Skip to main content
greenhughes.com
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Main navigation

  • About
  • Contact Me
  • Elsewhere
  • Home
  • teleremix
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
User account menu
  • Log in

Breadcrumb

  1. Home

chrome

By Liam Green-Hughes, 11 August, 2011

An HTML5 Leanback TV webapp that brings SPARQL to your living room

sparql
leanback
television
webtv
iptv
webapp
google
googletv
chrome
howto
linkeddata

A group of people looking in through a living room windowWhen you are sat on the sofa at the end of the day relaxing and watching TV, maybe eating food and not in the mood to have to keep constantly making decisions about what to watch you might not think that you are in a situation where Linked Data and SPARQL queries could be useful. Yet the flexibility of the data that can be obtained from data sources supporting these technologies makes them ideal candidates to power a Leanback TV experience. With the right query it is possible to curate a collection of video podcasts that can be played one after each other to keep the TV viewer happy. They still have control, they can still go to any podcast in the collection, but they are not faced with a decision every ten minutes about what to watch, allowing them to relax and discover new content.

By Liam Green-Hughes, 2 March, 2010

Where are you? Find out with geolocation in Javascript.

web
firefox
mozilla
web development
google
nokia
chrome
programming
n900
iphone
javascript
g1
geolocation

Despite the idea of "being in Cyberspace" and the power of the Internet to connect us to people all over the world regardless of our location, we often use a browser to find out about people and services close to us. These might be queries such as finding the opening times of a local store, the time of a train or local expertise. Each time we do this it is often necessary to tell the website where we are, typcially by providing a post code, but what if you don't know the postcode? Fortunately browsers and becoming much more clever, and some can even work out where you are.

By Liam Green-Hughes, 12 December, 2008

Google Chrome out of beta: time for a party or a post-mortem?

opinion
web2.0
browsers
firefox
mozilla
google
poll
chrome

Back in September, Google Chrome was launched with quite a lot of fanfare, it was a big tech story and received a lot of attention. At the time there was speculation that it could not only threaten Internet Explorer, but even speculation that it could threaten Microsoft Windows itself.

By Liam Green-Hughes, 3 September, 2008

First impressions of Google Chrome

opinion
web2.0
browsers
google
chrome
brand
review

No doubt the big tech story of the week has been the release of the new Google Chrome browser, Google's new entrant into the browser wars. Like many others I downloaded this and gave it a go to see what the fuss was about. So first gripe, the current beta is only for Windows, although we are being promised versions for Linux and the Mac. This is an interesting decision, maybe it was taken as they don't want to aim the product at "geeks"?

By Liam Green-Hughes, 2 September, 2008

Are you planning to use Google Chrome as your default browser?

Tags/Keywords
browsers
google
poll
chrome
chrome
greenhughes.com
Powered by Drupal