scholarly journals Organizing A Home Page of the Public Web Site Using the Delphi Method

2013 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 21-32
Author(s):  
Jae Hyung Byun ◽  
Song, Hyerim ◽  
Lee, Gyehwi ◽  
Seo JongHwan ◽  
이기형
Keyword(s):  
Web Site ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tri Suratno
Keyword(s):  
Web Site ◽  

Media informasi terdahulu yang menggunakan buku, brosur, spanduk, maupun famplet untuk mempromosikan suatu lembaga ataupun organisasi. Hal ini kurang efektif dalam menarik minat masyarakat, baik masyarakat umum maupun masyarakat ilmiah, untuk itu dirasakan perlunya sebuah informasi media yang mampu memberikan fasilitas yang memadai dari penyebaran sebuah informasi. Dengan adanya kemajuan dan kecanggihan teknologi saat ini media informasi dapat dikembangkan dengan mudah, apalagi dalam dunia informasi atau telekomunikasi dikenal dengan nama internet, yang di dalamnya memuat banyak informasi dalam bentuk web site atau home page, sehingga pengunjung dapat melihat dan mencari lebih detail lagi tentang informasi. Dengan pengembangan sistem informasi pertanian berbasis website diharapkan dapat memberikan informasi yang lebih detail dan mampu menjawab persoalan yang ada dalam transfer informasi pertanian.


2011 ◽  
pp. 2643-2656
Author(s):  
Genie N.L. Stowers

This article examines the user help and service navigation features in government Web sites and compares them across levels of government. These features are critical to ensuring that users unfamiliar with government are able to successfully and easily access e-government services and information. The research finds clear patterns in the use of similar help and navigation features across governments, leading to a conclusion that these features are diffusing in the public sector Web development field. The article concludes by stating that Web developers should work to overcome a second digital divide, one of a lack of knowledge of Web site organization and government structure. Users need to be actively assisted to find information by Web developers.


2001 ◽  
Vol 81 (11) ◽  
pp. 1830-1833 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben F Massey

APTA President Ben Massey shared the 2001 Presidential Address with members and other participants during the Opening Plenary at PT 2001: Annual Conference & Exposition of the American Physical Therapy Association, June 20, 2001. As part of Massey's enthusiastic and motivational presentation, he introduced a new 60-second video, “We Live for Moments Like These,” that APTA has developed for members to use as a promotional tool. The video is now available to members at cost and also can be viewed from the APTA Web site at www.apta.org. When I ran for election a little more than a year ago, I did so with pride and passion and a profound commitment to this profession and our Association. I was prepared for the work that would be required of the job, but I was not as prepared for what I would experience in return. I've had the privilege of meeting hundreds of you this past year. And your pride, and your passion, and your commitment have inspired me. I am so proud to be a member of a profession that transforms and restores people's lives. And I am equally proud to be part of an association membership who stands up for the public we serve—and who goes after what we believe in. The images you just viewed [in APTA's new video “We Live for Moments Like These” are extraordinary. And what is perhaps equally extraordinary is that these are the images of everyday physical therapy—from making it possible for a grandmother with debilitating arthritis pain to hold her grandchild to enabling a prima ballerina who has been injured to return to the stage. Yes, any one of you could have been featured in this video for the extraordinary things that you do every single day, that you do with skill and expertise and a unique body of knowledge backed by scientific proof, that you do with heart, and soul, and passion. [Massey BF Jr. 2001 APTA Presidential Address: We have arrived! Phys Ther. 2001;81:1830-1833.]


1998 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 285-311 ◽  
Author(s):  
William P. Eveland ◽  
Sharon Dunwoody

We report here initial findings of a multi-year study of public use of a World Wide Web site for science information. “The Why Files” strives to provide “the science behind the news” in story narratives that contain opportunities for both linear and non-linear navigation. We report results of two studies, one using survey data and another using computer-collected audit trails. The survey revealed that the typical user was male and well-educated, a pattern that reflects both Web users generally and the science-attentive segment of the public particularly. Audit trail data indicated that the site reached as many as 25,000 different individuals during a two-week measurement cycle. The typical pattern of site use was linear, with individuals making heavier use of in-text navigation features than of graphic ones such as page-turning buttons and page numbers. Additional information in glossaries, bibliographies, or via links to other Web sites went largely unused.


2003 ◽  
Vol 80 (3) ◽  
pp. 528-547 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gyotae Ku ◽  
Lynda Lee Kaid ◽  
Michael Pfau

This study examined the impact of Web site campaigning on traditional news media agendas and on public opinion during the 2000presidential election campaign. Based on an intermedia agenda-setting approach, this study demonstrated the direction of influence among three media in terms of the flow of information. An agenda-setting impact of Web site campaigning on the public was also identified.


1998 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 242
Author(s):  
Lucy K. Bradley ◽  
Jean C. Stutz

The Univ. of Arizona Cooperative Extension home horticulture World Wide Web site for Maricopa County, “Environmentally responsible gardening and landscaping in the low desert,” provides the public with timely, research-based, regionally appropriate information. This delivery method enables self-service access to prepared text information and high-quality images that could not be economically distributed via traditional print methods, and interactive opportunities for submitting questions.


2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (10) ◽  
pp. 117-127
Author(s):  
Chris David Impey ◽  
Kevin K. Hardegree-Ullman ◽  
Anand Patikkal ◽  
Carmen L Austin

A web site called Teach Astronomy (http://www.teachastronomy.com) has been created to serve astronomy instructors and their students, amateur astronomers, and members of the general public interested in astronomy. The content includes astronomy articles from an introductory level textbook and from the online resource Wikipedia, short video clips, astronomical images, podcasts, and recent news stories. This article describes the technology behind the delivery of those learning resources, which is relevant to the capabilities and limitations of the web site. One key innovation is the Wikimap, a Flash-based tool that presents the visual results of a real-time clustering analysis of hundreds or thousands of text items, displaying the item that best matches the search term and most closely related items. The clustering is carried out in a Lucene index, and it can operate on any database containing items of text. The astronomy content is routinely updated, in some cases daily. Due to the prevalence of smartphones, tablets, and other handheld devices, a simplified non-graphical version of the interface was developed using custom style sheets. Teach Astronomy has a large following of students taking introductory astronomy classes and members of the public with a recreational interest in astronomy. In the past year, there have been 250,000 unique visitors. Currently we are developing a new interface that uses HTML5 instead of Flash to display the Wikimap, an app version of the website for use on smartphones and tablets, and tool to support an instructor and learner community.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dong Xie ◽  
Guixia Ma

The ultimate goal of social marketing is to change the behavior, attitude, concept, and so on of target audiences. For the public welfare organization, the basis of its service project design is the organization's mission and location. The key to achieve the organizational mission is to be able to lock the service objects and respond to the needs of service objects effectively. This research is based on the theoretical framework of social marketing and based on the questionnaire survey and analysis of the advocacy effectiveness and problems of service objects of the 327 public service organizations in China. Using the Delphi method and the entropy method, the 6P model of social marketing for service objects advocacy in the field of domestic public welfare practice is concise, and a new operational mechanism for service objects advocacy of public welfare organizations is proposed to implement the mission and value of public welfare organizations and contribute to the change of service objects.


Author(s):  
Lorna Uden ◽  
Kimmo Salmenjoki

The word portal came from the Latin word porta, which is translated to gate. Anything that acts as a gateway to anything else is a portal. The portal server acts as gateway to the enterprise in a network. However, there are many different definitions of the word portal. A search of the word using Google search engine yields many thousands of references. Some consider portal to be a new name for a Web site. A portal is an entry point to the World Wide Web (WWW) and therefore, more than what a Web site does. According to Internet 101 , a portal is a Web site linking to another Web site. Sometimes search engines have been referred to as portals. Access companies, such as Microsoft Network (MSN) and America On-Line (AOL), have often been referred to as portals. Although the definition of the word portal is still evolving, the definition we will use is a gateway, and a Web portal can thus be seen as a gateway to the information and services on the Web, more specifically to services on both the public Internet and on corporate intranets. This article aims to take the historical approach based on the development of the Web and examine the factors that have contributed to the evolution of portals. The origin of portals came about because of the need for information organisation. Users need to be provided with coherent and understandable information.


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