Book description
Web 2.0 is more pervasive than ever, with business analysts and technologists struggling to comprehend the opportunity it represents. So what exactly is Web 2.0 -- a marketing term or technical reality? This fascinating book finally puts substance behind the phenomenon by identifying the core patterns of Web 2.0, and by introducing an abstract model and reference architecture to help you take advantage of them.
In Web 2.0 Architectures, authors Duane Nickull, Dion Hinchcliffe, and James Governor -- who have 40 years of combined experience with technical specifications and industry trends -- examine what makes successful Web 2.0 services such as Google AdSense, Flickr, BitTorrent, MySpace, Facebook, and Wikipedia work. The result is a base of knowledge that developers, business people, futurists, and entrepreneurs can understand and use as a source of ideas and inspiration.
This book reveals:
- A Web 2.0 model: How the classic Client-Server model evolved into a more detailed Web 2.0 model.
- Web 2.0 reference architecture: A generic component view of basic Web 2.0 patterns that can be repurposed for other commercial ventures.
- Specific Web 2.0 patterns: How service oriented architecture (SOA), Software as a Service (SaaS), participation-collaboration, mashups, rich user experience, collaborative tagging systems (Folksonomy), and more can be used in your business.
If you want to understand what makes Web 2.0 tick, and how it will enhance your business, Web 2.0 Architectures takes you right to the core.
Publisher resources
Table of contents
- Web 2.0 Architectures
- Preface
- 1. An Architect’s View of the Web
- 2. A Different View of the Internet
- 3. Dissecting Web 2.0 Examples
- 4. Modeling Web 2.0
- 5. A Reference Architecture for Developers
- 6. From Models to Patterns
-
7. Specific Patterns of Web 2.0
- The Service-Oriented Architecture Pattern
- The Software as a Service (SaaS) Pattern
- The Participation-Collaboration Pattern
- The Asynchronous Particle Update Pattern
- The Mashup Pattern
- The Rich User Experience Pattern
- The Synchronized Web Pattern
- The Collaborative Tagging Pattern
- The Declarative Living and Tag Gardening Pattern
- The Semantic Web Grounding Pattern
- The Persistent Rights Management (PRM) Pattern
- The Structured Information Pattern
- Summary
- 8. Where Are We Going from Here?
- Index
- About the Authors
- Colophon
- Copyright
Product information
- Title: Web 2.0 Architectures
- Author(s):
- Release date: May 2009
- Publisher(s): O'Reilly Media, Inc.
- ISBN: 9780596514433
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