7. History of hypertext 1987 – launch of HyperCard by Apple Other systems around at the time included NoteCards, Guide, Intermedia, Hyper-G , Microcosm embyronic Web
8. XML Open hypermedia systems community now influence the Web Contextual and conceptual linking gone Is it accepted? ONTOLOGIES
17. Moulthrop questions “How should education respond to the challenges of an increasingly mediated world?” “How can it enable young people to become active, and critical participants”
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19. “The Lottery of Babylon” Borges, 1941 The concept of general literacy of pathwork, universal but not total, could significantly advance understanding and practice. (Moulthrop, 2005). Hypertext as a form of literacy, others have been preparing the ground For along time. Google Images, 10 May, 2010
23. References Australian Communication Media Authority (ACMA) 2010, The ACMA digital media literacy research program . Viewed 15 April 2010, http://www.acma.gov.au/WEB/STANDARD/pc=PC_311472 . Buckingham, D. 2003. Media education: literacy, learning and contemporary culture. Cambridge: Polite Press. Levy, P, 2001, Cyberculture , Minneapolis U. Minnesota Press. Livingstone, S. 2003, ‘The Changing Nature and Uses of Media Literacy’. Working paper. London. London School of Economics. Available online at http:www.lse.ac.uk/collections/media@lse/mediaWorkingPapers/ewpNumbert4.htm (accessed April 4,2010). Lenhardt, A & Madden M 2007, Teen Content Creators and Consumers . Washington Pew Internet & American Life Project. Viewed 10 May, 2010, < http://www.pewInternet.org>. NML White paper 2009, viewed 10 May, 2010, <http://newmedialiteracies.org> Postman, N. 1969. Text address at the Convention of the National Council of Teachers of English, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. November, 1968.
Notas do Editor
Theodor Holm (Ted) Nelson, the father of the word &quot;hypertext,&quot; is also the creator of Project Xanadu and of interactive media and network publishing. He postulated and started planning for the network, deriving a number of words current in the computer field, including &quot;image synthesis,&quot; &quot;technoid,&quot; &quot;dildonics,&quot; &quot;transclusion,&quot; and &quot;electronic visualization.&quot; He is the author of numerous books and articles.While the World Wide Web may owe much of its inspiration to Project Xanadu, Nelson himself is an opponent of the Web, the Internet, XML, and all embedded markup. He continues to work on development of alternative information structures, most notably the ZigZag structure and related technologies.Nelson is known for such quotes as &quot;The purpose of computers is human freedom,&quot; &quot;No one's life has yet been simplified by a computer,&quot; and &quot;In 1974, computers were oppressive devices in far-off air-conditioned places; now you can be oppressed by computers in your own living room.&quot; He is also fond of the anonymous quote, &quot;If houses were built the way software is built, the first woodpecker would bring down civilization.&quot; Related Links www.xanadu.com www.xanadu.com/zigzag www.iath.virginia.edu/elab/hfl0155.htmlBibliog
Douglas Engelbart invented the mouse, the graphical user interface, and the first working hypertext system, NLS, which was also the second computer system connected to the ARPANET.At the end of World War II, Douglas Engelbart was a 20 year old US Navy radar technician in the Philippines. One day in a Red Cross library, he picked up a copy of the Atlantic Monthly from July, 1945, read Vannevar Bush's article about his &quot;memex&quot; automated library system, and was profoundly influenced by the vision of the future of information technology.Sixteen years later Engelbart published his own version of Bush's vision, describing an advanced electronic information system in the paper &quot;Augmenting Human Intellect: A Conceptual Framework&quot;, prepared for the Air Force Office Of Scientific Research and Development, and extracted belo
Douglas Engelbart invented the mouse, the graphical user interface, and the first working hypertext system, NLS, which was also the second computer system connected to the ARPANET.At the end of World War II, Douglas Engelbart was a 20 year old US Navy radar technician in the Philippines. One day in a Red Cross library, he picked up a copy of the Atlantic Monthly from July, 1945, read Vannevar Bush's article about his &quot;memex&quot; automated library system, and was profoundly influenced by the vision of the future of information technology.Sixteen years later Engelbart published his own version of Bush's vision, describing an advanced electronic information system in the paper &quot;Augmenting Human Intellect: A Conceptual Framework&quot;, prepared for the Air Force Office Of Scientific Research and Development, and extracted belo
Semantic WebBy boohersblogSemantic Web is said to have been inspired by the same creator of the World Wide Web, John Berners-Lee. He had the inspiration to turn the web into a single repository for information instead of an enormous collection of web sites and pages.The Semantic Web is primarily focused upon machines while Web 2.0 is primarily focused upon people and social networking and collaboration. The Semantic Web is a project aimed to compile and present data in a manner that is understood by computers. The project aims to do this in such a way that the computers can then compile and aggregate information without the need for a human operator.The Semantic Web is not a seperate entity from the World Wide Web, it is simply a component of it. It adds new data, extending previous documents into further data. To achieve the means of the semantic web, developers have created RDF (Resource Description Framework) which is a framework that is used to turn web data into structured data that can be used by software.Semantic Web is most commonly used in research and life sciences where it is utilized to easily compile lists of medicines and illnesses that would otherwise be quite difficult to aggregate.