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HISTORY

OF WEB
INFORMATION & COMMUNICATION
TECHNOLOGIES

It deals with the use of different


communication technologies such as mobile
phones, telephone, and or internet to locate,
save, send and edit information.
ICT in the Philippines
Philippines is dub as the “ICT hub of
asia” because of huge growth of ICT-
related jobs.
ICT department in the Philippines is
responsible for the planning,
development and promotion of the
country’s ICT agenda in support of
national development
INTERNET
Is the global system
of interconnected
computer networks that
use the internet protocol
suite (TCP/IP) to link
billions of devices
worldwide.
WWW (WORLD WIDE WEB)
An information system on the internet that allows
documents to be connected to other documents by
hypertext links, enabling the user to search for
information by moving from one document to another.
Is an information space where documents &
other web resources are identified by URL’s,
interlinked by hypertext links, and can be
accessed via the internet.
Invented by Tim-Berners lee
WEBSITES
A LOCATION CONNECTED TO THE
INTERNET THAT MAINTAINS ONE OR MORE
PAGES ON THE WORLD WIDE WEB.

IT IS A RELATED COLLECTION
OF WORLD WIDE WEB (WWW)
FILES THAT INCLUDES A
BEGINNING FILE CALLED A
HOME PAGE
WEB BROWSER

It displays a web page on monitor


or mobile device.
A software application for
retrieving, presenting, and traversing
information resources on the world
wide web.
WEB PAGES
Web page is a
hypertext document
connected to the
world wide web.
It is a document
that is suitable for
world wide web.
STATIC WEB PAGES
 Static is web 1.0
Dynamic is web 2.0, 3.0
Static web page is known as flat page or
stationary page in the sense that the page
is “as is” and cannot be manipulated by
the user.
The content is also the same for all users
that is referred to as web 1.0
STATIC WEB PAGES
COLORLIB.COM
DYNAMIC WEB PAGES
Web 2.0 is the evolution of web 1.0 by adding
dynamic web pages
The user is able to see website differently than
others e.g. Social networking sites, wiki’s, video
sharing sites
Web 2.0 allows users to interact with the page,
the user may be able to comment or create a
user account
Most website that we visit today are web 2.0
EXAMPLES OF DYNAMIC WEB PAGES
STATIC VS. DYNAMIC WEB PAGE
“Static” means unchanged or constant
while “dynamic” means changing or
lively.
A static site is one that is usually written in
plain html. Everything that is encoded will
be displayed to the user
A dynamic site is written using a server-
side scripting language such as php, asp,
jsp or coldfusion.
WEB 1.0/STATIC WEB PAGES
FOCUSED

SITES AREN’T
WEB ON
COMPANIES
INTERACTIVE 1.0

SITES OWNING
CONTENT
ARE YOU FIND
STATIC NEWS
FEATURES
OF WEB 2.0
RICH USER INTERFACE
Content is dynamic and is
responsive to user’s input
An example would be a website
that shows local content.
FOLKSONOMY
Allows user to categorize & classify
information using freely chosen
keywords e.g. tagging by Facebook,
twitter, use tags that starts with the
pound sign #, referred to as hashtag
USER PARTICIPATION
The owner of the website is not the only one
who is able to put content. Others are able to
place a content of their own by means of
comments, reviews, evaluation. E.g. Lazada,
amazon.com etc.
SOFTWARE AS A SERVICE

Users will be subscribe to a


software only when needed rather
than purchasing them e.g. Google
docs used to create and edit word
processing and spreadsheet.
MASS PARTICIPATION
Diverse information sharing
through universal web access.
Web 2.0’s content is based on
people from various cultures
WEB 2.0/DYNAMIC WEB PAGES
THE WILDLY FOCUSED ON
COMMUNITIES
WRITE
READ WEB

WEB 2.0

SHARING NEWS FIND


CONTENT YOU
WEB 3.0 & Semantic

Is a movement led by the world wide web


consortium (w3c).
The w3c standard encourages web
developers to include semantic content in
their web pages
Semantic web is a component of web 3.0
Semantic web provides a common
framework that allows data to be
shared and reused across application,
enterprise and community boundaries

The aim or web 3.0 is to let machines


or servers understand the user’s
preferences to be able to deliver web
content.
PROBLEMS WITH WEB 3.0
COMPATIBILITY
HTML files and other web browsers could not
support web 3.0
SECURITY
The user’s security is also question since the
machine is saving his/her preferences
VASTNESS
The World Wide Web already contains billions
of web pages
VAGUENESS
Certain words are imprecise. The world
“old” and “small” would depend to the
user.

LOGIC
Since machines use logic, there are
certain limitations for a computer to be
able to predict what the user is referring to
at a given time.

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