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 Sunday, August 31, 2003
Google RSS 2.0 feeds
While many new news aggregators come with built in Feedster support, allowing you to monitor up the minute what blogworld...
[hebig.org/blog
5:41:15 AM      comment []   trackback []  



Microsoft Bloggers Multiplying Exponentially
It had been a while since we updated the Microsoft Watch list of current and former Microsoft employees who are bloggingThere are now more [sigma]
lots more. [Microsoft Watch from Mary Jo Foley
5:22:28 AM      comment []   trackback []  



RSS Feeds are the Better Email Newsletters
According to Heinz Tschabitscher from About.com; "Email newsletters are great, but spam is not. The deluge of junk mail has made it increasingly painful to follow the news and what's happening on your favorite web sites via email." They also added; "Either the newsletter you're eager to read is hidden in a massive spam attack or it doesn't arrive because your ISP is blocking spam and your favorite newsletter falls victim to the filters, too (now you know why a 'false positive' is something negative)." Read the rest here......
[Lockergnome's RSS Resource
5:08:17 AM      comment []   trackback []  



Tagging conventions for microcontent
Jon Udell has put up his structured blog search which allows you to write XPaths over an XML representation of his blog and get some useful information out of it. In the accompanying blog post he makes the plea for well formedness, since that makes things easier. No argument from me. What I'm more interested in is a description of his tagging conventions.
[Ted Leung on the air
5:06:19 AM      comment []   trackback []  



The September That Never Began
I have been watching and waiting for the impact of AOL Journals. Back in January I outlined the business case for AOL to enter the market, using LiveJournal stats to suggest a $48m revenue stream as the prize. I wondered...
[Ross Mayfield's Weblog
5:01:43 AM      comment []   trackback []  



Categorical indirection
Don Park's post on how to link blogs and wikis is actually an instance of the following. Take a category, or view (if you prefer database terminology) and send it off to somewhere else. This is cool, and another reason why multiple categorization would be useful. Each category can do its own rendering, transmission, etc.
[Ted Leung on the air
4:35:21 AM      comment []   trackback []