1 / 23

Web Skills , Technologies, and the Industry

ITP 104. Web Skills , Technologies, and the Industry. As a Medium. How the web as a medium is perceived and used, and how that evolution of the web has affected and changed us What do you do on the Web? What type of activities in your work and play ?

nassor
Télécharger la présentation

Web Skills , Technologies, and the Industry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ITP 104 Web Skills , Technologies, and the Industry

  2. As a Medium • How the web as a medium is perceived and used, and how that evolution of the web has affected and changed us • What do you do on the Web? • What type of activities in your work and play? • Answer:Email. Research. Read news. Watch videos and listen to music. Chat. Network. Play games. Write. Share photos. And of course use Facebook.

  3. As a Medium • When you go to Facebook what type of activities do you do there? • Review other peoples sites/feeds. Search for and add/reject friends. Chat. Mini-blog/post. Play games. Post pictures. Comment on all of the previous.

  4. As a Medium • What creatively (as opposed to communicatively) or artistically can you do on the web? • Answer:Design. Drawing/illustration? Write (blogs, articles, etc.)? How about Programming/development? How about artistic and intellectual collaboration?

  5. A Social Phenomenon • What is Web 2.0? • Tim O'Reilly' defined it back in September of 2005 in his dissertation “Web 2.0” • Web 2.0 empowered everyday Web users to become authors • no longer necessary to know how to write html, program code or write a database in order to public not just web sites but write blogs, post video, etc

  6. A Social Phenomenon • Web 2.0 is also about collaboration • How is Wikipedia different than say the electronic version of the Encyclopedia Britannica? • Wikipedia features social or communal definitions that evolve as hundreds, thousands or millions of people all contribute to definitions of ideas

  7. A Social Phenomenon • The current generation of the web is about user interaction and participation. • And what are the implications of that? • Web 2.0 the Machine is Us/ing Us

  8. A Social Phenomenon • One of the major changes in the web was the ability to distribute and re-package "information” • While this started with RSS feeds for news information, blogs, photos, etc., it evolved into ANY kind of data. So you could share your applications or functionalities with other people and sites.

  9. A Social Phenomenon • A whole crop of "mash up" , when Google opened its mapping functionality to everyone • What are some other popular Web 2.0 mash-ups?

  10. A Social Phenomenon • One other major movement or evolution in web pages and applications was the idea of "live" or dynamic data. • Asynchronous data allowed calls and requests for information to take place in the background • pages do not have to "wait" for data. • data calls happen in the background while a user is using an application, rather than the user sitting and waiting or having to update.

  11. Technologies • The original version of the web was driven by html, and then css/styles, hosted on servers. • As the web evolved additional technologies such as database back-ends and scripting and programming became standard components of web sites.

  12. Technologies • All "interactive" elements of web pages require client-side scripting through Javascript. • As JavaScript became more prevalent and more advanced functionality was desires, new libraries or platforms such as jQuery became more common.

  13. Technologies • Databases house much of the core information for most major sites.

  14. Technologies • Server-side scripting languages drive the back-end of most sites • i.e. ASP/.Net, PHP, ColdFusion, JSP, Python, Ruby on Rails, etc • Flowing information from databases into templates that form web pages, collecting and storing user data, generating emails, etc.

  15. Technologies • In order to distribute and exchange information beyond and between sites, data had to be organized through shared formats such as XML. • All of the more complex functionality was accompanied by new vulnerabilities and "holes" in servers and code that could be exploited by hackers • increasing the need for security analysis and solutions.

  16. Basic Web Technologies and Skillset • Design • Graphic Production • Specialized graphic production • Flash • Video • Mobile

  17. Basic Web Technologies and Skillset • HTML Production -- Web publishing • Basic Page Web Development: DHTML (HTML+CSS+Javascript) • Advanced Web Development: • Server-Side Scripting: ASP, PHP, CF, JSP, etc. • Web Programming: Perl, VB, Actionscript (Flash), AIR, Mobile (Android, Java, etc.) • Web services: XML + Database/SQL + Scripting + Programming

  18. Basic Web Technologies and Skillset • New development frameworks combine multiple development areas/languages simultaneously: • XHTML/CSS or Flash-- display platform • DOM -- Centralized/standardized domain object model • XML/XSLR -- standardized/open source format/structure for data • Javascript (and libraries such as jQuery) -- place calls to other code and sites, exchange data, flow information into pages.

  19. Basic Web Technologies and Skillset • Database Design, Production, Administration, Optimization (programming) • DB Web Development (Server-Side Scripting+SQL+DB) • Security

  20. Working in the Industry • Traditional Web "skills" still needed: design, production, DBA, scripting and programming • For developers, it still holds true that more technical proficiency and diversity = more marketable and desirable • Web 2.0 has raised the bar for "top notch" developer talent. It requires leveraging diverse functionality and languages/standards

  21. Working in the Industry • First steps are still the same: • Master the Web Publishing basics: • HTML, CSS and a lite amount of JavaScript/interactivity • Learn Web Development: • Scripting and interactivity, Database Web Development, and lite amounts of programming and security • Advance skills: • Developing apps that leverage multiple skills, abstracting routines, consuming and disseminating functionalities/data (Web services, etc.). • Diversify: • Flash and Actionscript, mobile, specific platforms such as AJAX, etc.

  22. Working in the Industry • Need to walk before you can crawl. You have to be able to create interactive DHTML pages, build traditional db-driven Web sites, etc., before you can create next-generation sites. • Starting salaries: • Web Developer -- $53-77K • Web Administrator -- $48-72K • Web Designer -- $43-68K

  23. References • Web Skills, Technologies, and the Industry • Patrick Dent

More Related