|
Thursday, December 28, 2000
Jimmy Carter: Make This Natural Treasure a National Monument. "The reason the Alaskan coastal plain is home today to a pageant of wildlife is that there have been both Republican and Democratic presidents who cared about the environment."
10:00:03 PM
|
|
XML Magazine: More than just Jabber. "Although Jabber was designed as an instant messaging system, its XML architecture enables it to do a whole lot more "
6:00:22 PM
|
|
MailToTheFuture's XML-RPC interface. A Frontier script that uses this interface.
6:00:22 PM
|
|
Doubleclick tries to regain credibility. Doubleclick entered 2000 with plans for new products, new revenue, and new customers. Instead, the Internet advertising company focused on crisis management. A ruckus started when a privacy advocacy group accused Doubleclick of planning to give out anonymous data to an offline direct-mail house.
5:00:43 PM
|
|
Stephan Somogyi: "OS X is not a revamped NeXT OS or even a seasoned Unix. It more closely resembles a computer-science Ph.D. project morphed into a commercial product spec."
5:00:33 PM
|
|
Just for fun I added a SOAP box to this DaveNet piece. It'll update without me, the channel author, having to do anything.
2:00:16 PM
|
|
A cult hero in the software world. Ray Ozzie wants to unlock once again the technology chains that bind you. The software hero who fashioned Lotus Notes now brings us peer-to-peer collaboration software. Mr. Ozzie is betting that Groove Networks will become as ubiquitous as email or the Web browser.
1:00:26 PM
|
|
Love-hate relationships with XML. Two sites which both embrace XML and criticize its flaws have appeared in the last few weeks: xmlsuck.com and xmlbastard.com.
10:00:34 AM
|
|
News.Com: New technology could help squelch digital music piracy. The plans are initially likely to affect removable or portable data storage, such as Zip drives or the Flash memory cards used in MP3 players. But the standards could ultimately serve as a way to keep consumers from copying copyrighted files directly onto their hard drives...
10:00:31 AM
|
|
News.Com: New technology could help squelch digital music piracy. The plans are initially likely to affect removable or portable data storage, such as Zip drives or the Flash memory cards used in MP3 players. But the standards could ultimately serve as a way to keep consumers from copying copyrighted files directly onto their hard drives...
10:00:14 AM
|
|
News.Com: Authors criticize Amazon's used book sales. In a letter earlier this month, the Association of American Publishers and the Authors Guild, whose board of directors includes Michael Crichton and Garrison Keillor, called on Amazon founder and chief executive Jeff Bezos to put a higher priority on selling new books.
10:00:14 AM
|
|
Free Links, Only $50 Apiece. Some online news sites have begun charging others to link to their articles. The Albuquerque Journal, for instance, charges $50 for the right. But legal experts say no U.S. law or court decision allows a website to successfully demand payment. Declan McCullagh reports from Washington.
4:00:07 AM
|
|
|
|
Recent Posts
|