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A kind, anonymous person pointed me towards fyuze, another RSS news aggregator. Has anyone else used it? I'll add it to the list on the presentation I gave today. Hopefully I'll be able to get it online soon and link to it, although I included far less commentary on the slides than I normally do because of time constraints.
I hadn't thought of it, but I noted today that this works well in rural areas, too.
Here's a good one from my Dad: Facing the Music - Enron. It does require Flash, but it's a funny "Behind the Music" parody.
Additional Kool-Aid for the ILA folks. I know you're getting tired of hearing about them, but it's baptism by fire after all. The above paragraph is part of a larger essay Dave has written about the one week it took him to become addicted to Radio. All I can really say here is "ditto." Oh, and Laura - Dave is the guy who is blogging how to use FrontPage in general, but specifically how to use FP and Radio together. After you install Radio, you'll want to subscribe to his site! :-)
Lots of bloggers have been linking to this article, but I'm choosing David's commentary as my post because I think he raises an excellent point. How then do you Google Bomb Dvorak? Watching the Grammys and here comes an actual lecture about piracy on the Net! Let's praise all of these artists, and chastise you for taking away their livelihoods. This is just too hilarious. I feel really bad for the three poor college kids who are getting held up to the world for downloading songs backstage. "Make sure you download music from legal sites only." Name one. Name one big, RIAA-backed site that will let me download a song and put it on my MP3 player. Name one that will agree that once I've bought it, it's mine to listen to as I please. You can't do it, can you? Is this guy really serious? Is he really going to stand up there and lecture me when the artists they're ripping off are sitting in the audience? I guess they couldn't get a single artist to stand up there and give that speech. I can't wait to see the blog reaction to this! Let the games begin!
For when you hear the argument that the DMCA just makes us compliant with existing international laws. Does not. Today I found yet another site to add to my news aggregator. At the ILA RTSF meeting today, there was a question about how to judge which sites to trust for your aggregator, and I didn't get to note one of the greatest benefits I've been given by the blog community and the Radio community in particular. Simplly by installing Radio and playing around with it, I found a network of trusted advisors, philosophers, connectors, and human gateways. In Userland-land, it's pretty easy to spot the movers and shakers. What they don't tell you is that you suddenly re-discover the joy of browsing to find the gems. Across the entire blogging spectrum, you recognize pretty quickly who you consider aggregator-worthy and why. At least, that's how it's been for me. So what site did I just add, you ask? Steal This Idea: Knowledge Management for the People. Mainly because I want to track Craig's Idea and what he does with it. Craig is a lawyer who is exploring ways to use Radio to help track his cases, his thoughts about his cases, and context for his cases.
I'll be interested to see how he does with this. I'm intrigued with the outlines feature of Radio, too, but that's something for another day when I have time to truly delve into it. Like when I retire or something or they add another hour to the day. Tonight eight-year old Kailee came to me with a piece of paper. It was a sign-in form for her club, and she wanted to know if she could copy it five times so that she could give one to each of her neighborhood friends. I said sure, thinking she meant could she have some more paper or take the time to hand-copy them. When I went upstairs a few minutes later, I found her at the fax machine. She had meant could she copy the page using the fax machine. And not only that, she knew how to do it on her own. That'll teach me to blindly say "sure" without further inquiry. Partnership bolsters wireless instant messaging
It's interesting to watch the evolution of a new form of communication, isn't it? So with this type of technology embedded in an IM client, why couldn't we construct an IM query interface to an online catalog? Would this be a viable entry point for remote searching?
We now return you to your regularly scheduled programming.
This morning's meeting was really exciting, and my brain was tumbling new ideas in its washing machine afterwards. While I was talking about aggregating RSS news feeds for handling information overload and disseminating information, I heard Tom say, "Wow." That's all I need in a situation like that - one person who gets it. One light bulb in a room full of people and I'm happy. So I was pretty high afterwards. Cut to an hour after the meeting, and I got the proverbial slap in the face on a totally unrelated topic. I have to get to work on the Tech Summit for tomorrow, and I can't because I'm so angry I can't concentrate. I can't even sit still at the computer at the moment, so I'm taking a little break. I'll get back to posting later tonight. :-
When did I miss this one?! Rocking! Dann's graphic for comments is even an IM icon! This would be a wonderful addition to my new information workflow. Well, I'm back from the meeting and I think it went pretty well. Yesterday I pitched blogging and RSS internally, today I pitched it to the RTSF sub-committee (is that the right terminology, Teri?), and tomorrow I'll hang my hat on it yet again at the Technology Summit. Confirmed light bulb count so far:
Baby steps....
Does anyone know of any special libraries or environmental libraries that are blogging? Please let me know if you do!
Today I'm demonstrating blogging at the ILA RTSF meeting!
Microsoft to Adopt Instant Message Archiving Technology "IMlogic's archiving system, IMLog 2000, is designed to integrate with existing IM infrastructures to enable enterprises to keep a record of business conducted via IM. IMLog provides the ability to record, log, index, search, audit, and retrieve IM communications." [IDG InfoWorld] I wonder if it will work with Trillian and other third-party software that provides inter-operability. This is starting to get close to John Robb's proposal to incorporate instant messaging logs into a knowledge management system.
Great... yet another language to learn - 3dhtml. Actually, it's very interesting and the examples are cool. Of course, you'll need a newish browser to view them. [via MeFi]
Ads feature the full-paged visage of dour drug czar John Walters (a PDF document) [via Daypop Top 40] You can tell I need a morning Coke because when I first read this headline, I thought it said "Ads feature the full-paged visage of dour drug czar John Waters." Now that's comedy!
Very cool! Can this be done with Radio? I'm not sure this is the "big neo-cortex" as Matt notes, but it does act as a built-in "see-also reference" like we have in libraryland. Even with the Greatness of Google, I don't think this will be truly killer until:
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Blogroll (Sites I Read in My Aggregator) Mobile Blogroll (Sites I Read on My Treo 600) Spreading the meme: Why You Should Fall to Your Knees and Worship a Librarian Unabridged: |
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