Public Health and Web 2.0
From Collaboration to Dissemination
Web 2.0 - what is it?It describes almost any site, service or technology that promotes sharing and collaboration online.Google is to Web 2.0 what Netscape was to Web 1.0
Characteristics
Some Web 2.0 ToolsBlogs are online journals. http://Blogger.com is one of several websites that you can use to create and host your blog for free.
Wikis are simple web pages that a group of people can edit together. Wikis are great for collaborating on a project or presentation. You can set up a free wiki at PBWiki.com
Youtube is a very popular videosharing website. Upload your public service announcements or educational videos and reach millions of people with your message. This site is popular amongst state and federal government agencies, politicians, academic institutions, hospitals, newsmedia, etc.
Use flickr or Picasso to organize, share, print your photos.
Use del.icio.us to keep all your bookmarks in one location.
Import your existing documents and spreadsheets, or create new ones from scratch. Edit from anywhere. All you need is a Web browser. Your documents and spreadsheets are stored securely online. Share changes in real-time. Invite people to your documents and spreadsheets and make changes together, at the same time.
What Next? Web 3.0Terminology:A place where machines can read Web pages much as humans read them. A place where search engines and software agents can better troll the Net and find what they want. examples
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blogsWikisYoutubeGoogle Docs
Other google tools
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Contacts:
Ray Schroeder at rschr1@uis.edu 217-206-7531
Veronica Halloway at veronica.halloway@illinois.gov 217-524-6817
