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JOHO the Blog | a Parody of The Real Blogger's Manifesto
(by Duncan, @ 10:30 AM)
via Scripting News - JOHO the Blog | a Parody of The Real Blogger's Manifesto B-):
Because parody is the sincerest form of flattery...
David - yes another David! - Weinberger parodies Chris Pirillo's Blogger's Manifesto.
One of these days' I'll need to do a Jotter's Manifesto. In the meantime, back to supervising my lab ;-)...
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Custom Weblog Post
(by Duncan, @ 11:06 AM)
via a Radio UserLand : RadioExpress announcement - Jeremy Bower's Custom Weblog Post
The Custom Weblog Post tool allows the user to create (sub-)templates that have more structure then RU's default flat text box. It ships with a template that matches the behavior of Manila's News Items, using the RU 'blogs categories as the choosable categories. Thus, for people who are used to posting with Manila's News Items, this provides a nice migration path to the RU 'blog, especially if you used the Manila Site Converter tool which will preserve your categories.
It also provides scriptlets which can be used in a similar fashion to Manila Express, allowing the user to highlight some text, and hit a bookmark/link on the link bar, and have RU fill out the page title, link, and selected text in a textarea, ready for editting. These scriptlets work in Mozilla and IE, and may or may not work in other browsers.
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CSS, cascading style sheets, HTML, Website Tips at Websitetips.com - web page and web site tips, articles, helpful information and resources
(by Duncan, @ 2:46 PM)
CSS, cascading style sheets, HTML, Website Tips at Websitetips.com - web page and web site tips, articles, helpful information and resources
The CSS Section below is filled with links to some of the best articles, tips, tutorials, editors, and templates on cascading style sheets (CSS).
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Google Directory - Computers > Open Source > Licenses
(by Duncan, @ 2:47 PM)
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Digital Diploma Mills: The Automation of Higher Education by David F. Noble
(by Duncan, @ 3:39 PM)
Very thought-provoking - Digital Diploma Mills: The Automation of Higher Education by David F. Noble
...The major change to befall the universities over the last two decades has been the identification of the campus as a significant site of capital accumulation, a change in social perception which has resulted in the systematic conversion of intellectual activity into intellectual capital and, hence, intellectual property. There have been two general phases of this transformation. The first, which began twenty years ago and is still underway, entailed the commoditization of the research function of the university, transforming scientific and engineering knowledge into commercially viable proprietary products that could be owned and bought and sold in the market. The second, which we are now witnessing, entails the commoditization of the educational function of the university, transforming courses into courseware, the activity of instruction itself into commercially viable proprietary products that can be owned and bought and sold in the market. In the first phase the universities became the site of production and sale of patents and exclusive licenses. In the second, they are becoming the site of production of - as well as the chief market for - copyrighted videos, courseware, CD-ROMs, and Web sites...
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diveintomark - the moral case for CSS
(by Duncan, @ 4:58 PM)
diveintomark/February, 2002
We've already covered technical, aesthetic, and business arguments for CSS. It promotes separation of content and design. It eases maintenance. It can even save you money if you use it wisely. Now for the moral argument. The moral argument for CSS is accessibility.
Guess what I'm building up to?
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Salon.com Technology | All hail .Net!
(by Duncan, @ 9:11 PM)
People are asking who the hell is Peter Wright* and why in Salon.com Technology | All hail .Net! he spouts such claptrap:
Microsoft's new software development tools are more than just nifty -- they are a great boon to humanity.
* answer at the end of the article:
About the writer -
Peter Wright is a software consultant and the author of numerous books on Visual Basic programming. He is currently working on two .Net titles for Apress slated for release later this year.
Talk about conflict of interest!?
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Frasier
(by Duncan, @ 10:07 PM)
Just watching the 200th episode of Frasier where he's celebrating his 2000th radio show with special guest star Bill Gates!
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Welcome to the Script Meridian
(by Duncan, @ 12:22 PM)
Yay! Seth and Jim have been busy - Welcome to the Script Meridian the reincarnation of the Script Meridian Community Mailing list and archive. This is now hosted on a Conversant site.
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Extreme Programming Six Degrees
(by Duncan, @ 11:14 AM)
Six Degrees - Weblog
We found something while developing Six Degrees...
I won't leave you in suspense; we found a development process that really works, the best that anyone on the team has experienced. The process that we use is a combination of adherance to the Joel Test and Extreme Programming (XP). Those two things plus our past experience and our willingness to adjust the process make what we have going now pretty powerful....
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Faculty Review
(by Duncan, @ 11:18 AM)
The next Faculty Review of the department in which I work takes place tomorrow. Faculty Reviews are conducted quinquennially and address Teaching, Research, Management, and Resource issues. They also undertake to identify, in collaboration with the department, likely developments during the next five years to get these onto the Faculty radar.
As a member of academic staff the main questions we need to ask ourselves to prepare for the review boil down to: "what are your tasks and how do you know you are doing a good job?" At first sight these seem simple enough questions. I'm pondering them now. It helps when I write these things down. Given that my answers don't need to be treated as confidential I might follow-up this post with them. However, I'm sure that the Faculty Review process and recommendations are confidential so please don't expect me to comment upon them.
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O'Reilly Network: Windows XP from a Mac Perspective
(by Duncan, @ 2:19 PM)
O'Reilly Network: Windows XP from a Mac Perspective
Author's note: This is not an objective analysis of Windows XP. Instead, this article reflects a view of Microsoft's latest OS compared to my experiences with Mac OS X and Windows 98. Even though Mac OS X is my preferred operating system, I work in Windows too. Over the last few months I had grown really tired of Windows 98 and its oddities, so I placed my hopes in XP that it might deliver a better computing environment. Here's what happened...
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XML.com: Second Generation Web Services
(by Duncan, @ 2:27 PM)
XML.com: Second Generation Web Services
Claim: The next generation of web services will use individual data objects as endpoints. Software component boundaries will be invisible and irrelevant.
Otherwise known as "REST and be thankful!" ;-)
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Glasgow : City of Love!
(by Duncan, @ 2:44 PM)
From three years ago - BBC News | UK | St Valentine remembered
If St Valentine's day proves nothing else it is that love can thrive in the unlikeliest of places.
And it does not come much more unlikely than a monastery in one of Scotland's most deprived inner city areas.
But friars at the church of Blessed St John Duns Scotus in Glasgow's Gorbals area have held a special Valentine's service on Sunday, putting on display what are thought to be the martyr's bones.
And they are hoping the relics could help make Glasgow Europe's city of love.
In fact, Glasgow has proclaimed itslef to be 'City of Love' and you can check out the Glasgow City Council - Web Cameras in George Square to see the huge fairground ferris wheel that's at the centre of the celebrations. If you look carefully, web cam #1 shows the red heart at the centre of the wheel Aah! ;-)
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