ISDS 705 - ISMG Ch 7 - test 4 exam with
correct answers 2024
Web 2.0 - ANSWER-these new services are targeted at harnessing the power of
the Internet to empower users to collaborate, create resources, and share
information in a distinctly different way from the static Web sites and
transaction-focused storefronts that characterized so many failures in the dot-
com bubble
Examples of Web 2.0 - ANSWER-Blogs, wikis, social networks, photo and video
sharing sites, and tagging systems
Web 1.0 -2.0 - ANSWER-Web 1.0 Web 2.0 DoubleClick → Google AdSense
Ofoto → Flickr Akamai → BitTorrent Britannica Online → Wikipedia personal
Web sites → blogging evite → upcoming.org and Eventful
domain name speculation → search engine optimization
page views → cost per click
screen scraping → Web services publishing → participation content
management systems → wikis directories (taxonomy) → tagging
("folksonomy") stickiness → syndication instant messaging → Twitter
Monster.com → LinkedIn
peer production - ANSWER-perhaps Web 2.0's most powerful feature, where
users work, often collaboratively, to create content and provide services online.
also leveraged to create much of the open source software that supports many
of the Web 2.0 efforts
social media or user-generated content - ANSWER-Web-based efforts that
foster peer production. These sites include blogs; wikis; social networks like
Facebook and MySpace
,ISDS 705 - ISMG Ch 7 - test 4 exam with
correct answers 2024
crowdsourcing - ANSWER-where initially undefined groups of users band
together to solve problems, create code, and develop services, are also a type
of peer production
wisdom of crowds - ANSWER-the idea that a large, diverse group often has
more collective insight than a single or small group of trained professionals
Blogs - ANSWER-(Web Logs) have grown to a point where the number of public
blogs tracked by Technorati (the popular blog index) has surpassed one
hundred million (Takahashi, 2008). This number is clearly a long tail
phenomenon, loaded with niche content that remains "discoverable" through
search engines and blog indexes
Trackbacks - ANSWER-(third-party links back to original blog post)
blog rolls - ANSWER-(a list of a blogger's favorite sites)
key features are common to most blogs - ANSWER-Ease of use. Creating a new
post usually involves clicking a single button. • Reverse chronology. Posts are
listed in reverse order of creation, making it easy to see the most recent
content. • Comment threads. Readers can offer comments on posts. •
Persistence. Posts are maintained indefinitely at locations accessible by
permanent links. • Searchability. Current and archived posts are easily
searchable. • Tags. Posts are often classified under an organized tagging
scheme. • Trackbacks. Allows an author to acknowledge the source of an item
in their post, which allows bloggers to follow the popularity of their posts
among other bloggers.
, ISDS 705 - ISMG Ch 7 - test 4 exam with
correct answers 2024
blogging has its downside - ANSWER-s can be a hothouse for spam and the
disgruntled. Ham-handed corporate efforts (such as poor response to public
criticism or bogus "praise posts") have been ridiculed. Employee blogging can
be difficult to control and public postings can "live" forever in the bowels of an
Internet search engine or as content pasted on other Web sites
Ranking engines, trackbacks, and comments allow a blogger's community of
readers to - ANSWER-spread the word on interesting posts and participate in
the conversation, and help distinguish and reinforce the reputations of widely
read blogs.
wiki - ANSWER-a Web site anyone can edit directly within a Web browser.
Many popular online wikis serve as a shared knowledge repository in some
domain.
The greater the number of wiki users - ANSWER-the more likely the
information contained in the wiki will be accurate and grow in value.
Organizations can seek to harness the collective intelligence (wisdom of
crowds) of online communities - ANSWER-The availability of free or low-cost
wiki tools can create a knowledge clearinghouse on topics, firms, products, and
even individuals. The openness of wikis also acts as a mechanism for promoting
organizational transparency and accountability.
wikis purpose - Wikipedia - ANSWER-attempts to chronicle a world of
knowledge within a particular domain. can be used for any collaborative effort
—from meeting planning to project management. And in addition to the
hundreds of public wikis, there are many thousand more that are hidden away
behind firewalls, used as proprietary internal tools for organizational
collaboration.
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