Thursday, January 7th, 2010
A few days ago I asked @preona, in a short post on my Three Tweets blog, if he could explain to his readers why he thinks the synaptic web paradigm is so focused on the user.
@preona replied with a post: ‘Why we think Synaptic Web will focus on the user.’
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Tags: daily processing patterns, neural encoding, reply to, synaptic web, user value
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Monday, December 21st, 2009
@stoweboyd wrote a post (’Streams And Sense Making‘) in which he also reacts to my last webtrends post ‘Towards a web of activity streams realizing the synaptic web paradigm‘.
Since my comments on his post became to long I decided to publish it as a post (point taken Stowe :). Although my response is directed to [...]
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Tags: activity streams web, future trends, real-time web, reply to, sensorium, social media, Stowe Boyd, synaptic web, web search
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Monday, December 21st, 2009
In the previous two weeks I’ve been reading multiple posts and tweets that show the vague contours of a trend towards a new kind of web, the web of (real-time) activity streams. This new web will effectively implement the synaptic web paradigm. In this post I give a rough overview of some of my current [...]
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Tags: activity streams, activity streams web, APIs, future trends, open social web, open standards, platforms, protocols, real-, real-time web, social media, synaptic web, twitter
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Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009
This post is a part of a post series with notes to prepare a WebTrends article on the Synaptic Web I’m working on. Basically the Synaptic Web revolves around the idea that the structure of, and mechanisms on, the web increasingly resembles that of the neural networks in our brain. This will have, for instance, [...]
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Tags: attention, real-time web, references, search, semantic web, synaptic web, trends, web business
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