Autor Tema: Para que no nos tilden de dinosaurios  (Leído 2262 veces)

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Desconectado kojik69

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Para que no nos tilden de dinosaurios
« : agosto 27, 2009, 03:06:55 pm »
Aquí les traigo este copy/paste que me pareció interesante, a ver qué opinan de esto, creo que muchos términos aún los seguimos usando comunmente, pero para que no nos vaya a tildar de veteranos algún bicho, aquí 12 frases o nombres que ya no deberíamos mencionar pues han caído en desuso.  :p

Nota: si les molesta el inglés, es otro síntoma de tender a ser dinosaurios.  :D B-)

12 Words You Can Never Say in the Office

If you're old enough to understand the reference in this headline -- George Carlin, anyone? -- then you're old enough to need a refresher course when it comes to talking about technology.

We've put together a list of outdated tech terms, phrases that you shouldn't be using at work anymore because they will make you seem old. This is especially true if you're looking for a new job. For example, on an interview, you should be talking about "cloud computing," not "ASPs" even though they are basically the same thing.

This list is useful for 20-somethings, too. Now when the senior person in the office uses one of these terms, you'll know what he's talking about.

1. Intranet

Popular in the mid-90s, the term "intranet" referred to a private network running the Internet Protocol and other Internet standards such as the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP). It was also used to describe an internal Web site that was hosted behind a firewall and was accessible only to employees. Today, every private network runs IP. So you can just use the term virtual private network or VPN to describe a private IP-based network.

2. Extranet

An "extranet" referred to private network connections based on Internet standards such as IP and HTTP that extended outside an organization, such as between business partners. Extranets often replaced point-to-point electronic data interchange (EDI) connections that used standards such as X12. Today, companies provide suppliers, resellers and other members of their supply chain with access to their VPNs.

3. Web Surfing

When is the last time you heard someone talk about surfing the Web? You know the term is out of date when your kids don't know what it means. To teens and tweens, the Internet and the World Wide Web are one and the same thing. So it's better to use the term "browsing" the Web if you want to be understood.

4. Push Technology

The debate over the merits of "push" versus "pull" technology came to a head in 1996 with the release of the PointCast Network, a Web service that sent a steady stream of news to subscribers. However, PointCast and other push technology services required too much network bandwidth. Eventually, push technology evolved into RSS feeds, which remain the preferred method for publishing information to subscribers of the Internet. RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication.

5. Application Service Provider (ASP)

During this decade, the term "Application Service Provider" evolved into "Software-as-a-Service." Both terms refer to a vendor hosting a software application and providing access to it over the Web. Customers buy the software on a subscription basis, rather than having to own and operate it themselves. ASP was a hot term prior to the dot-com bust. Then it was replaced by "SaaS." Now it's cool to talk about "cloud computing."

6. Personal Digital Assistant (PDA)

Coined by former Apple CEO John Sculley back in 1992 when he unveiled the Apple Newton, the term "personal digital assistant" referred to a handheld computer. PDA was still in use in 1996, when the Palm Pilot was the hottest handheld in corporate America. Today, the preferred generic term for a handheld like a Blackberry or an iPhone is a "smartphone".

7. Internet Telephony

You need to purge the term "Internet telephony" from your vocabulary and switch to VoIP, for Voice over IP. Even the term VoIP is getting old-fashioned because pretty soon all telephone calls will be routed over the Internet rather than the Public Switched Telephone Network. It's probably time to stop referring to the PSTN, too, because it is headed for the history books as all voice, data and video traffic is carried on the Internet.

8. Weblog

A blog is a shortened version of "Weblog," a term that emerged in the late 1990s to describe commentary that an individual publishes online. It spawned many words still in use such as "blogger" and "blogosphere." Nowadays, few people have time to blog so they are "microblogging," which is another word that's heading out the door as people turn Twitter into a generic term for blasting out 140-character observations or opinions.

9. Thin Client

You have to give Larry Ellison credit for seeing many of the flaws in the client/server computing architecture and for popularizing the term "thin client" to refer to Oracle's alternative terminal-like approach. In 1993, Ellison was touting thin clients as a way for large organizations to improve network security and manageability. Although thin clients never replaced PCs, the concept is similar to "virtual desktops" that are gaining popularity today as a way of supporting mobile workers.

10. Rboc

In 1984, the U.S. government forced AT&T to split up into seven Regional Bell Operating Companies [RBOCs] also known as Baby Bells. Customers bought local service from RBOCs and long-distance service from carriers such as AT&T. Telecom industry mergers over the last 15 years have formed integrated local- and long-distance carriers such as AT&T, Verizon and Qwest. This makes not only the term RBOC obsolete, but also the terms ILEC for Incumbent Local Exchange Carrier [i.e., GTE] and CLEC for Competitive Local Exchange Carrier [i.e., MFS].

11. Long-Distance Call

Thanks to flat-rate calling plans available from carriers for at least five years, nobody needs to distinguish between local and long-distance calls anymore. Similarly, you don't need to distinguish between terrestrial and wireless calls because so many people use only wireless services. Like pay phones, long-distance calls -- and their premium prices -- are relics of a past without national and unlimited calling plans.

12. World Wide Web

Nobody talks about the "World Wide Web" anymore, or the "Information Superhighway," for that matter. It's just the Internet. It's a distinction that Steve Czaban, the popular Fox Sports Radio talk show host, likes to mock when he refers to the "Worldwide Interweb." Nothing dates you more than pulling out one of those old-fashioned ways of referring to the Internet such as "infobahn" or "electronic highway."

Desconectado DarkBios

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Re: Para que no nos tilden de dinosaurios
« Respuesta #1 : agosto 27, 2009, 03:14:50 pm »
a huevos esta pelado, ya lo ley de una carrerida y tenes razon:

cumplo con los sigientes:

1, 2, 3, 4, 7 y 12

Desconectado kojik69

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Re: Para que no nos tilden de dinosaurios
« Respuesta #2 : agosto 27, 2009, 03:22:10 pm »
a huevos esta pelado, ya lo ley de una carrerida y tenes razon:

cumplo con los sigientes:

1, 2, 3, 4, 7 y 12

Cumplís como?? que todavía usas los términos o de que ya no los usas??? :unsure:

Desconectado Snipe

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Re: Para que no nos tilden de dinosaurios
« Respuesta #3 : agosto 29, 2009, 11:27:16 pm »
Me causa gracia que la palabra "navegar" está desde que recuerdo la existencia del internet.

Desconectado ezrichard01

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Re: Para que no nos tilden de dinosaurios
« Respuesta #4 : agosto 29, 2009, 11:54:36 pm »
Muy interesante, hay ondas que yo ni las he usado porque relativamente hace poco entre en esto de la informatica, y los jovenes desconocen o hacen caso omiso de los terminos como el www, intranet, etc
Tarde o temprano, la disciplina vencerá a la inteligencia.

Desconectado mxgxw

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Re: Para que no nos tilden de dinosaurios
« Respuesta #5 : septiembre 01, 2009, 08:13:57 am »
Me causa gracia que la palabra "navegar" está desde que recuerdo la existencia del internet.

En español. En ingles antes se utilizaba mucho web surfing. La palabra browsing viene más a ser la acción de utilizar un "web browser".

El último término de World Wide Web, aunque estoy de acuerdo que no se usa... pues no es exactamente por la razón que expone el artículo. El protocolo HTTP y el HTML nacieron luego de la invención del internet propiamente dicho. El concepto de hipervínculos se desarrolló con el HTML y el término WWW se acuño principalmente para los servicios HTTP que servían páginas en HTML.

Un ejemplo. Vos entrabas a un sitio www.algunlugar.com sabias que iba a ser un site HTML. si entrabas  a ftp.algunlugar.com esperabas que fuera un servicio FTP. Al pasar el tiempo, el prefijo www se ha vuelto opcional ya que se asume que la mayoría de servicios en internet son HTTP y sirven HTML. Así que si escribis svcommunity.org sabés que debería equivaler a www.svcommunity.org.