Howell Raines: The Times's image as a bastion of quality had become even more important as tabloid television, Britain's declining newspaper values, and the unsourced ranting of Internet bloggers polluted the journalistic mainstream of the United States.
 Dave Winer: There are a lot of folk legends about the evolution of RSS - Here's the scoop, the sequence of events in the life of RSS, as told by the designer of most of the formats.
 Mikel Maron: Web Services, RIA, Semantic Web, the Blogosphere, are coming together to enable an Internet OS, built on amateur application programming in recombinant growth.
 Jon Udell: In theory a CSS attribute could say: "Don't index this element" - Parsing it would likely be more work than search engines are currently willing or able to do.
 John Robb: P2P tools should be as invisible as plumbing.
 Rogers Cadenhead: Creating text date links in Radio.
 Jon Udell: Ironically, although Microsoft cited competition with Apple's Safari as the reason for killing IE for the Mac, I've abandoned Safari on OS X for the same reason I've abandoned IE on Windows - Firefox does more, it's moving faster, and - here's the kicker - it runs identically on Windows, OS X, and Linux.
 Karen Kwiatkowski: I witnessed neoconservative agenda bearers within OSP usurp measured and carefully considered assessments, and through suppression and distortion of intelligence analysis promulgate what were in fact falsehoods to both Congress and the executive office of the president.
 Dave Winer: I'd like to make a constructive offer to the people who are working on Atom.
 Albert Delgado: I think Userland has the more important job of updating its products, from the kernel on out.
 Philip Miseldine: So, what I'm thinking is, why not provide a stylesheet (XSLT or something else, perhaps) that tells the aggregator how to consume your feed to produce descriptions.
 Davenet: A Bright Future for Syndication.
 Amit Singh: Mac OS X is perhaps one of the best examples of how a capable system can result through the direct or indirect efforts of corporations, academic and research communities, the Open Source and Free Software movements, and even individuals.
 Daniel Terdiman: A recent study finds that almost half of US Internet users contribute online content.
 Matt Mower: Whatever happened to the Wiki API?
 Ted Goranson: Much of the idealistic promise of the sixties was transferred to the creative and revolutionary world of the Mac in the eighties and early nineties - Nowhere in that flow of applications was this more obvious than in outliners.
 Aleph One: Smashing The Stack For Fun And Profit.
 Paolo Vademarin: Our first step is going to be implementing a tool which will allow to add event-related information to a weblog post.
 Jon Udell: Heads, decks, and leads: revisited.
 Guardian: The political press and the Washington campaign consulting industry recognised that Howard Dean posed a grave danger to their position and they responded with a fierce campaign to undermine and discredit his message.
 Xeni Jardin: Life, Liberty and Pursuit of Porn.
 Technology Review: Our Non-Expeditions to the Moon and Mars.
 Daniel Rubio: Building PHP Web services with PEAR.
 Matt Mower: DIY blogging stats.
 Dave Winer: Atom has a big hill to climb, but through skillful PR it may not look that way.
 in the New York Times: "All virus-spreading," one virus writer said caustically, "is based on the idiotic behavior of the users".
 Simson Garfinkel: Releasing the source code wouldn't make Windows free.
 Rael Dornfest: Blogging, because of RSS, has gone from a popularity contest - how many times has my site been pinged? - to discovery of information.
 Andrew Grumet: RSSTV - Syndication for your PVR. Give customers the ability to push Suggestions into their friends' TiVos.
 Ted Nelson: A Publishing and Royalty Model for Networked Documents.
 Peter Seebach: What you need to know to write man pages.
 John Robb: Unfortunately, the feature that should be in the browser (an RSS aggregator) isn't something Dave is going to ask for.