Buried Bones (Archive) for December, 2004
Alan Levine aka CogDog barked this December 30th, 2004 1:01 am
Pontification on the meteoric popularity of Flickr is a common past time– and it makes all the sense in the world of network hubs, preferential attachment, link fitness, etc (see Thinking About Links…).
Flickr was hardly the first photoblog site (I danced a bit with fotolog and buzznet before flickr even hit the seen) but flickr’s [...]
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Posted in small pieces | 3 Comments »
Alan Levine aka CogDog barked this December 30th, 2004 12:25 am
Thanks to some good feedback from suers, I’ve been able to make some needed corrections to our Feed2JS (RSS Feeds rendered via JavaScript). Like a Homer Simpson Doh! slap across the forehead, I realized that while I was faithfully adding to the main page’s history, it certainly could use an RSS Feed to publish news [...]
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Posted in rss | 2 Comments »
Alan Levine aka CogDog barked this December 29th, 2004 11:22 pm
In addition to interesting initiatives such as WikiBooks to publish free content, comes this interesting announcement from the giant Internet Archive:
International Libraries and the Internet Archive collaborate to build Open-Access Text Archives
Today, a number of International libraries have committed to putting their digitized books in open-access archives, starting with one at the Internet Archive. [...]
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Posted in web good dog | 1 Comment »
Alan Levine aka CogDog barked this December 28th, 2004 8:46 am
Ahh, it is creeping up New Year, and the insightful pundits are rolling out the grand prognostications. Is their crystal ball really any sharper than yours or mine? Why?
Here is mine:
I predict that I will not be making any new year predictions.
That’s it.
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Posted in Blog Pile | Comments Off
Alan Levine aka CogDog barked this December 27th, 2004 7:14 pm
Looking for trends? You do not need pundits or experts, just keep your eyes open. I liked a saying I heard at the last EDUCAUSE meeting on the point where a technology reaches a wide range of acceptance- it appears as a consumer item, the “BestBuyification” of technology.
I was doing some shopping at Costco (more [...]
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Posted in small pieces | 1 Comment »
Alan Levine aka CogDog barked this December 27th, 2004 5:08 pm
People and journalists are writing about a blogging phenomena n Greensboro, North Carolina, which apparently is becoming a critical mass as maybe a hub in public engagement in blogging (reading, writing, commenting), Jay Rosen in Greensboro Newspaper Goes Open Source: A Follow Up:
I am going to stay on the story of the Greensboro blogging [...]
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Posted in rss, wide world of blog | Comments Off
Alan Levine aka CogDog barked this December 27th, 2004 4:49 pm
Readers know how affectionate and enamored I am of flickr but the feelings are just as gooey for ecto, the desktop blog editing tool for Mac OSX and Windows. In fact, it is one of the very few software titles out there that I shelled out some shareware $ for.
Without a doubt, I would [...]
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Posted in small pieces | 1 Comment »
Alan Levine aka CogDog barked this December 27th, 2004 4:36 pm
It has actually been several months since I read
“Linked: How Everything Is Connected to Everything Else and What It Means” (Albert-Laszlo Barabasi) but I keep coming back to it, scribbling in the margins, and finding it so insightful to thinking about links between people, places, and things on the net. It has everything to [...]
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Posted in small pieces | 2 Comments »
Alan Levine aka CogDog barked this December 23rd, 2004 3:27 pm
flickr foto
Photo Radaravailable on my flickr
I got a not so notice photo mailed to me form the city of Scottsdale. They took an unflattering photo of me doing 36 in a 25 mph zone. In ths modified scan, [...]
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Posted in Blog Pile | 1 Comment »
Alan Levine aka CogDog barked this December 23rd, 2004 12:24 pm
In the last 2 hours I experienced a computer religious experience. I opened the box for my new G4 laptop, connected a firewire cable from it to my old laptop, and then watched in awe as the entire content, applications, and set up were transferred over. It was 100% smooth (so far).
Details on how to [...]
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