# Sunday, August 18, 2002

Scripting News Related To That Where Are The Developers These Days I

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[Scripting News] : Related to that, where are the developers these days. I'm not talking about hoardes of people who clone Unix and Unix utilities. I mean people doing real new software, new ideas, patentable stuff, who aren't taking the patents. Those are the people we should be hearing from. I also like hearing from smart respected lawyers. I'm not one of those people who think all lawyers are slime. But something is really wrong when all we hear from re technology are lawyers. That's when you get disconnects like his oft-repeated mantra that developers aren't doing anything. Well, Larry, if you don't talk to developers, how could you possibly know?

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All too busy to bother e-mailing? There's loads of software out there, what does he want to hear?

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Monster Site Of NET Links And Resources It Has Just Come

Monster site of .NET Links and Resources. It has just come to my attention that Keene Systems is maintaining a most excellent .NET Resoource Site with tons of links. Great stuff! [Sam Gentile's Radio Weblog]
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Flash Explores New Angles Macromedias Flash MX Allows

Flash Explores New Angles. Macromedia's Flash MX allows users to do a number of cool tricks, including switching instantaneously between video clips. By Lisa Delgado. [Wired News]

What I'd like to see is this done in a really cute Zeepe wrapper frame.

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This Should Be A Followup

This should be a followup
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# Saturday, August 17, 2002

Via Radio Free Blogistannbspto Organica Who Kindly Provide A List Of A Href

Via Radio Free Blogistan to organica who kindly provide a list of weblog crawlers - what do they do beyond crawl and simple search?

 

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# Friday, August 16, 2002

Jon Udells Personal RSS Aggregators Ar

Jon Udell's (Personal RSS Aggregators) article discusses the benefits of what I call "citation analysis" - a number of people are referring to this, but all the context of Google. While probably the most famous implementation I think it is quite probable that weblogs themselves will benefit from this analysis to determine "hubs" and "authorities".

Profundis (it no longer works, but the docs are 'interesting') implemented a variation on the algorithm proposed by Jon Klienberg and yielded interesting results. What Profundis showed was the web as communities - and the algorithm would reach a steady state on these communities. What would be interesting is whether weblogs are also  "steady state" communities (they should be because they are just web pages) and whether application of the algorithm would enable one to find (by recommendation of the algorithm) the most relevant to oneself of the logs in the community.

Profundis was written a couple of years ago - it appears that Jon Klienberg has some new papers up (or after I was looking) on gossip protocols (whatever they are) and analysis of small worlds - might be interesting to follow up.

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The Trouble Is That Once You Start Wandering Around The Web It Consumes Nearly All Your Time Which Is OK For Journalists An

The trouble is that once you start wandering around the web it consumes nearly all your time (which is OK for journalists) and you get sunk beneath 8 million different possible ways of implementing "hello world":

http://www.mozilla.org/projects/xul/xre.html

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Aggie Looks Interesting In Fact Not Quite So Interesting A C App That Does

Aggie looks interesting.... In fact not quite so interesting - a C# app that does threaded download of rss files and then builds an aggregated xml file that is then transformed by xml and the result shown in a browser. Once more a completely separate tool.
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There Doesnt Seem To Be A Way In Here To Organise My Information Nor To Encompass The Browsing Experience Into Building That Kn

There doesn't seem to be a way in here to organise my information nor to encompass the browsing experience into building that knowledge base (space). Is this information searchable (privately or by anyone else?). Rather than starting from scratch, is it possible to build a frame application around radio that makes callbacks onto the local server (like subscribe to rss feed)?
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This Is And Will Be An Interesting Thing To Keep An Eye On Mono

This is and will be an interesting thing to keep an eye on: Mono.

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