Updated: 5/18/02; 2:05:43 PM.

Doc News
Cool documentation, tools, tips and news posted from the Radio community and friends.


daily link  Saturday, May 18, 2002


WebEdit Rocks !. I've been introduced by the eVectors team to the refinements of WebEdit. [read more] [s l a m]

By way of Userland's Frontier ...

  2:05:40 PM  permalink  

Going Crazy With Outlines. Ever since the first time I read Mark Pilgrim's brillant dive into mark, I've been mildly jealous of his 'outline' CSS based style. [read more] [s l a m]

  1:41:33 PM  permalink  


daily link  Friday, May 17, 2002


IBM Ease of Use: The Core of Computing. Today's peripatetic lifestyles have spawned a massive dependence on portable computing devices. As users become increasingly reliant on laptops and PDAs, they desire ever more convenient computing options that will enhance their productivity while fitting seamlessly into their busy lives. [Tomalak's Realm]

Someday your blog will go with you as you scale yourself and your computer to suit the task of the moment.

  10:34:38 PM  permalink  

Blog Notes 2 - A Dozen Things We Know.

Blogging is in a primitive form. The heavy users only know that it is possible. "Why?" is a question that awaits a claifying "How?" 

Here are a dozen things we know.

  1. Personal publishing has always moved from the grassroots out to society and blogging is an advancement in personal publishing.
  2. The technical ground beneath "blogging" (web services, net services or whatever you want to call it) is moving from the grass roots out (and not from the top down as Oracle, Sun, IBM and Microsoft would have it.)
  3. The blogging phenomenon itself is a market based example of a self-organizing system that appears to be producing features and functions just as they are needed.
  4. The growth vectors associated with blogging dwarf the original growth vectors of the Web in Phase 1 (circa 1993-1995).
  5. The sprawling, "static web" is in need of a function like consciousness that guides and focuses attention. Blogging makes that a volunteer job (in the sense that the great assignments go to volunteers who see risk differently than the 'never volunteer  for anything' set.)
  6. As was the case in early static web publishing, the egos of the individual contributors are larger than life so the story is exciting.
  7. In it's current state, 'blogging' is the product of technologists who are less concerned with "Why?" than "How?" although they grapple with "Why?" as contnet.
  8. Even as the technology finds its limits, applications are being unearthed. Knowledge-Logs (or K-Logs) are an underground phenomenon that may deliver what Lotus Notes promised.
  9. While the throngs of marketing professionals have not yet embraced the phenomenon clusters of influence are forming. That sort of infrastructure (the social network that creates technical momentum) has a longer half-life than the technical innovation itself.
  10. The first real beach-head in the maturity of the tool set will be the arrival of the "usual suspects". Although some from the "Wired community" are on board (see boing boing), expect near term entries from the standard digerati.
  11. The rhetoric is heating up. With forecasts like "blogs will overturn conventional media by the end of 2002" circulating widely, there is relative assurance that this thing has the standard 3 year adoption windup. As near as we can tell, it's still year one.
  12. Blogging is a nuance. If the Bugler, the Scripting News, the Electronic Recruiting News and EGR haven't been blogs for the past 8 years, it's the underlying technology, not the form. That said, the nuance makes the form accessible to a far broader array of participants. Automatic transmissions, which made automobiles accessible to the majority, were a similar form of nuance.

[5th Constituency]

A little breathless (I'm still looking for consciousness in my neighborhood, let alone the web) but thought-provoking.

  10:31:52 PM  permalink  


daily link  Wednesday, May 15, 2002


Connecting Gadgets, Without Wires. Three years ago, a wireless technology called Bluetooth arrived with great fanfare, then flopped. Now, Bluetooth 1.1 is set for release. Is it any better? By David Pogue. [Headlines From The NY Times]

It won't be ubiquitous for another five years, but why not envision a soon-coming world where you-and-your blogging communities will be in touch 24-hours a day. Optionally. Turn them off when you wish. 1,500 companies are working hard to exploit the technology even now.

  9:46:24 PM  permalink  

Word Blogger is a port of my previous Word blogging macros to XML-RPC, this means they now work with other blogging tools besides Radio, and also you don't need to fiddle with Radio to enable the SOAP version of the BloggerAPI, it can all be enabled from the prefs page. It also includes a couple of tweaks suggested by Omar Shahine.

The next step is to call blogger.getRecentPosts so that its easier to edit existing posts from Word. The hurdle here is converting the HTML back into a sensible word document [surely Word must be able to do this for me ?] [Simon Fell]

Not for end users quite yet but a harbinger of a world where web services will allow us to choose our editor of choice and post to our weblog tool of choice.

  9:34:20 PM  permalink  

 
May 2002
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  
Apr   Jun
[Macro error: Can't call the script because the name "xmlCoffeeMug" hasn't been defined.]
Click to see the XML version of this web page.

Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.
Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website.

jenett.radio.simplicity.1.3


Copyright 2002 © Russ Lipton.
Last update: 5/18/02; 2:05:43 PM.