Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...
New sites on the internet frogans sites
1. New sites on the Internet:
Introducing Frogans sites
Illustration : internet and tacos
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu
2. December 2013
About this presentation
• This presentation is a derivative work of
documents produced by the OP3FT:
-“Context of the introduction of Frogans
sites on the Internet”, published at the
following permanent URL:
https://www.frogans.org/en/resources/conte
xt/access.html.
- “Position of the Frogans technology in the
Internet”, published at the following
permanent URL:
https://www.frogans.org/en/resources/positio
n/access.html
• It also includes figures from KPCB (Kleiner
Perkins Caufield Byers).
LICENSE FOR THIS PRESENTATION SOURCES
1
www.smartwords.eu
3. About the OP3FT
The OP3FT is the non-profit organization whose
purpose is to hold, promote, protect and ensure
the progress of the Frogans technology in the
form of an open standard for the Internet,
available to all, free of charge.
More information is available about the OP3FT on
their Web site: https://www.op3ft.org/
2
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu
4. Overview of the Internet
The Internet is composed of three layers. A huge ecosystem of content and
service providers has emerged on top of them.
3
Source: https://www.frogans.org/en/resources/position/access.html
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu
5. Internet : a widespread resource
There will be 2.7 billion Internet users by the end of
2013. That is 39% of the world population.
Illustration : James Cridland – Creative Commons
4
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu
Source: International Telecommunication Union, The World in 2013: ICT Facts and Figures, February 2013
http://www.itu.int/en/ITU-D/Statistics/Documents/facts/ICTFactsFigures2013.pdf
6. The rise of the mobile Internet
Mobile Internet accounted for 15% of all Internet traffic in
May 2013.
That’s a 150% increase compared to 2012.
The rhythm of growth of the mobile Internet is constant or
even increasing.
Source: KPCB (Kleiner Perkins Caufield Byers): http://www.kpcb.com/insights/2013-internet-trends
Illustration : Matt Jones. – Creative Commons
5
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu
7. The mobile Internet is the domain
of mobile apps
Internet users prefer apps for accessing the Internet on a
mobile.
U.S. smartphone users spend about 25 hours per month
on mobile apps, and just 4 hours on mobile Web.
Why ? Simply because apps are much easier and more
convenient to use than mobile Web sites.
Source: Nielsen Norman Group, The Cross-Platform Report: A Look Across Screens, June 10th, 2013
http://www.nielsen.com/us/en/reports/2013/the-cross- platform-report--a-look-across-screens.html
6
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu
8. The Internet : been there? Done that?
Illustration : Julian Fong – Creative Commons
7
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu
9. Rejoice!
The Internet is still an open space for technological innovation.
It is possible to freely introduce new application layers on the
Internet to meet the changing needs of users.
Illustration : KMJPhotography – Creative Commons
8
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu
10. The problems with apps
for content publishers
The development, distribution and maintenance of a
mobile app is a much more complex and costly
project than publishing a Web site.
Updating a Web site Updating a mobile app
Simply upload the new Web pages to
the server
Develop a new version of the app
(i.e.: software development)
Get approval from the "Store"
Invite users to download and install
the new app
Repeat all the above for each mobile
platform (device and OS)
9
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu
11. Apps are also far from perfect
for end-users
Users cannot install thousands of apps on their
device (storage limitation).
Installing apps is time consuming.
Heavy apps require high speed Internet connections,
not always available for users on the move.
Risk of malwares
Issue of access to personal data
10
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu
12. Content publishers and users
cannot meet easily
Most content publishers don’t have the time or money to create mobile apps.
Neither can they maintain dozens of versions of mobile Web sites.
Publishers of content on the Internet are increasingly isolated
from end-users.
Illustration : Frits Ahlefeldt-Laurvig – Creative Commons
11
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu
13. The introduction of Frogans sites
on the Internet
After 14 years of R&D, a new software layer is
about to appear on the Internet.
Content publishers will be able to publish content
and services on a new type of sites, Frogans sites.
End-users will be able to browse them by means of
specific software, Frogans Player, which will be
downloadable for free from the OP3FT.
12
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu
14. Benefits of Frogans sites
for publishers
The promise: a Frogans site can be developed only once and
still be rendered in exactly the same way, down to the pixel
level, on all devices, fixed and mobile, present and future.
Validating the publication of a Frogans site will be quick: a
single test will be enough, on any device.
Illustration : Wee Sen Goh – Creative Commons
13
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu
15. Benefits of Frogans sites
for end-users
Frogans sites will be easy to browse: no additional learning needed.
On a touch screen mobile device, a hand and a finger will be enough to
browse.
Frogans sites will be accessible through specific, short identifiers:
Frogans addresses. These addresses can include non-latin characters.
Unlike Web URLs, Frogans addresses include no character with a
technical meaning, except the asterisk “ * ” .
The “ * ” characterizes a Frogans address, in the same way that the sign
“@” characterizes an E-mail address.
Network-name site-name
14
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu
16. Want to know more?
More information is available on the official Web site of the Frogans
technology: https://www.frogans.org.
For more information about the OP3FT, you can visit:
https://www.op3ft.org/ .
Stay tuned to the Frogans project on the OP3FT’s Announcement
mailing list: https://lists.frogans.org/announcement/
And if you have questions, why not join the discussion on the Early
questions mailing list? https://lists.frogans.org/early-questions/
Thanks for sharing!
15
December 2013 www.smartwords.eu