Posts Tagged ‘Canvas’

Webstruxure Builds Fuel Labelling Site for Government

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

From 7 April 2008, cars for sale in New Zealand will have to display information about the vehicle’s fuel economy. This information, usually in the form of a printed label displayed with the car, will help buyers choose a vehicle that uses less fuel. The fuel labels and fuel information are available from the Fuel Economy Labelling site, built by Webstruxure, which got a lot of media coverage recently – it was the lead item on TV3 News last Wednesday (see http://tinyurl.com/2g7a4o).

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Webstruxure was chosen to build the site by the Government’s Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority (EECA). This is the third vehicle sustainability site that Webstruxure has built for the Government over the last two years. These sites are becoming increasingly important for motorists hit by the strongly rising trend in fuel prices.

First came Fuelsaver, which allows motorists to work out the fuel consumption of their vehicle, or of a vehicle they’re thinking of buying, based on the vehicle’s characteristics and their own driving habits – and figure out how they can reduce fuel consumption and costs.

Next, we developed Rightcar for Land Transport New Zealand. Rightcar lets users compare vehicles on a range of criteria, including fuel economy, the safety of passengers and other road users, and carbon dioxide and pollutant emissions. The site has been a big success, with a lot of people researching potential car purchases online.

The Fuel Economy Labelling site allows car dealers and others in the industry to print the fuel labels that will be mandatory (with some exceptions, as explained on the site) from 7 April. It also provides information for vehicle buyers and private sellers, including an extensive set of FAQs.

Behind these sites are our tools for collecting and managing vehicle data on behalf of the various government bodies. This has to be understood and massaged into a shape useful for such things as information-based websites and fuel labels.

That’s the link between these sites and our products such as siteNav, Sketch and the forthcoming Canvas – we make tools to turn big blocks of data into useable information.

We are pleased that our expertise in this area has continued to be recognised by Government agencies. We’re also happy that we can make a contribution to improving the sustainability of New Zealand’s vehicle fleet.

Web 3.0, the Semantic Web, and Webstruxure

Wednesday, February 20th, 2008

There’s been a lot of buzz lately about the Semantic Web and Web 3.0 (which may or may not be the same thing). ReadWriteWeb has been leading the charge, and Hutch Carpenter provides an explanation of the Semantic Web that actually makes sense to me.

Webstruxure isn’t currently using the Resource Description Framework. Nevertheless, Canvas, one of the products we have under development, is very much in the Semantic Web space. As I described previously, Canvas takes content in HTML format and makes it dynamically reusable based on how it’s been tagged.

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Webstruxure has been helping our clients take semi-structured data and make it available to their users in meaningful ways since 2002, as described on our About Us page. We don’t really mind whether our products and applications are identified with the Semantic Web, Web 3.0 or anything else. But if the web as whole is moving in the direction we’re going, then that’s all to the good.

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Canvas: Say Goodbye to Database Backends

Friday, January 25th, 2008

I’ve talked about Sketch quite a bit in recent postings. That project is humming along nicely, and will soon go into alpha testing, but it’s time to introduce the next project on our list. It’s a little thing called Canvas.

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Our products specialise in solving problems for web designers and their clients. Canvas solves a big one: it does away with the need to create a database backend to accomplish various website functions. It’s a web designer’s tool for making reusable content.

Previously, if a client wanted a site that could repeat content in different places, display specific items of content only under certain conditions, or generate content on demand, there was nothing for it but to go to the time, trouble and expense of hiring a developer and creating a database backend. Canvas does away with all that.

With Canvas, you create reusable items using a form, and you create formats in HTML that show Canvas how and when to display the reusable items. Canvas takes these two inputs and gives the data you want displayed the way you want it. No developers, no databases, no scripts for you to write.

Webstruxure’s products empower clients as well as designers. Sketch lets the client participate in the site design and content creation process from an early stage. The simple form-filling interface of Canvas makes it easy for a client to create new reusable items for the site you’ve designed.

Whether you’re Rembrandt or Jackson Pollock, Rita Angus or Colin McCahon, Canvas frees you up to express yourself as a designer. We like to think of it as a work of art.

A Sketch of 2008

Friday, December 21st, 2007

2007 is almost over. It’s time to wish you a happy holiday and look ahead to what’s coming up for Webstruxure in 2008.

First of all, there’s Sketch – the tool that can do everything, as I rather ambitiously called it in a previous post. We’re making rapid progress on this, and we’re now looking at a beta release in the first half of 2008.

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Sketch is an online prototyping tool that lets web professionals and their clients work collaboratively on the structure and content of web sites. But it’s not just a prototyping tool: at the end of the process, you get a set of files that constitute a working website that can then be refined and styled using applications such as Dreamweaver.

When the time is right, we’ll be calling for beta testers. Contact us if you’re interested.

Coming up behind Sketch are other products which are designed to make the lives of web designers and builders, and their clients, easier and better. In 2008, we’ll be telling you more about Canvas, FormStore, and some of the other projects we’ve got in the pipeline.

Along with development of these products, we’ll be continuing to develop applications for individual clients. In April 2008, for example, cars* sold in car yards or online in New Zealand will be required to display vehicle fuel economy information. We’re building the application to produce the vehicle fuel economy labels, as an extension of our work on the Fuelsaver and Rightcar sites. In January, I’ll be spending some time in car yards as we test the fuel labelling application out with car dealers.

This application continues our record of working with Government departments to provide information to users through easy-to-use online applications. That’s sparked our interest in how small firms can often provide better value for money for Government projects than the “big iron” firms that usually win Government contracts. In 2008, we’ll be outlining how small firms, working singly or together, can make a big difference to Government IT procurement – an area that doesn’t always go smoothly.

So, plenty to be going on with. I’m off to catch my breath and recharge my batteries. See you in 2008.

* This applies to new and used light vehicles (cars, utes, vans and small trucks) of 3.5 tonnes or under manufactured from the year 2000 onwards, with some exceptions.