Test Information Space

Journal of Tech, Testing and Trends

Posts Tagged ‘web2.0’

Dili-ology

Posted by cadsmith on September 13, 2009

090912

To a digital library, all readers are scholars. At least users develop smoother knowledge interaction skills. There is no foraging in the stacks and waiting in line at the tall desk for someone to do book checkouts, indicate what’s relevant or where it might be hidden. New ideas can be discovered through links between material. Excerpt streams raise interest. Like testers, readers can get to original data from which conclusions are drawn, e.g. electronic records. Librarians or teachers may leverage a set of reader proxies to serve wider audiences. Filters deliver timely and flawless content to each customer. A miniature copy of the world’s information can also be carried on person for those who prefer an old school approach.

As in heavy metal, paradise or perdition is subjectively layered. This entry’s title might describe devotees of a cousin to the previously discussed Hali world of immersion or augmentation for seekers of the perfect portal, lens or cave. Those who prefer fiction may find a wider range of levels. some noticing hints of a precursor to singularity where Q&A email or messaging is a type of Turing test for content analysis and sources.

What are some examples of a digital library? They’re more than just notes and quotes:

  • WDL has an international museum collection that features a time slider to change the date range from 8000BC to present.
  • Google books has public literature.
  • Papercube visualizes the domain of academic papers.
  • DigitalGlobe offers high-resolution geospatial imagery for sale.

In addition to concepts, digital library artifacts cover books, documents, podcasts, music and video recordings, art, news, databases, software, taskflows and messages. Digital rights management (DRM) prevents fraudulence and can limit the number of simultaneous copies, whole or partial, where necessary for payment. Private libraries can be implemented, e.g. for educational exploration. A digital library can also be embedded in the web and vice-versa. This becomes interesting when one considers that present web search engines or wikis already offer language localization and translation, web2.0 has bookmarks, annotations, reviews, rankings, recommendations, search wikis, creative commons and mashups, and semantic web has taxonomies, ontologies, datamining and linked-data.

Library classifications include at least the size of collection, purpose, users, implementation, features, interaction, media types, and errata or known issues, e.g. structural or tested. User roles encompass readers, authors, librarians, publishers, artists, and critics. Faculty and students are also contained in this set. Purposes have not been exhausted, but so far have comprised cultural archives, research, documentation, academic or learning management system (LMS), business and personal entertainment. Implementations span the gamut of IT from software, to internet or cloud, and devices including mobile ereaders, laptops, phones and netbooks.

A key feature is digitization of data, metadata and processes. An example is books scanned into storage. Accessibility aids may convert these to another language, large print, audio or braille. Details and topics are indexed for multimedia browsing or search guides. Details can be summarized for outlines. Data calculations can be performed. Answers can be derived upon request or realtime alerts can be sent to interested parties when relevant information appears.

Speed reading techniques can be adapted. Rapid skimming loads preconcious representations (though may trigger site autodownload blockers in extreme cases). Mnemonics can be filled in, e.g. by repetition, outlining, and cues. Historically this involved  poetry and pictures. Now there are also hyperlinks, tag clouds, and storyboards.

Issues are legion. The digital divide needs to be conquered. Copyright involves negotiation as demonstrated by the book rights registry resulting from the Google settlement. There are tradeoffs involving cultural identities when collections merge, e.g. the library of (party) congress. Censorship is an ancient barrier in modern guise. There are need-to-know limitations for safety or security. Sponsors may have agendas. Some material may not be digitized. Where media is cultural memory, unrepresented items cease to have ever existed which affects government legislation based upon official research. Misinformation techniques exist for revisionism, tampering or spoofing. Surveillance can be excessively pervasive, e.g. reading lists used to label (literary) agents. Datawarehousing concerns apply, e.g. synching copies to sources. Users have to distinguish between appropriateness of specialized and general-purpose devices. We can further evaluate qualities such as preservation, usability, findability, accessibility, performance, scalability, quality of service, interoperability and sustainability.

Also see bookmarks.

Image: Buddha‘s Kindle.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Com Posit

Posted by cadsmith on June 14, 2009

090527h1

Remote testing is now possible using Twitter as a CLI by real-time monitoring in addition to reporting algorithms. Question is how to also recognize and organize new ideas which may become useful.

Have heard that testers, like surgeons, may enjoy classic musical themes while in the zone, e.g. “The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly” (MP3), Morricone, 1966. This may help to handle seeming anarchy when myths are merging from all directions. It is also entertaining to see resultant media or special effects from augmentation or remote or mobile sensors or games. An avatar may represent a team comprised of multiple members or types of ware.

Possible web trends: Can share comments, pictures or videos pasted onto existing web pages using a Layer.com account. May be possible to quickly convert data tables to graphic visualization or map using tables.googlelabs.com which requires login.

Books added to wiki this week were Nickull 2009 on web 2.0 architecture, Ford 2008 enterprise software test, Samek 2008 UML, Fine 2002 beta testing, and Miéville 2009 detective fiction. Video series include Charland 2008 on enterprise Ajax and Lemen 2008 on digital painting.

Image: recent avatar.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Augmented Utility

Posted by cadsmith on December 10, 2008

Zemanta is plugged into Firefox so am seeing the recommendations on right side while entering text directly into WordPress blog. (Sometimes type into another Word doc window to use thesaurus.) Previously had discussed use in Windows Live. In this case, login worked so added Twitter, Facebook and OPML from Google reader. This created a list of sources from friends’ websites and the blogroll feed.

Head First Javascript, Morrison, 2007, is an introductory book which presents the material in a fashion which combines visual graphics, conversational style, changes in format to draw attention, and emotional appeal to attempt to make it easier to read and more memorable. It is unique, different from reading web pages or text-oriented hardcopy. There are many other titles in the series. Each indicates prerequisites, e.g. this expects reader to have HTML and is itself needed for AJAX. Code samples can be downloaded from book site.

Penetration Testing and Network Defense, Whitaker and Newman, 2005, covers security topics and techniques. It is geared toward vulnerability testing of networks, including those having dated equipment and software. Ironies included link to a web site which reports that it is no longer legal in the host country, and a trojan alert from a link listed in the tool pdf on the book site. (“Why is it so hot in here?“)

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Feed Frame

Posted by cadsmith on November 19, 2008

In previous posts, we have looked at feeds as updates for resources and commentary. It can also be useful to convert their current contents into a web page. For example, links can be inserted into a wiki by pasting from rss2html sourced from a bookmark site such as delicious using selected tags. This is the case for The Art of Debugging with GDB, DDD and Eclipse, Matloff and Salzman, 2008 based on gdb tag, and Lab Notebook from notebook tag. The wiki itself supplies another feed. It is possible then to translate between content management system (CMS) types such as bookmarks, wiki, database, spreadsheet, documentation or website.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Gently Down the Stream

Posted by cadsmith on November 18, 2008

Due to the growth of social networking, recently added more resources under twitter and rss tags.

Friendfeed followers may have noticed expansion of feed circuit to Twine from delicious via rssforward. The latter is needed since onlywire has a limited set of sites that it can post to, and Twine does not have a built-in feed input to complement its output subscriptions. Zigtag has a delicious import function given login settings or external bookmark file and sends an email when completed.

Published this site to feedburner. Started reviewing Toluu blog feeds which easily connected to google reader.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Easing the Feed Speed Limit

Posted by cadsmith on November 10, 2008

Onlywire simultaneously posts bookmarks to multiple sites, e.g. del.icio.us, twitter, furl, or connotea. An icon can be added to the browser toolbar that prompts for tags and comment. They request that it be promoted on the user site using a javascript command, e.g. googlepages.

There are things yet to be done. Some sites were not available, e.g. zigtag, twine or buru, and it seemed to have difficulty with blinklist and simpy. The site promotion was not immediately activated using html widgets on wordpress or office live. The onlywire bookmark list did not seem to include all recent links though they had appeared on target sites. Use of the browser button sometimes lands on a blank page labelled “Bookmark Saved” rather than returning to the original page. Had not yet tested the API to allow applications to automatically bookmark. It would be nice to have an RSS feed of bookmarks from the site, e.g. to use in friendfeed, though the latter does input from some of the individual sites.

Incidentally, LinkedIn blog feed app can post entries on one’s full profile. Blog posts to Twitter can use Twitterfeed.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Posted by cadsmith on September 16, 2008

Twitter added to mobile links.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

Posted by cadsmith on August 9, 2008

Read Performance Testing Guidance for Web Applications: Patterns and Practices,2007. Wiki.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

Posted by cadsmith on July 16, 2008

Read Getting Real, 2006, by 37signals. Online book site. Authors created a number of web sites using agile methods. Text discusses user-interface-driven development that does not rely on specifications.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Posted by cadsmith on July 6, 2008

Added How 2.0 as yet another pencast.

Read Test Driven: Practical TDD and Acceptance TDD for Java Developers, Koskela, 2007. Wiki.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 39 other followers