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Monday, March 04, 2002 |
Internet Access Gap Closing, but Other Inequities Remain
"For eighth-grader Dale Willis Jr., getting Internet access at home means no longer having to wait in line at the library for less than a half-hour at the computer. It means no longer scheduling his school day around teachers' availability to supervise -- and no more mockery from classmates....
Willis, 13, exemplifies the difference having Internet access at home can make. If people without home access are classified as disadvantaged, the "digital divide" is much larger than what recent studies suggest....
While overall home access reached 44 percent of the U.S. population in 2001, minorities and lower-income Americans were less likely to have it, according to Commerce. For example, half of blacks and Hispanics who use the Internet at public libraries can't log on from home, compared with only 30 percent of whites and 22 percent of Asians.
Among all kids ages 10 to 17, less than one-third of blacks and Hispanics have access at home while at least two-thirds of whites and Asians had it. Schools, libraries and community centers can be important for training people so they feel comfortable enough to eventually own a computer....
The current criteria of measuring the digital divide through access alone grew out of comparisons between the Internet and the telephone -- a device with fewer functions, noted Andrew Blau, a technology consultant who advises nonprofit groups.
A better approach, he said, is to compare Internet use with literacy.
Comparing access 'does a real disservice to understanding and seeing the real issues,' he said. 'We don't think, 'If everyone had a book, they would be literate.' " [at the Portsmouth Herald, via h20boro lib blog]
11:07:40 PM Permanent link here
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Everybody, put your hands together for Teri! Her article Today's PDAs Can Put OPAC in the Palm of Your Hand is now available in this month's issue of Computers in Libraries, and it includes a mention of Lori's work, too. Way to go, Teri!
"The most exciting of these combination PDA/bar code scanner devices, I think, is 3M's Digital Library Assistant or 'Palm-on-a-Stick.' When you've put Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags into your books, this tool can locate items in the stacks, so you can use it for shelf-reading and weeding, and for finding books and correcting circulation data. For instance, think of the classic case of a patron claiming that he's returned a book, but your system shows it's still checked out and overdue. You've checked the stacks and not found it, but perhaps it's only been mis-shelved. You can code the RFID number into the hand-held device, then go to the stacks and wave it across the shelves. When it reads the tag you're looking for, it will sound off to let you know. Book found, patron absolved. This product and the other pieces of the Digital Identification System have been beta tested at the University of Nevada Las Vegas....
Some of the vendors have already started trying. Innovative Interfaces, Inc. has two wireless products, according to III product manager John McCullough. The AirPAC is a stand-alone alternate OPAC product, designed for users of wireless devices. It is in its last round of testing and is being used by Boulder Public Library to provide services for patrons with cellphones that use the Wireless Application Protocol (WAP). In addition, Innovative Interfaces is currently developing an infrared beaming product to help patrons of libraries that use Innovative's Millennium product line. This upcoming product will probably be available sometime after the fall of 2002. We can probably expect to seemore of these kinds of add-on software programs in the future...." [via ...useless miscellany]
I've been volunteering SLS to beta test the infrared beaming with Palms for-freaking-ever.
10:58:44 PM Permanent link here
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The Shy Librarian - Free Issue
"In celebration of the one-year anniversary of The Shy Librarian, the entire Spring 2002 issue is being made available in PDF form." [Library Stuff]
This particular issue includes a write-up of Boston Public Library's successful ad campaign. I remember reading an article about two television commercials the Library produced. If memory serves, one included Peter Wolf from the J. Geils Band, a high cool factor for anyone my age, and a second one that showed the Mayor of Boston giving a speech. I never saw it, but supposedly he has to deal with a heckler who wants him to take on Giuliani and tell him that Boston's Library is better than New York City's Library. Good stuff.
10:28:09 PM Permanent link here
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The Face of the Net is A-changin'
"By 2006, the majority of online shoppers in the United States are likely to be over the age of 35, and one-third will be 50 or older, Jupiter said. By comparison, only 16 percent of the online shopping population is 50 or older today....
'You look at the numbers and there really isn't that much of a digital divide anymore, and it's closed so quickly,' said Arrison, whose public policy analysis firm advocates limiting government regulation of business.
Access to the Internet, either through home, work, school or the library, spread to 50 million people between 1996 and 2000--many times faster than the spread of television, radio and the PC when they were introduced, Arrison said." [CNET News.com]
Isn't it funny how older users are considered to be a good thing for the Internet, but bad for television? Seriously though, will we continue to see the digital divide close once the Bush administration dismantles the programs that spurred the bridge in the first place?
10:07:11 PM Permanent link here
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"The Shifted Librarian has some thoughts on Google Bombs. I don't get the analysis. Search engines rank returns. How do you propose they rank it?" [John Robb's Radio Weblog]
I'm worried about the weight given to blogs, as much as I love them. When Matt Haughey comes up higher than the company Critical IP site purely because more folks are linking to him, that's pure popularity, which isn't what you as a searcher necessarily want. It confuses things, especially for newbies. Radio is a perfect example. If someone comes to my reference desk for information about broadcast radio, I don't want the first ten results to be Winerlog. I'm not saying it's a crisis right now, but I am worried about all of those other types of manipulations mentioned in the Google Bombs article. When manipulating Google's search results becomes a game, search retrieval loses.
9:43:49 PM Permanent link here
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Star Wars on Telnet
"It only gets about halfway through, but still an amazing effort." [MetaFilter]
Apparently this is a couple of years old, but it's the first time I've seen it. I know Bruce and Andy will definitely enjoy it!
8:51:05 PM Permanent link here
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Morpheus' Downfall: Bills Weren't Paid
"In progressively more extreme statements, StreamCast Networks Chief Executive Steve Griffin has characterized the shutdown as an "attack" on his company and on the millions of people who used the Morpheus software. Bulletin and chat boards around the Web have been buzzing with conspiracy theories, ranging from a competitor's sabotage to plots by the record industry.
But in its first public statements since the blackout, Dutch company Kazaa BV, which provided StreamCast with its peer-to-peer technology, said there was a simple explanation.
"MusicCity (also known as StreamCast Networks) has failed to pay any amounts due to Kazaa BV under the parties' license agreement," Kazaa BV founder Niklas Zennstrom wrote in an e-mail to CNET News.com. "As a result of MusicCity's breach, Kazaa BV did not provide version 1.5 to MusicCity. Kazaa has also terminated MusicCity's license." [via News.com]
So it all comes down to money. I guess they weren't really in it for the free trading after all. ;-)
8:44:23 PM Permanent link here
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Suh-weet! Roxio Paves Way for Books on CD
"Software maker Roxio and spoken-word audio provider Audible on Monday announced software that will allow customers to burn Audible tracks on CDs.
Despite investment support from Microsoft, Audible has struggled in recent years, laying off 40 percent of its staff last year and scrambling to keep its stock above $1 a share. One of the limiting factors for the company has been a lack of options for listening to books on the go. Audible tracks will only run on a few MP3 players from Sonicblue and Digisette, a few models of Pocket PC-based handheld computers, and an add-on for Handspring's Visor handhelds.
The Roxio software will be available in a few months as a free plug-in for Audible's Audible Manager software. After 30 days of use, customers will be able to continue using the free plug-in, but it will only be able to burn tracks at the CD writer's slowest speed. For full-speed burning, Roxio will sell its Easy Creator 5 CD burning application for $100. " [CNET News.com]
Audible's modified MP3 players are actually pretty cool because they allow bookmarking and they remember where you left off when you turn off the device. I wish they could do a better job of advertising these features, because they're necessary for listening to MP3 audiobooks. The CDs will be great for the car, but not a portable CD player or boombox.
I'll be surprised if the book publishers don't find this upsetting, though, since it makes it easier to pirate audio ebooks. You used to be able to find a few major works on Napster (Stephen King, Harry Potter, Michael Crichton), but it will be interesting to watch what happens with this new functionality added to Audible titles. Will it be the apocalypse or a blip?
3:18:02 PM Permanent link here
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Recording Honcho Presses Ahead
" 'CD copy protection technology is a measured response to a very serious problem facing the music industry today,' RIAA chief Hilary Rosen said in a letter (PDF) last Thursday, referring to online piracy through informal MP3 swapping or more organized file-trading applications." [Wired News]
I'd like to know what about it is "measured" since I can't do anything except listen to those CDs on a home or car stereo. Are the alternatives to leave CDs the way they are or sell me a CD I can't listen to at all? I don't think "measured" passes muster then. Here's more from the article:
"Boucher had asked if the recording industry would 'support independent testing of the effect on sound quality' the protection mechanisms might have. Rosen shot back with the Washingtonese equivalent of absolutely-not-fat-chance.
'We don't see why technologies to protect copyrighted musical content should be treated any differently than technologies to protect copyrighted movies, video games, software or books, none of which has been subjected to the kind of independent testing you describe,' Rosen said."
So again, I ask what "good faith" gestures are they willing to bring to the table then? At what point does this become legalized racketeering for a particular industry that then becomes completely independent from and above the law?
2:52:22 PM Permanent link here
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Google Time Bomb
"Google and Weblogs seem inextricably tied together, as link-rich blogs are increasingly influencing the algorithms of Google's search engine. [See our article last week on this very subject.]
But with great power comes great responsibility... and the weblog community is only now beginning to come to terms with a new application that subverts the very technology that powers Google, the world's favorite search engine....
If the Church of Scientology can foil Google, then Google Bombs - especially ones based on blogrolling - could potentially have a serious and long-term impact on Google rankings.
This has serious implications for the future of Google Bombs.
One or two people linkblogging some Google Bombs isn't going to make a big difference in Google ranks in the long term. But teams of people working together to blogroll Google Bombs could have a serious and long-term impact on Google rankings.
Sooner or later, these teams of people will emerge... and when they do, their collective power on Google will be staggering.
Google, you'd better start watching out for these "Bomb Squads." Weblogs can help filter billions of webpages for you... but they could also help destroy the very technology that Google is based on!" [at Microcontent News, via John Robb's Radio Weblog]
John says this isn't a scandal and that he loves Google just the way it is but being a librarian, I have to stick up for information retrieval and respectfully disagree. When I talked about the phenomenon of Google time bombs at the Tech Summit last week, it was to a room full of library directors, reference librarians, and school librarians. When I described Google bombs, there was a very audible gasp that rippled through the room. I expect an uproar to hit the library press over the summer (it takes a while for us to get our print machine rolling).
While there's something inherently appealing in being able to hijack Jack Valenti in Google's algorithm, I really shouldn't be able to do it technologically. I'd love to be second, third, fourth, and fifth, but Google was and should remain smart enough to pick out the most important content, not link.
The idea of "money bombs" (paid google bombing to bring your site or a competitor's up to #1) is an even scarier thought to those of us who search for a living. Why would this be any more acceptable than pay-for-placement schemes? "Justice bombs" are interesting (morally I like the links for the Daniel Pearl Videotape and the R. Kelly Videotape), but what about the kid that's doing research trying to find media stories and blogger insights about these tapes (not watch them). I know he'll probably find relevant info further down, but lots of folks don't go beyond 20 or 30 results these days, and at the core, it's still messing with the playing field.
And heaven forbid the government was to get involved in this. What if the Bush administration starts Google bombing their own PR stories? Google issue or candidate bombing would be incredibly detrimental to the authority, accuracy, and authenticity of the information we find through that search engine. If this becomes too rampant, librarians will drop Google faster than Bush dropped Christie Whitman.
All your search are belong to us, indeed!
12:47:15 PM Permanent link here
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Lori P. would like to find out if anyone knows of libraries that are using scanned images of book covers on their web sites, whether they scan them in themselves or "steal" them from Amazon, the publisher, etc. If you know of any, please contact her!
11:56:21 AM Permanent link here
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White House Spurns Tech Programs Left Over from Clinton Presidency
"Only those with 'an unreal understanding' of U.S. capitalism would expect the poor, minorities and rural residents to immediately have the same access to the Internet as other Americans, the nation’s top telecommunications regulator has said. Government efforts to bridge the divide, he added, veer toward 'socialization.'
THE SKEPTICISM EXPRESSED last year by Michael Powell, the Bush appointee who is chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, plainly seems to be shared by the rest of the administration. Breaking with Clinton administration policy, the Bush team has set about quietly dismantling many programs devoted to ending the so-called digital divide....
Earlier this month, an NTIA report showed the growth in Internet usage among poor and minority Americans far exceeded that for wealthy, white or Asian Americans. Web use among blacks and Hispanics, for instance, grew by 33% and 30%, respectively, between August 2000 and September 2001, while the growth rate for whites and Asians was 20%. To the administration, this is evidence of a narrowing digital divide, undercutting the argument for more federal help.
Some Democrats drew a different conclusion. While growth rates for Web use are indeed higher for those on the wrong side of the divide, those groups started from so far down that the gap is wider than ever. For instance, the report found that in 1997, 10% of Americans earning less than $25,000 a year used the Web, compared with 45% of those earning more than $75,000 — a gap of 35 percentage points. By 2001, despite the progress in both groups, the gap was 50 percentage points.
Shortly after taking office, Bush officials said they would fulfill a campaign promise effectively eliminating the FCC’s popular e-rate program, which Mr. Gore had promoted and which reimbursed schools and libraries for as much as 90% of the cost of Internet access. Instead, the administration proposed block grants for the states from the Education Department, combining funds that otherwise would have gone for the e-rate program with those for other education-technology programs.
The administration’s most controversial move is its proposal to eliminate the small TOP program of grants to state and local-government agencies and nonprofit groups. Last year, the Bush administration had proposed slashing its funding, once as much as $45 million, to $15 million. The TOP program was designed to provide matching grant money for technology projects at schools, libraries, health agencies, police departments and nonprofits.
Ms. Victory cites other proposals in the Bush budget for fiscal 2003 — among them, technology grants of as much as $1 billion for the Education Department, $1 billion for the Justice Department and $100 million for rural telecommunications through the Agriculture Department. She concedes most programs that have received TOP funds could be bypassed by the new block grants, since local and state officials would be largely free to use the money as they like." [at MSNBC, via Dave Farber's Interesting People list]
Apologies for the excessive quoting, but MSNBC articles don't hang around and this is an incredibly important topic. Here's the thing.
These moves are devastating to public libraries. If you take away nothing else from my site, please understand how dependent libraries are on public monies, and the incredible breadth and depth of what our culture receives in return. We don't have pledge drives like NPR, we don't get royalties on products, and it's pretty rare for a millionaire to leave us money. In fact, I'm going to dig up all of the truly-amazing-your-jaw-will-drop statistics and post them at some point.
The Bush administration's current tap-dancing will make things even worse. While transferring monies to the Department of Education or state education agencies may have some benefits for schools (and hence for school and academic libraries), it will cut public libraries out of the money loop. Public libraries in this country are generally NOT part of the Department of Education at the state or federal level. Library systems are NOT part of the education infrastructure.
And if you want to see the digital divide up close and personal, visit your local public library. Especially in a big city, but it reaches to rural areas, too. Public libraries teach internet classes to more people than you realize. In Illinois, the E-rate program has allowed us to build the Illinois Century Network, a high-speed backbone for libraries throughout the State. Public libraries can join for a reduced rate than what they were paying Ameritech for slower access.
Without these monies, public libraries won't be able to maintain even the current levels, especially in respect to grants and collaborative partnerships. With tax caps in place in Illinois, it's difficult for PLs to get any additional revenue these days. I have lots of great ideas I want to see happen in libraries, but the reality is that it takes public money and grant money to do these kinds of things because our budgets are already strained. In dismantling these initiatives, the Bush administration is doing more than just retarding the current status of library funding. This will affect millions of people in the long run, people who have nowhere else to turn but their local public library.
10:50:01 AM Permanent link here
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Dave W. "I have a confession to make. Radio is also an outliner." Hey, I use Radio's outliner every day (I keep a copy of 7 around so I can save as html, a command I hear's broken in 8). It's not perfect, but very little software actually is. I'm looking forward to UserLand's focus to swing back to around the outliner to see what they'll cook up next. [Steven's Weblog]
Ditto - I've been using the outliner in Radio since its first incarnation as Pike. Pretty much every word I've written in the last few years has flowed through Radio/Pike.
I can understand why Dave hasn't yet emphasized the outliner, but it's the essential reason I'm sticking with Radio as a blogging tool. I'm looking forward to new mind bombs from Dave in this realm. [McGee's Musings]
Okay, I don't get this. The big piece of the puzzle is missing for me, as I haven't used outlines since college. What am I missing here? Why will outlines in Radio (or anywhere else) revolutionize my life? Somebody please mind bomb me!
10:14:10 AM Permanent link here
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Camworld: "Hmmm, would it be useful to be able to use your cell phone to scan bar-codes? I think so. A few years back when I was working at Borders.com we were pushing hard for the management to accept the idea of letting customers in the stores use portable bar-code scanners to build a "digital library" (by walking around the store and scanning books, movies and music) that they could then upload to their Borders.com user profile at one of the Internet-enabled kiosks that were being installed into the stores. Needless to say the management looked at us like we were insane but it's still a good idea and as technology like this becomes more an more integrated into everything we do, we'll probably start to see more retail stores adapt technology like this to provide cool differentiating services or their customers."
This is truly an excellent idea, and I'm surprised Borders didn't go for it (and still hasn't apparently). When I go there, I take my Palm and make a list of what I've found, but then I take that data with me and often I order from Amazon or Ingram using it. If Borders let me scan the ISBNs and UPC codes, they could be part of that loop and help me create and maintain my Amazon-like wish list on their site.
It's also an excellent idea for libraries. Everybody derided the CueCats, but I saw potential for libraries. If you could scan the code for any book, CD, movie, etc. and have that search the online catalog or create a wish list within the catalog, that could have been helpful for patrons. We could then help them find relevant links and items based on those items. We could also made the process for requesting an item or putting a hold on an item that much easier.
In the scenario in the article Cam points to, it would be interesting to keep libraries in that loop so that you could scan a product's barcode and then read the review, whether it's from Consumer Reports in the library's database offerings, a book review, a music review, or a company history. Or search the library's catalog and "check out" the digital file on loan for two weeks (ebooks, MP3s, digital video, etc.). With GPS required in cell phones for future E-911 services, it would be relatively easy to zero in on your local library's services.
9:21:52 AM Permanent link here
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Palm Unveils Color, Wireless Models
"Palm is showing that color is in with the debut of its spring lineup Monday, introducing the M130 entry-level handheld and the premium M515 model at roughly the same prices that monochrome units cost in the past.
At $279, the Palm M130 is the lowest-priced color PDA with an expansion slot on the market. With its rounded plastic case, it resembles its predecessor, the monochrome-screen M125, and like the M125, it has 8MB of memory. At $399, the M515 has the same hard-metal case as the current M505 model; it also has a color display and 16MB of memory." [PC World]
It has taken Palm too long to get here, but just like the old days with TVs, monochrome screens are on their way out. What's disappointing is the continued delay of a color, truly wireless Palm, say the "i705c." I was excited reading the above headline until I read the article and realized it's Bluetooth wireless. Three years ago I predicted the combination of color and wireless would be Palm's killer app, but they still haven't made it a reality. Do I not understand the technology well enough to recognize the reasons for the delay, or is Palm really that clueless?
9:05:35 AM Permanent link here
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David Coursey reviews PalTalk, a chat-room service.
"WHAT MAKES PalTalk especially interesting is the way it merges text, audio, and video into a single integrated environment--and how much of this service PalTalk gives away for free.
If all you want to do is type, or use the audio features, PalTalk is free. Yes, there are some advertisements, but the pop-ups arrive only at login and shutdown. This is a pretty good deal, especially considering that you and all your friends can set up a 24-hour chat room, which you administrate yourselves." [ZDNet AnchorDesk]
It sounds interesting, although I'm pretty happy with Trillian and I don't see myself using video yet. Maybe someday.
8:55:08 AM Permanent link here
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End of 'Nightline' Shows TV's Changing Landscape
"Killing a respected, 22-year-old network news program could create a ripple effect at other networks. But that it's even being contemplated reflects a changing landscape, where network news is increasingly viewed as dispensable in light of 24-hour cable news....
To show Letterman how serious they are, Disney officials told him privately that Nightline was toast whether he left Late Show or not. And when the story broke, they didn't back away from that stance. Hardball.
It was the way that Disney finessed — or didn't finesse — this affair that has ABC News buzzing. Why? It exposes network news divisions and their leaders for what they have become: cogs in much larger corporate wheels. Winning isn't everything, it's the only thing....
(Incidentally, ABC also plans to kill Bill Maher's Politically Incorrect, which follows Nightline, regardless.)
Rest assured, Letterman and his Stupid Pet Tricks will end up at CBS or ABC. But it's the now bottom-line-driven news business that really is threatening one of America's premier newscasts. And TV news may never be the same.
'If they will do this to Ted Koppel and Nightline, they will certainly do it to Peter Jennings,' Jones says. 'And other networks will probably do it to their news operations without much concern — or at least they'll say, 'Oh, we'll take a little heat and then be done with it.' ' " [USA Today]
My undergraduate degree is in journalism, specifically broadcast news, so I find this whole soap opera very discouraging. Of course, I watch very little televised news these days so I'm symptomatic of the problem, too. ABCNews should be trying to send me news via RSS instead. It's too bad there isn't a way to count demographics for this type of thing (although I'm sure that is part of our future), because the first one to do it is going to have a tremendous lead on the pack out of the gate.
8:49:12 AM Permanent link here
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Very cool - Fifteenth-century Book Found in Farmhouse
"What the book dealer didn't know right away was that she had the 'Nuremberg Chronicle,' a 500-year-old history of the world considered a milestone in the history of printing....
Back in Pribyl's Camden shop, a query on the Internet revealed that the book, printed some 50 years later, was the 'Nuremberg Chronicle,' a work largely considered the greatest illustrated book of its time.
'All you have to do is type in 'Books Published in 1493.' There are not a whole lot of them,' Pribyl said.
Bibliophiles at the Camden Public Library, where the owner allowed the book to be displayed before taking it home, certainly were charmed. Some gathered around as Ellen Dyer, the library's archivist, donned white cotton gloves and turned the rag paper pages." [CNN]
8:33:36 AM Permanent link here
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Scholars Who Dig-itize Gutenberg
"In an ambitious project, the Library of Congress is digitizing its perfect rendition of the Gutenberg Bible. These high-resolution images could reveal more about Gutenberg's invention of moveable type." [Wired News]
Excellent article about how the LOC will even include microscopic details in order to allow users to zoom in on individual letters. I wonder if Jack Valenti will be surprised to hear that the Bible is in the public domain and is not only well-protected, but flourishing. Or is this supposed to be bad for the public domain and it doesn't benefit consumers? Maybe god should extend his copyright on it instead.
7:28:48 AM Permanent link here
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Subscription Sharing Systems (RSS)
"Note to new arrivals, subscriptions are called RSS newsfeeds in the weblog world (an xml-based format for easy syndication of Web content). Simply put, RSS news is a short summary of new posts to a website that changes often (a general news source or weblog). RSS information for a site is published as an additional page to the published website." [John Robb's Radio Weblog]
John has written a great introduction to RSS and why the way it is integrated into Radio is such a big leap forward. As I noted at the Tech Summit last week, we're all familiar with the benefits of publishing on the web; it's the subscribing part that's new and not well understood yet. It's the part I'm finding most fascinating.
Definitely read through his whole post, and then when I have a chance to write up my own explanation, combine the two.
7:19:56 AM Permanent link here
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© Copyright 2004 Jenny Levine.
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