Vickylyn F. Lumawag

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Vickylyn F. Lumawag

Uploaded by

Vickylyn Lumawag
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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You are on page 1/ 34

VICKYLYN F.

LUMAWAG
THE WEB

◦ The Web(World Wide Web) consists of information


organized into Web pages containing text and
graphic images. The World Wide Web is larger
collection of interconnected documents or context.
It contains hypertext links, or highlighted
keywords and images that lead to related
information.
Sir Timothy
John
Berners-
Lee

He is a English
Engineer and
computer
scientist and a
professorial
Fellow of
Computer
Science.
A. WEB 1.0 (READ ONLY
STATIC WEB)
It is an old internet that only allows people to read from the internet. First
stage worldwide linking web pages and hyperlink. Web is use as
“information portal”. It uses
table to positions and align elements on page.
• Most read only web. If focused on company’s home pages.
• Dividing the world wide web into usable directories
• It means web is use as “Information Portal”
• It started with the simple idea “put content together”
EXAMPLE OF WEB 1.0
software that enables files to be compressed quickly to
10% or less of their original size for storage on disk or
hard drive or esp for transfer over the internet. 2. an
audio or video file created in this way.
A home page is the main web page of
a website. The term may also refer to
the start page shown in a web browser
when the application first opens.
Directories

A directory is a unique type of file that


contains only the information needed to
access files or other directories.
B. WEB 2.0 (READ-WRITE
INTERACTIVE WEB
A term used to describe a new generation of
Web services and applications with an
increasing emphasis on human collaboration.
EXAMPLE OF WEB 2.0 ARE THE
FOLLOWING:
A. Social Networking

the use of Internet-based social


media sites to stay
connected with friends, family,
colleagues, customers, or clients.
Social networking
can have a social purpose, a
business purpose, or both,
B. Blogs

a discussion or informational website published


on the world wide
web consisting of discrete, often informal diary-
style text entries (posts). Posts are
typically displayed in reverse chronological
order, so that the most recent post
appears first, at the top of the web page.
C. Wikis

a hypertext publication collaboratively edited


and managed by its
own audience directly using a web browser. A
typical wiki contains multiple pages
for the subjects or scope of the project and may
be either open to the public or
limited to use within an organization for
maintaining its internal knowledge base.
D. Video Sharing Sites

a website that lets people upload and


share their
video clips with the public at large or
to invited guests.
KEY FEATURES OF WEB 2.0
• Folksonomy

allows users to categorize and


classify/arrange information
using freely chosen keywords (e.g.
tagging).
• Rich User Interface

content is dynamic and is responsive


to user’s input.
An example would be a website that
shows local content.
• User Participation

the owner of website is not the only one who is able to


put content. Others are able to place a content on their
own by means of
comments, reviews, and evaluation.
• Long Tail

services are offered on demand rather than on


a one-time
purchase. This is synonymous to subscribing
to a data plan that charges
you for the amount of time you spent on
Internet or a data plan that charges
you for the amount of bandwidth you used.
WEB 3.0 (READ-WRITE
INTELLIGENT WEB)
Suggested name by John Markoff of the New York Times for the third
generation of the web.
• In this generation, all the application on web or mobile will be upgraded
with more features. It applies same principles as Web 2.0: two-way
interaction.
• Web 3.0 will be more connected, open, and intelligent, with semantic web
technologies, distributed databases, natural language processing,
machine learning, machine reasoning and autonomous agents.
• Semantic Web - provides a framework that allows data to be shared and
reuse to deliver web content specifically targeting the user.
• It is a web of data.
• Changing the web into a language that can be read and categorized by
the system rather than humans.
TYPES OF WEBSITES:
• eCommerce Website

a website people can directly buy products


from you’ve probably used a number of
eCommerce websites before,
most big brands and plenty of smaller ones
have one. Any website that
includes a shopping cart and a way for you
to provide credit card
information to make a purchase falls into
this category.
• Business Website

is any website that’s devoted to representing a


specific business. It should be branded like
the business (the same logo
and positioning) and communicate the types
of products and/or services
the business offers.
• Entertainment Website

If you think about your internet


browsing habits, you can probably think
of
a few websites that you visit purely for
entertainment purposes.
• Media Website

collect news stories or other reporting. There’s


some
overlap here with entertainment websites, but
media websites are more
likely to include reported pieces in addition to or
instead of content meant
purely for entertainment.
• Brochure Website

are a simplified form of business websites. For


businesses that know they need an online presence,
but don’t want to
invest a lot into it (maybe you’re confident you’ll
continue to get most of
your business from other sources), a simple brochure
site that includes
just a few pages that lay out the basics of what you do
and provide
contact information may be enough for you.
• Educational Website

The websites of educational institutions and


those offering online courses
fall into the category of educational websites.
These websites have the
primary goal of either providing educational
materials to visitors or
providing information on an educational
institution to them.
• Personal Website

Not all websites exist to make money in some way


or another. Many
people find value in creating personal websites to
put their own thoughts
out into the world. This category includes personal
blogs, vlogs, and photo
diaries people share with the world.
• Web Portal

are often websites designed for internal purposes at a


business, organization, or institution. They collect
information in different
formats from different sources into one place to make
all relevant
information accessible to the people who need to see
it. They often
involve a login and personalized views for different
users that ensure the
information that’s accessible is most useful to their
particular needs.
• Wiki or Community Forum Website

Most people are familiar with wikis through the


most famous example of
one out there: Wikipedia. But wikis can be
created on pretty much any
subject you can imagine. A wiki is any website
where various users are
able to collaborate on content and all make their
own tweaks and changes
as they see fit. There are wikis for fan
communities, for business
resources, and for collecting valuable information
sources.
THANK YOU!!!

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