﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" standalone="yes"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/" xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/" xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"><channel><title>BlogJava-Ryan-随笔分类-概念探讨</title><link>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/category/14380.html</link><description /><language>zh-cn</language><lastBuildDate>Wed, 28 Feb 2007 03:57:55 GMT</lastBuildDate><pubDate>Wed, 28 Feb 2007 03:57:55 GMT</pubDate><ttl>60</ttl><item><title>世界三大BLOG运营商：</title><link>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/archive/2006/08/23/65224.html</link><dc:creator>Ryan_Wang</dc:creator><author>Ryan_Wang</author><pubDate>Wed, 23 Aug 2006 02:41:00 GMT</pubDate><guid>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/archive/2006/08/23/65224.html</guid><wfw:comment>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/comments/65224.html</wfw:comment><comments>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/archive/2006/08/23/65224.html#Feedback</comments><slash:comments>0</slash:comments><wfw:commentRss>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/comments/commentRss/65224.html</wfw:commentRss><trackback:ping>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/services/trackbacks/65224.html</trackback:ping><description><![CDATA[ <br /><br /><a href="http://www.blogger.com/start" target="_blank">http://www.blogger.com/start</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.livejournal.com/" target="_blank">http://www.livejournal.com/</a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.xanga.com/" target="_blank">http://www.xanga.com/</a><img src ="http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/aggbug/65224.html" width = "1" height = "1" /><br><br><div align=right><a style="text-decoration:none;" href="http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/" target="_blank">Ryan_Wang</a> 2006-08-23 10:41 <a href="http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/archive/2006/08/23/65224.html#Feedback" target="_blank" style="text-decoration:none;">发表评论</a></div>]]></description></item><item><title>Web2.0免费概念添新军 大蒜瓣模式白送网站</title><link>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/archive/2006/08/23/65216.html</link><dc:creator>Ryan_Wang</dc:creator><author>Ryan_Wang</author><pubDate>Wed, 23 Aug 2006 02:21:00 GMT</pubDate><guid>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/archive/2006/08/23/65216.html</guid><wfw:comment>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/comments/65216.html</wfw:comment><comments>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/archive/2006/08/23/65216.html#Feedback</comments><slash:comments>0</slash:comments><wfw:commentRss>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/comments/commentRss/65216.html</wfw:commentRss><trackback:ping>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/services/trackbacks/65216.html</trackback:ping><description><![CDATA[
		<p>
				<span>近日，一个不起眼的小网站悄然发布。由于这个网站提供的网络服务非常特别和有新意，因此它还没有进行正式的推广活动，但是已经在IT圈里面通过人际网络极为迅速的传播开来。现在，在中国的个人网站站长和那些手持域名的" 玉米虫" 们之间，最常见的问候语就是：" 你用大蒜瓣了么？" " 大蒜瓣（<a href="http://www.dasuanban.com/">http://www.dasuanban.com</a>）" 是一个在当前中国互联网web2.0理念的大旗下的一个让人感到惊奇和创意的内容外包服务网站。</span>
		</p>
		<p>
				<span>我们都知道，虽然在现在，建立一个互联网网站并不是很难的事情，但是无论你要建设什么样的网站，在除了自己需要找一个好域名之外，你需要有一个网络上的服务器空间，需要有一定的带宽来支持你的服务，并且你还需要定期坚持给你的网站添加内容、更新、维护……随着你的访问量的增加，你会发现除了可能的收入增加之外，你关于你的服务器空间、服务器性能、带宽等方面的支出，也不可避免的不断攀升。以至于很多个人网站最后的结局都是以被其它大网站收购而告终。普通网站尚且如此，更不要说对于服务器和带宽都要求极高的软件下载站了。</span>
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				<span>所以，尽管资源下载网站能够带来巨大的流量和高高的Alexa 排名，但是对于很多小型的网站而言，建立下载网站或者是下载频道，对他们来说都是一个不堪重负的事情。更不用说在现在盗链横行的网络环境里，很多时候辛辛苦苦提供的下载资源却被其它网站直接盗链而去，自己花钱购买的服务器和带宽资源却成为了他人免费享受的晚餐。在这样的条件下，建立一个属于自己的内容下载资源网站服务，有多么困难就可想而知了。</span>
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				<span>" 大蒜瓣" 看起来是为了颠覆人们的传统观念而来的。上面一段所说的看起来天经地义的事情，在" 大蒜瓣" 看来，正是他们发挥创意的空间。他们在对自己的介绍中这么写：" 让你的网站毫不费力的拥有你自己的软件下载频道，不需要你的服务器空间，不需要担心有死链接，也不需要每天来管理、更新维护……你只需要设置一个你的域名，甚至可以是添加一个二级域名，然后给你的下载频道添加一个链接，你就拥有了一个装满好几万款软件的下载频道，增加你自己的网站的内容，给你带来流量。"</span>
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				<span> " 大蒜瓣" 通过建立内容联盟，实现软件内容的外包服务，怎么外包呢？如果你想提供下载服务但是苦于没有精力更新，或者没有足够的空间来存放，或者没有足够的下载流量支持等等，只要你有一个自己的域名，大蒜瓣就可以提供以上情况的外包解决方案。通过编辑定制，用户完全感觉不到大蒜瓣在用户站点的存在，也就是说从形式上完全是站长自己的站点或频道，这个下载站就好像白送给你的一样。网站放什么软件，放什么广告，由你来选择；系统自动帮你更新；站点风格你可以选择大蒜瓣提供的模板，或者如果你是高手也可以完全自己设定；存储空间和下载流量也不是问题，用P2P 软件来解决下载。</span>
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				<span>" 大蒜瓣" 网站的两个站长的名字就分别叫做" 大蒜瓣" 和" 白给的" ，他们在论坛里面说到：" 由大蒜瓣统一提供内容，可以保证网友在所有加盟大蒜瓣的网站的下载内容都没有病毒、恶意插件和流氓软件的侵扰。大蒜瓣为了让更多的用户喜欢和使用这个服务，也会从自身努力确保软件源的质量。" 可以说，也许在将来，" 大蒜瓣" 本身，就是对下载站品质的一个认证。</span>
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				<span>互联网总是一个让人们感觉到惊奇的地方。尽管" 大蒜瓣" 的名字有让人感觉在借鉴国内另外一个非常引人注目的web2.0网站的意思，但是其全新的内容外包服务理念让人耳目一新。也许，" 大蒜瓣" 和大蒜瓣模式的出现，将会带动中国互联网上新的一轮内容外包服务的风潮。现在的大蒜瓣是软件下载频道外包，也许过不了多久，就会有小蒜瓣，橘子瓣们开始提供音乐、读书以及新闻等等的频道外包服务出现了</span>
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<img src ="http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/aggbug/65216.html" width = "1" height = "1" /><br><br><div align=right><a style="text-decoration:none;" href="http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/" target="_blank">Ryan_Wang</a> 2006-08-23 10:21 <a href="http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/archive/2006/08/23/65216.html#Feedback" target="_blank" style="text-decoration:none;">发表评论</a></div>]]></description></item><item><title>Is Web 2.0 killing the Semantic Web?</title><link>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/archive/2006/08/23/65214.html</link><dc:creator>Ryan_Wang</dc:creator><author>Ryan_Wang</author><pubDate>Wed, 23 Aug 2006 02:19:00 GMT</pubDate><guid>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/archive/2006/08/23/65214.html</guid><wfw:comment>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/comments/65214.html</wfw:comment><comments>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/archive/2006/08/23/65214.html#Feedback</comments><slash:comments>0</slash:comments><wfw:commentRss>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/comments/commentRss/65214.html</wfw:commentRss><trackback:ping>http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/services/trackbacks/65214.html</trackback:ping><description><![CDATA[
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				<a class="permalink" href="http://www.oreillynet.com/xml/blog/2005/10/is_web_20_killing_the_semantic.html">Is Web 2.0 killing the Semantic Web?</a>   </h2>
		<div class="post-byline">Friday October 7, 2005 1:44AM      <br />by <a href="http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/au/2379">Dan Zambonini</a></div>
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				<p style="FONT-SIZE: 70%">(Disclaimer: Every now and again, I like to break up my bad cartoon blogs with some provocative, opinionated, ill-informed ramblings. This is one such entry.)</p>
				<p>I really want the Semantic Web (SW) explosion to happen, and sooner rather than later. But a<br />sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach tells me that it’s still a long way off. And worse still,<br />that the Web 2.0 momentum could push it further back. Let me explain.</p>
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						<div style="PADDING-RIGHT: 5px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; PADDING-BOTTOM: 5px; PADDING-TOP: 5px; FONT-STYLE: oblique">Web 2.0: Beautiful but deadly</div>
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				<p>Without getting into a protracted argument over the exact definition of “Web 2.0″, let’s go with<br />the general consensus that it’s <em>all about people</em>. That’s it. It doesn’t care about<br />technology or standards; use AJAX, SVG, FOAF, PHP, Ruby, XHTML, P2P or XSL - it doesn’t matter, just<br />make sure that it’s people-oriented. Let people create, collaborate, share and interact. Who cares<br />what the back-end uses, or how it does it - just give “Power To The People”, quickly and<br />efficiently.</p>
				<p>The Semantic Web is the polar opposite: standardise all your data in RDF; encode it in XML (OK,<br />so there’s also N3, but it’s probably mostly going to end up as XML); create your OWL. And then, once you<br />have all this standardised data, let the machines loose on it! Because this data is for computer<br />consumption, the SW should be more or less transparent to its users.</p>
				<p>So whilst Web 2.0 is about high-level (user experience) and immediate benefits, the SW is a<br />low-level (data), long-term solution. Users are seeing all this cool, flexible new<br />Web 2.0 stuff, and it’s making the SW look even more complex, rigid and unnecessary. Both<br />technologies appear similar to the outside world - share and aggregate data - but<br />Web 2.0 has a pretty interface, and is here and now. And thus the (finite) budgets of<br />organisations are being spent on wikis and blogs, rather than RDF database converters.</p>
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						<img height="149" alt="Semantic Web example: Haystack" src="http://www.oreillynet.com/users/files/23984/semweb.gif" width="200" border="0" />
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						<div style="PADDING-RIGHT: 5px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; PADDING-BOTTOM: 5px; PADDING-TOP: 5px; FONT-STYLE: oblique">Semantic Web: All hail the true king!</div>
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				<p>But don’t write off the SW. What do we really want from the future web? I mean <strong><br />really</strong> want? Web 2.0 has given us more efficient maps. We can share photos. And<br />collectively criticise the same websites. But, you know something - so <em>what</em>? Are these the<br />impacts we dream about making; is this our legacy when we die? The SW could <em>save lives</em>. Because it could enable the identification of otherwise un-detected patterns in<br />large-scale, distributed data sets, it could help find medical cures and aid other problems in<br />life sciences. It could help detect and prevent organised crime and terrorist activity. It might<br />help analyse geological or meteorological data and limit the destruction of natural disasters. It<br />could help detect and contain viruses and outbreaks. It could help distribute and re-use important<br />educational resources. These are bold claims, but these are the goals we should be aiming for, and<br />this is why we <em>need</em> the SW to flourish. We can’t let a fancy map get in our way.</p>
				<p>What’s the way forward? Well, we need the SW to take advantage of the Web 2.0 pile-driver.<br />As <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/all#djweitzner">Daniel Weitzner</a> recently told me, it’s all<br />about finding the “sweet spot” between the formal SW<br />semantics and the flexible, free-form Web 2.0. <a href="http://www.w3.org/TeamSubmission/grddl/">GRDDL</a><br />is one such project hoping to help us find this elusive middle-ground, by re-purposing existing web content into<br />SW data.</p>
				<p>We can also take advantage of the flexibility of Web 2.0. As it is technology agnostic, we<br />can use SW technologies in our Web 2.0 applications and get the best of both worlds (the FOAF RDF<br />vocabulary has already succeeded at being integrated into many social networking applications).</p>
				<p>So lets push things forward. The Web 2.0 applications are amazing, efficient, and without doubt<br />interesting and a huge step forward. But don’t let them distract from the benefits that the SW could<br />realise. Only 10% of the world population have internet access, and those of us who regularly use Web<br />2.0 applications a very small niche within this. The SW benefits are further reaching; giving us<br />developers new toys to play with, but also potentially impacting the lives of the other 6 billion<br />people in this world without internet access.</p>
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				</a>Comments</h3>
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						<p>
								<b>A bird in the hand</b>
								<br />Whenever I see articles about the Semantic Web, I keep getting remionded of the AI hype from the 1960s. I remember as a child in the 1970s seeing a TV program told me that some time in the 80's AI would be so advanced that all the important political and economic decisions in the world would be made by computers.</p>
						<p>All the factors that make 'brute force' AI based on rules programming next to impossible, also apply to the Semantic Web. Problems such as usefully defining problem domains in a rigorous way, unambigously defining terms that are ambiguous in everyday language, etc, etc.</p>
						<p>Untill SW advocates have real working systems to put on the table, I'll stick with the powerful, real web applications I can access now with the click of a button.<br /></p>
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								<strong>simon_hibbs</strong> | <a href="http://www.oreillynet.com/xml/blog/2005/10/is_web_20_killing_the_semantic.html#comment-20804">October 8, 2005 01:34 AM</a></div>
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<img src ="http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/aggbug/65214.html" width = "1" height = "1" /><br><br><div align=right><a style="text-decoration:none;" href="http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/" target="_blank">Ryan_Wang</a> 2006-08-23 10:19 <a href="http://www.blogjava.net/Ryan/archive/2006/08/23/65214.html#Feedback" target="_blank" style="text-decoration:none;">发表评论</a></div>]]></description></item></channel></rss>