Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Web 2.0 and the Geoweb Part 1: Web 2.0 Examples

As I have mentioned earlier, I am ramping up for the upcoming semester and am feverishly prepping. My course, "Introduction To the Geoweb" is part of the Master of Engineering/GIS offered at the University of Colorado at Denver.

In the coming weeks, I intend to share materials I will be presenting to my students to all of you in hopes of getting some constructive feedback from the experts--YOU! I won't be sharing everything, just some selected materials that I think can benefit from some "participatory lecture development" if there is such a thing. I will also be citing much of the work that many of you have contributed so your feedback is critical.

The collection of materials I intend to share is tentatively termed "Web2.0 and the Geoweb." My hope during this series of lectures is to expose students to well documented Web 2.0 patterns and examples as a foundation for further exploration of the Geoweb. Some have suggested that a detailed look at web architectures and http are warranted before this discussion. Rest assured, the students will be prepared for these more advanced concepts.

The primary source of my research related to Web 2.0 patterns and examples comes from Web 2.o Architectures by James Governor and others. It is a good piece, articulating web2.0 patterns in a formal way and has worked nicely for foundational discovery. I have also incorporated materials from several additional sources that have proven adequate.

The story I hope to weave reads something like this: the Geoweb (which I think I can fully embrace) has roots, much of which can be described using well document Web 2.0 patterns. These patterns are best described using real world examples which can then be articulated formally using a standard method of description. This framework then serves as the foundation for further discussions mapping these patterns and subsequent reference models and architectures to Geoweb concepts, some of which have been stewing for some time and others which have emerged recently.

With that said, part 1 of 4 (or maybe 5) slides follow. These are subject to change which goes without saying. Be aware that these are lecture slides so there is a fair amount of text. Students get a little "bent without bullets."

I will be posting my recorded lectures as well. Continue to Part 2: Web 2.0 Patterns.

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