|
Sunday, August 7, 2005 |
Jim Moore XML
Just started my new blog with OPML, here is a mini review. So, here is what I love about Dave's OPML editor: the app is really nice--clean, simple, powerful. Everything I want--writing, saving, RSS and viewing in a tight little working window. And of course, an outliner. I've been a dedicated outliner since the days of Thinktank and More, so I love this way of working.
I started my blog, http://blogs.opml.org/jimmoore/
and wrote a post, and even put in a image, and---hmmmm--the blog is up but I see no text or image when I view.
Ok, now the text is up. I will put in an image later. I wonder what the brief delay was? [Jim Moore's cybernetics, politics, emergence, etc.]
9:42:44 PM
|
|
Blogs: Wave of the Future Has Arrived - by Rob Bradford
Lowell Sun: "Nobody outside of the fledgling world of the internet took notice when a computer programmer named Dave Winer began the weblog revolution in 1997 with his running online commentary titled, Scripting News." [Scripting News]
"If it wasn't for a site out of Japan named 'Antipixel.com' many computer users across the world wouldn't have known about the Jack Kerouac Bobblehead promotion put on by the Lowell Spinners -- or that CNN actually reported on it."
4:43:03 PM
|
|
Cowboy Eats
Cowboy Eats. What a whirl wind tour of Las Vegas, Grand Canyon, Williams, AZ and Hoover Dam, I had with Manos, who incidentally is wonderful to travel with!We had a GREAT time! He put a big smile on my face, by making sure I was hooked-up with wireless access! He turned my old Sony Vaio notebook into a true mobile computing device and off into the desert we drove in a gas guzzling SVU to the Canyon. I actually By (Tery Spataro). [Daily Eats - Food Lovers Unite!]
12:08:47 PM
|
|
MIMAS
Cassini flies by Saturn's tortured moon Mimas. On its recent close flyby of Mimas (MY-muss), the Cassini spacecraft found the Saturnian moon looking battered and bruised, with a surface that may be the most heavily cratered in the Saturn system. The Aug. 2 flyby of Saturn's 'Death Star' moon returned eye-catching images of its most distinctive feature, the spectacular 140-kilometer diameter (87-mile) landslide-filled Hershel crater. Numerous rounded and worn-out craters, craters within other craters and long grooves reminiscent of those seen on asteroids are also seen in the new images. [Science Blog - Science News Articles from Medicine, Space, Physics and More]
10:16:53 AM
|
|
© Copyright 2009 Gary Santoro.
|
|
|
|
|
|
M E D I A B U R N
<
#
phoenix bloggers
?
>
Search This Website
Subscribe to the Mediaburn news feed if you have a Radio Userland Weblog
RSS Blog Syndication
|
|
|
|
|
|