A web world

It’s kind of interesting to see the turn among most companies out there concerning the use of different software tools for different tasks. For years we have had a mentality that either you create your own monster of a solution or you customize one product from some big vendor. But since the appearance of internet and the web our world has gotten a lot more fragmented.

(All links in this post opens in new windows)

Lately the consumer market has created a feel for sites and products on the net that is not only OK to use, but “necessary” to use. I am of course talking about web based applications and social software. In other words, Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn, instant messaging products and other similar tools. Several companies have their own Wikis, blogs, forums and instant messaging products. Micro-blogging tools like Twitter and Yammer is also being used more and more these days.

For years we have had Open Source Software (OSS), and except for Linux and Apache not all of them have been accepted by big business. And the only reason that Linux and Apache got accepted was due to their track record and the support from some pretty large vendors, among else IBM.

Lately I have got the feeling that a lot of corporations have accepted the risk of using products with a smaller support organisation than what these corporations are used to. The acceptance of small vendors and OSS products into the suite of software used by corporations have given me as a professional both benefits and challenges.

The biggest challenge is the same as it has been for years now, integration. We need information and functionality integrated on several layers and in infinite ways. So what the big vendors do and have done for years is to create tools for us to help integrate our fragmenting world.

The increasingly complex world of tools and services always make me think of the second law of thermodynamics. Luckily we do not have a closed system; we have the opportunity to impose change and to establish ways to solve our complexity.

So, the next time you use a wiki for documenting your experiences, the next time you rate some other users post on the web, the next time you chat with a colleague or the next time you write a blog post, consider this – how do you use such information from other products and sites within your company. Are you able to use the information? Should you be able to use it? Do you want to be able to use it? And finally, if the answer is yes on any of those questions, how do you integrate your tools?

I have deliberately not mentioned search, archiving and all the other corporate necessities like reviewability, reusability, accountability and so on. Neither do I want to mention the words service oriented architecture (SOA), web services or integration platform. What I want is a world where this information is seamlessly available to me, stored indefinitely and persistently at no cost. As a professional I do not trust this, so I need to gather knowledge I have produced in such a way that it is still available to me even though the service I originally used to create this information no longer exists.

How do you do that?

Semantic Web Layer Cake

David Norheim and his semantic cake

David Norheim is getting one year older on Saturday (2009.03.14), and WWW is twenty today (2009.03.13)

On Saturday 14 March 2009 David Norheim can celebrate another birthday. Today the WWW can celebrate it’s twentieth birthday. One of the creative girls (Terese Liadal) at work created this cake and we felt we just had to share it with all the rest of you out there in cyberspace as well.

David Norheim is one of the leading Semantic Web gurus in Norway and was extremely happy when he got this cake. The cake illustrates one version of the Semantic Web Layer Cake, an illustration that describes the different layers in the architecture stack. There are several versions of this layer cake available online.

You can find a close up of the cake here

Posted from Bærum, Akershus, Norway.

World Wide Web is 20 years

I’ve got a lot of nerdy friends. One of them is on chatting terms with Sir Tim. Who is Tim you might ask? Well if you have to ask, then you probably aren’t that interested in technology. We are talking TBL here… Tim Berners-Lee. The man behind the World Wide Web.

Now, that is an idea that most have heard of. If not, how are you reading this? The World Wide Web is an invention that has permeated our entire society. We are producing, consuming and sharing content on an enormous scale. All due to his proposal from March 1989, according to several sources (2 pages on wikipedia: Tim Berners-Lee and WWW). The name could have been Information Mesh, The Information Mine (TIM – a reference to his Name?), Mine of Information (MOI – moi is me in French!), but they settled on World Wide Web. A name that most people only pronounce as the web, WWW or W3.

So let us skip back to my friend again. He just happened to chat with Tim this weekend, and suddenly he remembered to ask. ”Hey, if we would like to celebrate the WWW, what date should we do that on?”

His reply?

”March 13!” (The exact language was a bit more engineer like)

So this Friday the Web as we know it will be 20 years old.

Let’s all write together now… CONGRATULATIONS,

and thank you Sir Tim.

My employer Computas also wanted to talk about this event so they created this little newsitem (in Norwegian) World Wide Web fyller 20 år fredag den 13.!

Update:
A lot of other sites also mentions this little item:
Dagbladet.no – Gratulerer med dagen, WWW! (in Norwegian)
Computerworld.no – Gratulerer, world wide web!(in Norwegian)
digi.no – Weben fyller 20 år i dag

All work and no play?

This blog as been quite silent for a few weeks. I am sorry, but sometimes the official part of my life takes up a bit more of my time than might be wished. As for most of us in the IT industry our work also is a big part of our hobby and interests. I guess we are kind of like artists in this. I like to
think of my occupation as one of the creative occupations. Maybe I do not paint or create statues, but I participate in creating something most of days.
Oh I guess some will disagree, but hey, I live in a country where free speech still exists …. (I hope).

As many of you have noticed by now. The blogging world is still increasing in numbers. Most blogs though are short lived, or they concern things I do not follow regularly. Celebrity blogs and diaries is not my thing. I am more likely to read a blog where I can learn something useful. I guess I follow too many blogs, but I would like to point out a few blogs from some of my friends.

I also follow a lot of photo blogs, but I guess I will write up a blog entry about those another time.

If you are a friend of mine, with a blog of your own and it isn’t mentioned here. Well, please give me a hint, or add a comment below.

Mediasone kiosks displayed

The new Mediasone kiosk to be installed at Deichmanske Library in Oslo

The new "Mediasone" kiosk to be installed at Deichmanske Library in Oslo

I work at a Company called Computas. We have been developing a new search interface for a multimedia kiosk called “Mediasone” (=Media zone) this autumn. The development is not finished, but the hardware of the kiosks was publicly displayed on Friday.

It looks like this might be a great hit if my feelings have any votes on this. These kiosks are going to be used as user interfaces for a multimedia search feature that the Deichmanske Library is releasing soon. You will be able to search all kind of multi-media content available in the Library, including sources like NRK, movie companies and a lot of music. Everything trough a touch sensitive screen and on software running on Mac OSX.

The kiosks have been designed by students at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design.

More news to come at a later date.

Posted from Oslo, Oslo, Norway.