notes from (web 2.0) revolution

Post on 16-Jan-2015

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A short presentation about what anyone building software can learn from the Web 2.0 success stories. Delivered to a group of IT Managers for Codeworks Connect.

TRANSCRIPT

Notes from the (Web 2.0) Revolution

Small Parts, Loosely Joined

“The world is changing very fast. Big will not beat small anymore. It will be the fast beating the slow.

Small Parts, Loosely Joined

Rupert Murdoch

“Youʼre better off doing what youʼre great at and leaving the other stuff to people who are better at it

Small Parts, Loosely Joined

Jason Fried, 37 Signals

What is the differences between mashups and integration?

Small Parts, Loosely Joined

Small Parts, Loosely Joined

Fall Forward Fast

“I think the whole thing got off to a slow start because most major programmes do

Fall Forward Fast

Patrick OʼConnell, BT Health

“Make many small bets, iterate wildly, back successes, kill failures, fast

Fall Forward Fast

BBC Web Principles

Fall Forward Fast

Fall Forward Fast

To Build 12 years

Worth £12.4bn

Infrastructure national

Users 60 million

Prescriptions 325 million

Fall Forward Fast

Fall Forward Fast

To Build 3.5 years

Worth £7.3bn

Infrastructure global

Users 49 million

Images 1.7 billion

User Centred Projects

Mashup, de-centralisation, non-Web like, user generated content, permission based activity,

collaboration, Creative Commons.

All put users and not the organisation at the centre of the equation

User Centred Projects

While most designers are conscious of the need to design for end-users, they often base their

understanding of users on their own experience.

User Centred Projects

User-centred design engages with potential users in their own environment.

User Centred Projects

Viva la Revolucion!

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