Saturday, January 16, 2010

Web 3.0 : The Next Generation Web

A warm happy new year to all my audience. 2010 brings with it a lot of predictions and hopes.

  • what would be the top 10 most wanted gadgets of 2010
  • Will google's nexus-1 beat I-Phone
  • Will twitter start making profit etc
So why not we (geekonnet team) predict the future. Being internet freaks, Many people came to us asking about the future of web2.0 or in a way web 3.0 "The next generation web".

Web 1.0: Lets go back back to 1991 when the first WWW was released to the public. The period of 1991 to 2001 (before the bursting of dotcom bubble), Web 1.0 was mainly concerned with the static html pages, guest book, forms etc. HTML extensions like " blink" and "marque " tag was introduced during the browser wars in this period of time. The biggest achievements of web1.0 were GeoCities and hotmail. GeoCities was purchased by Yahoo! for $3.57 billion in January 1999. Yahoo! closed GeoCities on October 26, 2009. There were atleast 38 million user-built pages on GeoCities before it was shut down. The GeoCities Japan version of the service is still available. Everyone knows the hotmail story, founded by the wonder boy Sabeer Bhatia. Hotmail was sold to Microsoft for 400 million dollars in 1997. At that time it had around 9 million users. Thus roughly the total number users of web 1.0 were around 45-50 million.

Web2.0: This is the current web which we are using. The bursting of dotcom bubble in 2001 was the main turning point for the internet. New technologies also played a big role in the transformation of internet from web1.0 to web2.0. Google revolutionized the search on the web. The concept of user generated content came and changed the entire web. This generation of web is mainly about the sharing of knowledge and content. Web like facebook, google have changed the entire business model of an online business. The total number of users of web2.0 are more than a billion.

Now these are the predictions for the new web form that is coming up:
Web3.0: Web3.0 will be based on the "intelligent" web applications. The main things which will be used are "Natural Language Processing (NLP)", "Machine Learning languages". Our information and datas will be linked to each other and will be organized in order to make our web intelligent. Our next generation search engine will be based on the semantic and not only on just the keywords. We will not have to surf again and again. The browser will do this for us. One can visualize the web3.0 as a global database which has every data and information. Web3.0 will be more personalized, Intelligent and mobile (anytime anywhere).

Read more... :)

Friday, December 11, 2009

Social Media Analysis

Standing by the side of Mahalaxmi Garbage transfer station , I felt happy that how even garbage contributes to a better tomorrow. Being an internet freak my mind dashed straight to the big pile of data collected daily by Social media websites. What we will get if we crawl and analyze the microbloging tools such as Twitter, Wikis, Social networking websites and millions of blog available on internet?
Social media analysis tends to separate out content analysis and structure analysis. In the age of web2.0, we have loads of data and information available on internet generated by millions of internet users. Here, arises another basic but very important question “Why”. Why academic institutions and companies are spending lots of money on analysis of this data? Why do we need to analyze this data.

Why?
From Industrial point of view, followings are the most probable reasons:
  • Relationship between consumers and the product
  • Identify Industrial Influence
  • Identify competitors in the market.
  • Identify competitor’s visibility
  • Product review
  • Identify presence of client
  • Identify Client demand
Aspects which may gain Industrial usage in very near future are as follows
  • Sentiment analysis
  • Keyword analysis
  • Social network analysis
Sources: The Next question is what data can we analyze? What sources we can include in it?
  1. Blog posts / Comments: It doesn’t includes only blog posts but it includes comments also. By analyzing comment we get the sentiments of the reader and review of the author.
  2. Microblog: Twitter is still growing rapidly and generating huge amounts of data every day which makes microblog a very important source for social media analysis.
  3. Discussion Forums
  4. Product Reviews on e-commerce websites viz, e-bay, amazon
  5. Social networks like Facebook, orkut and myspace etc.
  6. Photo / video sharing websites: flickr/youtube
  7. Social news: Digg, ReadIt, stumble
It's very interesting to know how the day to day blabbers and spattering of a common man is about to gain an industrial value. You writing on facebook about how you feel today or you commenting on a particular product on e-bay can become a basis for an upcoming product launched by a multimillion firm. So whenever you tweet or whenever you comment on FB/Orkut and whenever you share a picture on flickr just remember you are making a contribution to a better tomorrow, which will be gifted to future mankind.

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Monday, November 9, 2009

SIXTH SENSE


We are sorry for not updating you all with some of the current changes that has been going around. We are finally again back to business telling you all about a product that has been doing the rounds-Sixth Sense.


How does one perceive and see things around? To begin with, it is a silly question. We have our five sense organs for it, and wouldn’t it be wonderful if there were a sixth sense too? Today seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting and feeling are not the only information required to decide the credibility of an object. Why else would ‘Google’ be so popular! But you cannot always ‘log on’ when you need information and knowledge about the object in front of you. That’s where Sixth Sense comes in.

Sixth Sense- it connects the digital world to the physical one. The device (which can be worn around the neck) consist a projector, a mirror, a camera connected to the cell-phone and colored caps (like rings) which are put on the tips of thumb and the forefinger. The projector projects visual information enabling surfaces, walls and physical objects around us to be used as interfaces; while the camera recognizes and tracks user's hand gestures and physical objects using computer-vision based techniques. The software program processes the video stream data captured by the camera and tracks the locations of the colored markers (visual tracking fiducials) at the tip of the user’s fingers using simple computer-vision techniques. The movements and arrangements of these fiducials are interpreted into gestures that act as interaction instructions for the projected application interfaces. The maximum number of tracked fingers is only constrained by the number of unique fiducials, thus SixthSense also supports multi-touch and multi-user interaction. It is just like watching search results only without a required screen!

The Sixth Sense device caters to a variety of needs, like map navigation. The fingers would allow zooming in an out of the map layout and help search the exact location. If you buy some stuff, it will pop up all the information available about it, so you get the best deal. The drawing tool helps draw on any surface using the fingers. It recognizes free hand gestures too. Using hands ‘framing’ gestures, will click pictures and then later you can flip through those pictures. SixthSense also lets the user draw icons or symbols in the air using the movement of the index finger and recognizes those symbols as interaction instructions. For example, drawing a magnifying glass symbol takes the user to the map application or drawing and ‘@’ symbol lets the user check his mail. The SixthSense system also augments physical objects the user is interacting with by projecting more information about these objects projected on them. For example, a newspaper can show live video news or dynamic information can be provided on a regular piece of paper. The gesture of drawing a circle on the user’s wrist projects an analog watch.




The mind behind this intriguing device is Pranav Mistry, an Indian Student pursuing PhD in the Fluid Interfaces Group at MIT’s media lab. His work in detail can be viewed at www.pranavmistry.com



~Naineet

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Saturday, November 7, 2009

About us

Free time tends to maximize your thinking abilities and leads you to something that may sometimes be very exciting. GeekOnNet.com has been such an experience for us. It’s an online portal where we write mainly about new online inventions, business events, innovative websites and web solutions.

We had a group known as the ‘Open Source’ during my IIT days, a group of students who used to share all the new ideas and solutions to solving assignments. Most of us were into blogging and used to put in our ideas into our own individual blogs. We used to meet up every time there was a barrage of assignments. Once during such a week, there came up an idea of having our own website and putting in all our technical discussions and analysis into that.

Me and two of my classmates Ranjeet Kumar Vimal and Deepak Mishra took of the initiative. Ranjeet posted the first article on June 9, 2008. He wrote about a 17 year girl earning $70K from internet. The response he got from the readers was very good. With time me and Deepak also joined in. We also bought the domain name “GeekOnNet.com” from US.

Our articles ranged from analysis and comparisons of online webportals to writing about budding entrepreneurs. We focused mainly on the online startups and portals. Also me and Ranjeet being from Computer Science department helped us, we could give a common man analysis of social networking websites- Orkut, Myspace, Facebook. When Crome and Bing was launched, people were looking out for comparisons and ours was the first to give a comprehensive analysis of both of them. The article on Mozilla and Internet Explorer received the maximum number of hits our portal ever received. Deepak had a different kind of a contribution to make. He comes from the Mechanical Engineering Department and belongs to a Theatre group in Mumbai. He had very good networking skills and had lots of contacts of Ex-IITians who were into entrepreneurship. We added a different section to our portal- the place where we wrote about the startups. GeekOnNet.com had finally become a startup for startups.

Some of our achievements:-

  1. 4th most popular blogging website of Mumbai by the bloggers community of Mumbai (http://www.mumbaibloggers.net/2009/03 /the-results)
  2. Ranked in top 10 most popular weblogs in the survey conducted by orkutheroes.com
  3. Achieved Google page rank of 4 within six months of its inception
  4. Invited & covered National Level business events for Economic Times-The power of ideas, Microsoft- Connect Bloggers Brief.
  5. Reported more than 15,000 page views and 10,000 unique hits per month

It’s an year now that GeekOnNet started. It had been a very good learning experience for all the three of us. Ranjeet plans to work for an IT company in a few days and Deepak to continue with his theatre in Mumbai. I have joined SIBM,Pune for my Masters in Business Administration. I hope the distance doesn’t create a hindrance in continuing our website.

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