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How many times have you seen a web site and said, “This would be exactly what I wanted— if only . . . ” If only you could combine the statistics here with data from your company’s earnings projections. If only you could take the addresses for those restaurants and plot them on one map. How often have you entered the date of a concert into your calendar with a single click instead of retyping? How often do you wish that you could make all the different parts of your digital world—your e-mail, your word processor documents, your photos, your search results, your maps, your presentations—work together more seamlessly? After all, it’s all digital and malleable information—shouldn’t it all just fit together? In fact, below the surface, all the data, web sites, and applications you use could fit together. This book teaches you how to forge those latent connections—to make the Web your own—by remixing information to create your own mashups. A mashup, in the words of the Wikipedia, is a web site or web application “that seamlessly combines content from more than one source 1 into an integrated experience. ” Learning how to draw content from the Web together into new integrated interfaces and applications, whether for yourself or for other others, is the central concern of this book.
Web 2.0. --- Mashups (World Wide Web) --- Web site development. --- Development of Web sites --- Web sites --- Internet programming --- World Wide Web --- Development --- Information Technology --- Computer Science (Hardware & Networks) --- Computer programming. --- Software engineering. --- Web Development. --- Software Engineering/Programming and Operating Systems. --- Computer software engineering --- Engineering --- Computers --- Electronic computer programming --- Electronic data processing --- Electronic digital computers --- Programming (Electronic computers) --- Coding theory --- Programming --- Web 2.0 --- Web site development --- 681.3*H1 --- 681.3*H35 --- 681.3*H43 --- 681.3*H43 Communications applications: electronic mail; teleconferencing; videotex (Information systems applications) --- Communications applications: electronic mail; teleconferencing; videotex (Information systems applications) --- 681.3*H35 On-line information services: data bank sharing --- On-line information services: data bank sharing --- 681.3*H1 Models and principles (Information systems) --- Models and principles (Information systems) --- Computer architecture. Operating systems --- Information systems
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How many times have you seen a web site and said, This would be exactly what I wanted if only . . . If only you could combine the statistics here with data from your company's earnings projections. If only you could take the addresses for those restaurants and plot them on one map. How often have you entered the date of a concert into your calendar with a single click instead of retyping? How often do you wish that you could make all the different parts of your digital world your e-mail, your word processor documents, your photos, your search results, your maps, your presentations work together more seamlessly? After all, it's all digital and malleable information shouldn't it all just fit together? In fact, below the surface, all the data, web sites, and applications you use could fit together. This book teaches you how to forge those latent connections to make the Web your own by remixing information to create your own mashups. A mashup, in the words of the Wikipedia, is a web site or web application that seamlessly combines content from more than one source 1 into an integrated experience. Learning how to draw content from the Web together into new integrated interfaces and applications, whether for yourself or for other others, is the central concern of this book.
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