Posts Tagged ‘Tim Berners-Lee’

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In Facebook Deal, Board Was All But Out of Picture (The Wall Street Journal)
On the morning of Sunday, April 8, Facebook Inc.’s youthful chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, alerted his board of directors that he intended to buy Instagram, the hot photo-sharing service. It was the first the board heard of what, later that day, would become Facebook’s largest acquisition ever, according to several people familiar with the matter. AllFacebook Zuckerberg negotiated with his Instagram counterpart down from an original $2 billion offer, asking Systrom whether he thought Facebook could one day be worth more than $200 billion, roughly the size of Google. Systrom agreed to the one percent or roughly $1 billion in stock. SocialTimes Normally a deal like this takes several days, if not weeks, to complete, and usually involves more lawyers and bankers than were present during the negotiations. Gizmodo It was a bold strategy, and one that smacks of the kind of approach a small start-up might take. It’s not, however, the way most people might expect a multi-million dollar public organization to conduct business. TechCrunch This just in: According to multiple sources close to the company, Facebook is eying an IPO on May 17th — depending on whether the SEC agrees that all the reams of paperwork (including those concerning its recent acquisition of Instagram) are in order. PRNewser The Ad Age Digital Conference continued Wednesday with a presentation from David Fischer, Facebook’s VP of business and marketing partnerships, whose presentation could be boiled down to this: “Your brand needs an always-on strategy.” Read more

The Top 4 Myths About Semantic Web

The Internet is often prone to confusion. All this immediacy and constant status updating can leave people lost when it comes to deciphering the true game changers, like Semantic Web. Will this new, smarter technology affect the way you work online? Yes. Is it all about metadata? Not exactly. Here are the top four widespread myths about Semantic Web (and why you should care):

1. It’s artificial intelligence.
The machines themselves aren’t the ones getting smarter. Instead, we’re making the content easier for the machines to interpret.

2. It’s just research. Nothing concrete has been made with semantic web yet.
Quite the contrary. Many different companies, like Huffington Post and Google, have already jumped on the semantic web wagon and are seeing a lot of success.

3. Semantic Web’s only purpose is to tag websites.
Tagging content is one part of the wide scope of what semantic web can do. Jeff Pollack of Semantic Universe says, “Imagine all the different website tags in the world linked up automatically to all the best online reference databases in the world…connected to the data on your hard drive and your business’ enterprise software systems like for business intelligence.”

4. Semantic Web will put Google out of business.

Google search will still be a pertinent necessity of online life and won’t be going away anytime soon, even with Semantic Web. This myth likely sprung from a recent Sunday Times piece attributing the belief of search’s impending death to Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web. He later took to his blog to counter the claim, calling it a “misunderstanding” in an “otherwise useful discussion.”

Register for Semantic Web Summit on November 16-17 in Boston to learn from innovators across industries and to see how Semantic Web can transform your business.

Internet’s Inventor Gets Top Webby Award

TBL_5.27.jpgThe guy who created this thing we now take for granted, you know, the thing that makes it possible for me to write this and for you to read this — the Internet. Well, in what is probably the best thing to happen to him since he was knighted in 2004, Sir Tim Berners-Lee will be honored with a Webby Lifetime Achievement Award next month.

Berners-Lee created the first versions of the technologies – including HTML, URL, and HTTP – that turned the Internet, previously a domain of scientists and researchers only, into a mass medium. Since he invented the Web twenty years ago, Berners-Lee has remained its most active and passionate advocate, working tirelessly to ensure that it remains open and free. He founded the World Wide Web Consortium in 1994 and currently serves as director of the World Wide Web Foundation.

On June 8, Berners-Lee will be saluted alongside Webby Award winners and other Special Achievement honorees, including Jimmy Fallon (Person of the Year), Trent Reznor (Artist of the Year), and Twitter (Breakout of the Year) at the 13th annual Webby Awards.