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Mittwoch, 21. März 2001 |
Smarter Tools to Scour a Wider Web. Business Week Mar 19 2001 11:06AM ET [Web developer news] 8:40:43 PM |
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On the Decentralization list, Ray Ozzie explains the technology in Groove. [Scripting News] 7:28:36 PM |
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Graphical RDF editor. Baltimore Technologies have released an RDF modelling application, allowing interactive graphical creation of RDF graphs and their serialization to RDF/XML. [xmlhack] 7:27:17 PM |
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Free Windows XML development environment. Victor Pavlov has created XML Cooktop, a Windows IDE for XML, DTDs, XSLT and XPath, available for free. [xmlhack] 7:26:59 PM |
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Integrating XHTML and RDF Schema. Jonathan Borden, stalwart of the RDDL effort, has created a new experimental language, TDDL (Terminology Definition Description Language), an XHTML based version of RDF Schema. [xmlhack] 7:26:33 PM |
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A Place for Writers to Be Heard. New online writers' workshop promises to discover unknown authors and connect new writers with published ones. Also: Palm enters e-publishing sector.... and more, as M.J. Rose discusses the week's e-publishing news. (7 min.) [Wired News] 7:26:13 PM |
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Where Is The Innovation? [Slashdot: News for nerds, stuff that matters] 1:59:47 PM |
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XML Protocol Requirements Working Draft Published. 19 March 2001: The XML Protocol Working Group has published XML Protocol (XMLP) Requirements as a Working Draft. XMLP allows two or more peers to communicate in a distributed environment using XML as its encapsulation language. Discussion takes place on the public mailing list xml-dist-app@w3.org (archive). Read about the W3C XML Protocol Activity. [The World Wide Web Consortium] 1:56:06 PM |
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Canonical XML now official. Canonical XML, a technology particulary important for implementation of XML-based digital signatures, has been released as an official W3C Recommendation. [xmlhack] 1:55:40 PM |
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Building a Bridging Firewall with Linux (article) [Security Focus] 1:54:29 PM |
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Radio press release: "It provides information distribution power that was previously centralized on services like Yahoo and eBay. Radio is as familiar and easy to use as the popular websites, and since the software is running on the user's desktop, it offers unprecedented performance and security. Having control of your data means that you can easily switch to new services, and your data is safe on your computer under your control." [Scripting News]1:54:06 PM |
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Is The Net Revolution Breaking Faith? [Slashdot: News for nerds, stuff that matters] 1:41:52 PM |
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Stephen Fry hates Microsoft [The Register] 1:40:39 PM |
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Internet Honeymoon is Over. Once upon a time content and services were free. Now online-based companies must charge, or face extinction. [The Motley Fool] 1:35:32 PM |
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