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If "Point and click web development without writing any code - create websites for free, wysiwyg style" is not shown property. Visit the source link above.
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Build The Next Big
Thing Without Writing Any Code |
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Take a look through these ten solutions —
which range from common, everyday type of Google Maps mashups to
heavy-hitting, enterprise-level applications — and be amazed at how
very little work can bring big results. |
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DevHub: A
point-and-click solution for developing a site, with monetization
in place from the day you open it up. The themes are
customizable, so your site needn’t be immediately recognizable as
being from DevHub; there is some branding indicating that your site
is a DevHub site, but it is pretty unobtrusive. DevHub is the
perfect solution for people who have an idea for a site, but have
no clue how to even begin coding (read
Craig’s coverage on SitePoint). |
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Iceberg: Iceberg
is a business development application tool that operates completely
within a visual editor, allowing anyone to build and launch an
application for their employees. You can build just about
anything with it, and the service is available for free to
non-profit groups and companies with less than five
employees. |
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IBM
Mashup Center: The IBM Mashup Center comes packed with
features, but is not too overwhelming for non-technical users
wanting to create new tools. It allows you to create widgets
for various mashups and to build pipes to bend information into a
way that is more usable to you. The Rapid Assembly tool
allows you take widgets from just about anywhere on the Web and
drag-and-drop them to form an entirely new creation of your
own. |
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JackBe:
JackBe is a mashup builder with a enterprise slant to it.
Using their Presto Mashup Composer — a web browser-based
visual mashup composition tool — both business-oriented users
and IT-savvy developers can produce a whole bevy of mashups to
serve both the company and its customers. The tool works as
an Eclipse plug-in for Java development that will allow you to
design, test, debug and deploy mashups. |
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Ning: Although there
are hundreds, if not thousands, of stand-alone social networks in
the world already, someone has to build one dedicated to people who
collect matchbooks. This is exactly the problem Ning attempts
to solve as it is dedicated to letting you set up a social network
in moments that is dedicated to the subject of your choice.
When a person first sets up their network, which only requires you
to answer questions, it will be supported by advertisements
controlled by Ning. This can be turned off by paying a monthly fee,
and there are other levels of monthly subscription if you need more
features, like additional storage, more bandwidth or a unique
URL. |
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OpenKapow: OpenKapow
will allow you to remix just about any web service you can think of
and bundle them into a widget to be shared with others. Want
to know where a phone call came from geographically? Enter
the number and YellowPages.com will display the location on a
Google Map. While this is a simple example, the possibilities
here are pretty much endless, and the path to creating to a
finished product couldn’t be simpler. |
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Pipes.deri.org:
Deri.org admits they were inspired by Yahoo Pipes, but it certainly
looks like they learned from the big Y and changed things up enough
to keep it interesting. You can pull in information using
RDF, XML, Microformats, JSON or a binary stream and then output it
in XML, RDF or JSON. You can choose to use the finished
product as a stand-alone site, or it can be embedded it into an
existing application. |
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Tarpipe: Tarpipe is
another pipes-style solution for remixing various content into one
application or destination, but there are a few points of
difference from competing solutions. While at its core, the
Tarpipe solution is all about making mashups of various online
services, you can also trigger processes by e-mail messages,
instant messaging updates and third-party applications. You
can also easily share your completed projects on sites such as
Evernote, FriendFeed, Flickr and Twitter. |
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WaveMaker:
WaveMaker offers both a desktop application and a cloud-hosted
version that provides the ability to drag-and-drop items to create
complex applications without coding. Wavemaker is also
available in an enterprise version for those who are ready to take
their next big thing to the next big
level. |
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Yahoo Pipes:
Yahoo Pipes is a product from Yahoo that is dedicated to nothing
but helping you build mashups from just about any source that has
some sort of feed. Suppose you wanted to view
a visual representation of the population of the United
States — all you have to do is drag and drop some modules
into the pipe, enter the data from the feeds to be filtered the way
you want to see it, and you’re done. There’s no hard coding
— just filling in feed information and checking some
boxes. The finished products are all hosted on Yahoo and can
be shared with anyone. |
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