Internet is the amazing accomplishment in several respects. The trouble with the usage of the Internet and the growing amount of information it allows access to is that the structure of the Internet isn’t keeping up. For example, the implementation of HTML 5 will make it easier to code and—by extension—parse information semantically. Similarly, Google is in constant development of projects (FriendConnect, OpenSocial, Google Webmaster Tools, etc.) designed to standardize the way information is stored and used on the Internet. There is also a small but growing trend among sites to open up systematic access to their data by way of an API, and there’s an ongoing movement to implement semantic technologies such as RDF and OWL.
Once a specification for HTML 5 has been agreed upon it will still take countless hours of development to get browsers to properly render the syntax, countless hours of research by website designers and programmers to learn and adopt the new syntax, and countless years before all the websites available in the public domain are using HTML 5.
Mozenda is a data management platform that allows users to combine and use data from multiple sources. The information, once collected, is stored on one of Mozenda’s secure servers and can be exported in a number of file formats or systematically accessed through Mozenda’s API. By allowing users to both gather data and access it through a call, Mozenda has essentially created the ability create an API for nearly any website.
















on Jul 16th, 2010 at 3:33 pm
langsung coba dh