Results for "8"

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  • Web
    Doin’ it for the People

    My first reaction when I looked at my referer logs and saw I'd been slashdotted was: Holy Shit! Actually it was Marc Canter'sPeopleAggregator that was the main link in the Slashdot article, but it was my interview with Marc that caused it. I've gotten 2000-odd visits from Slashdot so far...

  • Web
    Interview with Marc Canter

    Read/Write Web is pleased to bring you this special feature, an interview with software pioneer Marc Canter. Marc is one of the founding fathers of multimedia, having created tools and content in the medium since the late 70's and early 80's. He formed a company called MacroMind in 1984 and...

  • Web
    CSS Libraries – Making CSS Layouts Easier for Web Designers

    Interesting comment from Lucas Gonze in the comments to my post regarding Lockergnome's CSS-to-Tables re-design. Incidentally, Lockergnome is in the process of moving back to CSS - good on ya! But here's what Lucas said about my pro-CSS rark-up, replicated in full:Lockergnome went back not because it preferred tables but because they're...

  • Web
    Permutation City

    I've just finished reading a fantastic science-fiction book: Permutation City, by Greg Egan. It covers a lot of the themes that interest me - computer technology, virtual reality, avatars, evolution, alternate and parallel universes, philosophy, self-programming. Heck it even has an alien race (created by humans though). Now I realise...

  • Entertainment
    Remix Culture

    I might Go Quiet for a week or two following this post. I'm feeling a bit overwhelmed by blog reading and writing and maintenance. Time to set my focus back on family, work, contemplative writing (read: not seat-of-the-pants writing as blogging can get for me when Info Overload hits). Besides,...

  • Web
    Moving your Radio Userland comments system to PyCS

    I've now swapped my comments system from Radio Userland's comments server to the Python Community Server, developed and hosted by Phil Pearson. The reason I did this was because I've experienced frequent problems with Radio Userland's comments server, causing slow downloads of my webpages and sometimes no service. This is...

  • Web
    Subscriber Stats in Bloglines

    The RSS Aggregator Bloglines is starting to build a lot of whuffie on the Web and it's justly deserved. I signed up to Bloglines at the beginning of August 2003 and at the time I raved about the benefits of having a browser-based RSS Aggregator - as opposed to the...

  • Web
    Real Live Book

    One of my goals this year is to get my writing published professionally. I called it "Paper-publishing" when I wrote down the goal at the beginning of 2004, but I include online publications in this definition as well. I've taken my first steps to publish a non-fiction article, by submitting a...

  • Web
    To ebook or not to ebook, that is the question

    Over the past week I've been devouring a bunch of Etech 2004 session notes, including one I read today from Cory Doctorow on the subject of e-books. Cory wrote the book Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom and released it as a free download on his website in early 2003, under a...

  • Web
    Much Ado About Comments

    I've noticed that a few of my favourite webloggers are being hit by comment spam. Bill Seitz's WikiLog has been hammered this week and Andrew Chen noticed this morning a new trick. A spammer had exactly mirrored a comment made by me a few days ago on Andrew's weblog, using my name but replacing my URL with its...

  • Web
    American influence on the blogosphere

    Today I came across a very interesting article in the New Zealand Herald newspaper entitled "US power and influence warrent careful scrutiny" by columnist Barbara Sumner Burstyn. She starts off by explaining why she writes about America so much (and gets flack from her readers because of her perceived anti-American stance):"So why...

  • Web
    Getting back on the Writing train

    So I've decided to write and serialize a short story on Read/Write Web. I'll treat it as a mini-Nanowrimo, with me as the only participant (unless anyone else is game). I'll aim for 10,000 words in 2 weeks, which is pretty cushy compared to when I wrote 50,000 words over 4...

  • Web
    On Big Goals and measuring Success

    I've been following Erik Benson's recentposts about his quest to find a "Big Goal" to work towards. The conversation has been very heavy, which is hardly surprising since we're talking about The Meaning of Life here :-) I recommend you go over and read the discussion for yourself, but I wanted to cross-post...

  • Web
    Random thoughts about Blogging Overload

    Thought a) Some people post too much. Recently I subscribed to 7 Journalist Bloggers - 6 of them post too many items, so I've fallen behind already. One of them has 81 unread items sitting in my RSS Aggregator and it's only 3 or so days worth. It's too much! I don't...

  • Web
    Internal Corporate Blogging

    One of my 12 main categories for this weblog is Corporate Weblogging. I recently wrote my category headings in the form of a manifesto, so here is how I actually phrased it: "Weblog technology can be used to enhance Corporate/Business communications and KM."Thus far I haven't written much on this...

  • Web
    Fun with XSLT – my draft thematic taxonomy

    Over the past few days I've been doing some work on a new XSLT-based topic navigation for my weblog. I started it over xmas, but had parked it since the new year because of a couple of bugs. My goal was to swap my Radio Userland-hosted OMPL-to-HTML transform (see Weblog Archive - by Topic in my menu) with...

  • Social
    This is off our first record, most people don’t own it

    Well my Fractal Blogosphere concept seemed to generate some interest this week. I think it's the first article I've done that got picked up by the populace without the support of an A-Lister. By that I mean, it got linked to by many "normal" people and no A-Listers (as far as...

  • Web
    On the meaning of fractal

    Somepeople disagree with my use of the word "fractal" (see the comments to my last post). I've done some extensive reading on the subject this afternoon and I have to say I'm satisfied the term "fractal" is applicable both to my idea of a scaled blogosphere and to Sir Tim Berners-Lee's Fractal...

  • Web
    The Fractal Blogosphere

    In this article I draft guidelines for a Fractal Blogosphere and suggest that it be used as a measure of scale in the weblogging world. The goal is to help bloggers, particularly new ones, easily fit into a suitable blogging pattern. Joi Ito wrote an interesting post today in response to Clay Shirky's Inequality post. It's about...

  • Web
    Fractal Web applied to Blogging

    I review Tim Berners-Lee's recent interview with Christopher Lydon and analyse how the Fractal Society impacts on the world of blogging.Today I listened to Christopher Lydon's recent interview with Tim Berners-Lee, the creator of the World Wide Web. In it Berners-Lee discussed the state of the Web and outlined his vision of...

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