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Tuesday, June 28, 2005 |
Is It a Wiki? A Floor Wax? A Dessert
Topping?. After you read Brian Lamb's article, take the
time to visit Tiddly
Wiki for a bit. As you look more closely, it will
become more and more amazing - an entire wiki can be a
single file. Lamb writes, "The entire tool is
contained in one html file using HTML, CSS and JavaScript.
Which makes the wiki very portable, and can be run in any
modern browser. As suggested on the website, I also
installed it and PortableFirefox on my USB thumb drive.
This would make updating/showing the e-portfolio very
portable as well. However, to save the changes of the wiki
page, it requires Firefox or Internet Explorer, plus save
capabilities (write access) to a server." By Brian
Lamb, Abject Learning, June 28, 2005
[Refer][Research][Reflect] [OLDaily]
11:46:20 PM Google It!.
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Google Video Launches Today. Still some bumps to smooth out, but Google's video
search launches today. Google's special video
viewer, based on the open source VLC
Viewer, installed easily but is for Windows only
(no doubt ports will soon be available). Second, despite
having signed on a number of providers ("PBS, CNN, Fox
News, C-SPAN, Discovery Channel, Animal Planet and the
Learning Channel") all the searches I tried resulted
only in screenshots and a "video not available"
message. Coming soon, I guess. More info at John
Batelle and Hollywood
Reporter. By Cory Bergman, Lost Remote, June 27,
2005
[Refer][Research][Reflect] [OLDaily]
1:16:38 PM Google It!.
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Grokster Loses Copyright Case. Americans are still weighing the impact of
today's Supreme Court essentially ruling against Grokster
and other file sharing services. "We hold that one who
distributes a device with the object of promoting its use
to infringe copyright, as shown by clear expression or
other affirmative steps taken to foster infringement, is
liable for the resulting acts of infringement," wrote
Justice David Souter in the majority opinion. Michael Geist
says it's not so bad: "P2P technology didn't lose...
By seeking to retain Sony but build in active inducement,
it is trying to navigate a difficult fine line... premised
on 'purposeful culpable expression and conduct.'"
Others
are less sanguine. The internet is now awash with opinion;
I'll just say it's a bad decision and leave it at that. By
Arik Hesseldahl, Forbes, June 27, 2005
[Refer][Research][Reflect] [OLDaily]
1:15:02 PM Google It!.
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© Copyright 2005 Bruce Landon.
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