Www2012 provisional program. City Forward. By clicking accept, you agree to the City Forward Terms and Conditions. City Forward Terms of Use Thank you for your interest in City Forward. By accessing and using this website, you agree to abide by these Terms of Use. The exploration and collaboration tools on City Forward are effective ways to analyze and share information about cities around the world. Remember that these tools are intended for individuals who wish to learn, explore and share but are not intended for commercial use or use for illegal purposes. We refer to City Forward in these Terms of Use as either “City Forward” or “this Site.” The term “IBM” refers to International Business Machines Corporation and its affiliates.
By accessing and using City Forward, you agree that: 1. 2. 3. -- the term “IBM-posted City Data” means that third party data gathered from various third party web sites and posted by IBM on City Forward. -- the term “City Data” means both User Contributed City Data and IBM-posted City 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Demo du #webofthings et du #sbook à @nk_m lors de la visite.
Web Apps Meet Consumer Electronics at CES. The 2010 edition of the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) gets into full swing today and already we're seeing a big trend emerging: web applications being ported to consumer electronics, from the technology inside cars to Web-enabled TVs. Yesterday we noted that online music service Pandora will be made available in cars, courtesy of a new Pioneer device that will begin selling in March. The pricey $1,200 device detects users' Pandora settings via their iPhones. Other evidence of this trend can be found in Ford's announcement of a new in-car system and Samsung's latest Internet-connected TV. Web Apps in Your Car This morning Ford CEO Alan Mulally delivered an opening keynote address at CES, unveiling Ford's latest car technologies. The online music integration in MyFord is one example of the slick smartphone-like functionality becoming available in cars.
Web Apps on Your TV The car is just one of many consumer products being Web-ized. Chris Anderson : "la nouvelle révolution industrielle sera celle. C'est la "Une" de Wired de ce mois-ci. C'est le nouveau "coup" de Chris Anderson. Après la "Longue traîne", où il nous prophétisait un monde où les oeuvres les plus confidentielles trouveraient leurs publics dans les marges bienveillantes de la consommation de masse, après Free, où il nous expliquait que le gratuit était désormais le seul modèle économique d'avenir, voici que le rédacteur en chef de Wired nous annonce que les principes du logiciel libre : ouverture, interopérabilité, open source... vont devenir les principes de base de toute l'industrie.
Comme toujours avec Anderson, le réel ne rentre pas complètement dans l'idée. Mais comme toujours aussi, il y a quelque chose d'éclairant, et de persistant, dans cette intuition... D'abord son exemple est réel. Mais il y a surtout quelque chose de plus profond, que l'on sent dans le mouvement du design numérique, dans le mouvement des FabLab, que l'on voit autour d'Arduino... En un mot : les hackers rencontrent les bricoleurs.