Edu_RSS
Standing in a Dumpster with Colin Powell
Now that Colin Powell has ridden off into the sunset, having served in what is likely to be his last public office, the time seems right to put down in writing a story that I've told a few people over the years--the day I saw Colin Powell standing in a dumpster. The year was 1981, and I was serving in the 4th Infantry Division in Ft. Carson, Colorado, just outside Colorado Springs. I had just been selected to serve as the executive officer for a battery of the 19th Field Artillery. It... From
Brain Frieze on November 23, 2004 at 10:56 p.m..
North Korean authorities and cellphones
In North Korea: "Mobile phones have become a weapon in antigovernment movements"In the spring,the North Korean authorities banned most cellphones. Some residents have contacts with people in neighboring countries by hiding mobile phones in places with good reception, like tall buildings and hilltops," said a North Korean document photographed by a Japanese aid group that calls itself "Rescue the North Korean People Urgent Action Network." On Sunday, the Kyodo news agency of Japan reported that North Korea was cracking down on people in border cities who helpe From
unmediated on November 23, 2004 at 10:56 p.m..
Amazon Japan Cell Phone Fancypants Service
Keitai Watch reports that as part of a renewal of their site, Amazon Japan has introduced a flattering new feature called "Amazon Scan Search." After users download an application to their cell phone free of charge, they can scan barcodes of ordinary products, which in turn enables them to search the cell phone version of Amazon.co.j From
unmediated on November 23, 2004 at 10:56 p.m..
Edelblog
News flash! Head flack at largest indie flack shop blogs without flacking! Um, I mean Richard Edelman, head of the world's largest independent PR company, has started blogging and it's not overtly about Edelman PR. In fact, Richard's entries so far tend towards the long-form, serious and reflective, sometimes about his industry but also about his avocation (he's a Civil War buff) and his family history. It'll be interesting to see how this particular intersection of PR and bloggery evolves as the PR industry tries to figure out what it's going to become in an age From
Joho the Blog on November 23, 2004 at 10:48 p.m..
reBlog: selective posts from multiple feeds
reBlog looks like an interesting addition to the eduBlogging scene:
¶ A reBlog facilitates the process of filtering and republishing relevant content from many RSS feeds. reBloggers subscribe to their favorite feeds, preview the content, and select their favorite posts. These posts are automatica From
Open Artifact on November 23, 2004 at 9:48 p.m..
Bourdon Academy Archives
Online databasis of the François Bourdon's Academy The database archives of the François Bourdon's Academy are now available online. This work has been realised in the scope of a partnership with the "Maison des Sciences de l'Homme" of the university of Bourgogne in Dijon. Researchers can now have access to: - The database "DOSSIERS" which now contains 20 397 records about archive files. - The database "PLANS" contains 4 153 records. - The database "PERIODIQUES" presents 648 records. - The datab From
Archivalia on November 23, 2004 at 7:53 p.m..
Weblog conversations: Comments vs. Citations
This is only a rough draft of a few paragraphs on comments in other Weblogs versus proper citations of other authors' content in one's own Weblog. This issue comes up whenever students make their first few steps as Weblog authors. Here we go...Efimova & de Moor (2005) suggest to speak of Weblog conversations "when a weblog post triggers feedback from others, either using comments to the original post or replies in other weblogs linking it" (p. 1). These two main mechanisms of reacting to published posts, withouth leaving the realm of Weblogs, deserve a closer look. C From
Seblogging News on November 23, 2004 at 7:51 p.m..
What Is Trackback?
Sometimes when you see a post on somebody's blog that you like, it's enough just to leave a comment on the other blog about that issue. But what if you've got something to say about the issue that you'd like to share with readers of your own blog? If you do post to your blog, you have to go and leave a comment in the other blog if you want the people there to know about your own blog entry. This is where trackback comes in. Using trackback, you can automatically notify another blog about your new entry and a link to your entry will appear in that blog From
Seblogging News on November 23, 2004 at 7:51 p.m..
There's no ID in irony
I'm now receiving spam about ID products "because you registered to attend Inside ID Conference & Expo that was held November 15-17, 2004..." Spamming people who attended an ID conference? Someone dial 211 and connect me to the Irony Squad...... From
Joho the Blog on November 23, 2004 at 7:49 p.m..
the power of the miscellaneous or why the trees are in trouble
David Weinberger rants on the organization of knowledge, data, metadata, tagging, authority, (multi)subjectivity, objectivity, human voice and conversation. Of course he mentions weblogs as means and procedures that are constructing our selfs in the new public thru persistence. If you want to invest some 40 minutes in getting to know these issues in a very entertaining way go an get one of the media formats (see also the enclosure) below.
Library of Congress mp3sThanks to Michae From
thomas n. burg | randgänge on November 23, 2004 at 7:47 p.m..
More SMS Than Internet, More Internet Than Newspapers
For young people, sending messages using SMS (Short Message Service) over cellular phones is more powerful than doing so through the Internet, according to a recent survey. The results of a
study conducted by Ericsson Consumer Lab show that 68 percent of Spaniards between 15 and 24 years old send messages with their cellular phones every day. But only 38 percent of young people connect to the 'Net on a daily basis. Internet media companies should be thinking about thi From
Poynter E-Media Tidbits on November 23, 2004 at 6:56 p.m..
Weblogs: Niche or Nucleus?
Detailed presentation with many references on the educational use of blogging. Looks at blog affordances, use in educational contexts, and issues. Broken into segments for easy downloading (or you can download the whole 4 megabyte PDF if you wish). An HTML version is also available. By Derek Morrison, Auricle, November 22, 2004 [
Refer][
Research][
OLDaily on November 23, 2004 at 6:45 p.m..
WikalongExtension
It's getting harder and harder to stay out in front in this business. I found out about Wikalong Saturday night at the Firefox 1.0 launch party in Vancouver but forgot to include it in yesterday's newsletter (I blame jet lag). Wouldn't you know that Derek Morrison of
Auricle has an item on it today. Anyhow: "Wikalong is a FirefoxExtension that embeds a wiki in the SideBar of your browser, indexed off the url of your current page. It is probably most simply described as a wiki-margin for the From
OLDaily on November 23, 2004 at 6:45 p.m..
Clusty
Rod Savoie sent a couple of links along today: this one, to a search engine that produces fairly good clustered results, and another, to the
visual thesaurus. Neither will replace Google for me, but I like having the alternative views of the web. By Various Authors, November, 2004 [
Refer][
Research][
OLDaily on November 23, 2004 at 6:45 p.m..
Anti-Virus Companies: Tenacious Spammers
Many schools, colleges and universities have installed anti-virus and anti-spam filters on their systems. As a popular target for such annoying emails, I am sympathetic with the need to block the garbage before it gets to unsuspecting users (especially those using Windows and Outlook, and hence could really be harmed by the messages). But as this item notes, these programs are worse spammers than the people they try to block. It's bad enough that I get a slew of these messages when I send a newsletter with a bad word in it. But I also get a continuous stream of notifications involving mes From
OLDaily on November 23, 2004 at 6:45 p.m..
Every Ontology is a Treaty
The latest issue of
SIGSEMIS: Semantic Web and Information Systems is out - and once again, I am forced to ask why a semantic web organization can't publish their journal in XML, or at least HTML, instead of the decidedly non-semantic PDF. Anyhow, the highlight is this issue is the interview with Tom Gruber, well known for his work on ontologies. Some good quotes asking what a knowledge portal is for, analyzing the cost and benefits of strict ontologies, and pointing out that an ontology is a treaty, not a law From
OLDaily on November 23, 2004 at 6:45 p.m..
Ads Making Overtures in RSS
Some discussion of recent moves by companies like Overture, the search advertising division of Yahoo, which is working with Feedburner, to insert ads into RSS feeds. There are only a few places ads could be inserted into feeds; these services insert them at the source as they offer to create RSS feeds for you.
More.
More. The only other place, really, is in the RSS reader - and with 640 different readers available, that's not really a reliable placement. With RSS ads, th From
OLDaily on November 23, 2004 at 6:45 p.m..
Learning Management Systems: The Wrong Place to Start Learning
The debates surrounding learning management systems continue as George Siemens weighs in with this good analysis of where they miss the mark. "The very notion of 'managing learning' conflicts with how people are actually learning today... [LMSs] still view learners as canisters to be filled with content." Worth reading as well on this topic is James Jarmer, who
comments on LMS marketing tactics, and Albert Ip, who
reports that LMSs " From
OLDaily on November 23, 2004 at 6:45 p.m..
Global Learn Day: GLD8 Educational Technologists Talk Online
My contribution to Global Learn Day is available as an
MP3 audio feed (2.9 M) - I talk about the Firefox launch, the emergence of blogging in the Yukon, and the spirit that lies behind all this - the idea that we could provide learning to everyone in the world (please note the sound is bad for three minutes during the introduction, then my talk comes out very clearly). Another recording of my talk (by Robin Good) is available
here. Robin Good also contributed a useful presentation to the event,
OLDaily on November 23, 2004 at 6:45 p.m..
Blogs, RSS and Other Cool Stuff
People seem to like that title. They also like the presentation, which covers everything from content management systems, blogs, wikis and RSS. The MP3 audio of my session Friday in Whitehorse, Yukon, is
available online. The main link above points to my
Yukon photos, which you can use to decorate your desktops, slides or web pages. On Saturday I went hiking at Miles canyon in the Yukon wilderness with fellow photographer and former RCMP officer Hank Moorlag, who offers
OLDaily on November 23, 2004 at 6:45 p.m..
Open Source on the Other Hand
I like open source. I think it's come a long way towards building corporate applications. I think the idea of distributed development is just fundamentally neat. Asymmetrical Information: Open Source on the Other Hand... From
Teaching and Developing Online. on November 23, 2004 at 5:53 p.m..
Conversation overload
We are going through rounds of discussions with colleagues on information overload, which is going to be one of our research topics for 2005. Those discussions provoke some associative thinking - on conversation overload (I'd define conversation overload as a stress of not being able to participate in conversations one wants to participate). Another trigger for this thinking is a discussion at
AOK mailing list on online communities. It's very timely (re:
Mathemagenic on November 23, 2004 at 4:54 p.m..
Outlook 2003, IE, and things Microsoftian
I've been testing some things using Outlook 2003 on my Windows machine. Something happened when trying to view a particular PDF document from a link in an email and Outlook stopped responding. I killed it with the Task Manager, and consented to send the error report to Microsoft. The error report process nicely came back noting that there is an update to Office 2003 available that I should probably install. When I clicked on the link, it went off to the Microsoft site, but then came back with a message saying that I needed to use Internet Explorer to get the update (Firefox is my defau From
Oren Sreebny's Weblog on November 23, 2004 at 4:02 p.m..
Browsers as test platforms
There is an interesting article from accross the pond about how to use browsers to develop and debug html structure, javascript, CSS etc. Read it and discuss below.... From
Curb Cut Learning on November 23, 2004 at 3:53 p.m..
Jake Shapiro on Pbulic Radio Exchange
Jake Shapiro of Public Radio Exchange is giving a lunchtime talk at the Berkman Center about how PRX is making it easier for creators of radio programming to get their stuff found and picked up by non-commercial radaio stations. PRX sits between stations and producers. It's "a web-based service for digital distribution, peer review, and licensing of radio content." You upload content, and others can peer-review it. Then stations can download it and use it. Creators get royalties. PRX is a fair and transparent broker between producers and multiple stations. Jake says the market is ready fo From
Joho the Blog on November 23, 2004 at 3:48 p.m..
Patent Proliferation in Academia?
Earlier today, The Chronicle of Higher Education
reported that Congress has passed the
Create Act ... a bill designed to extend patent coverage for collaborative product development. I wish I understood all the ramifications for open source and the influence of big business inside academia, but I don't. I won't have time to explore it in detail, but if anyone has any pointer From
EDUCAUSE Blogs - on November 23, 2004 at 3:01 p.m..
Online Collaboratories: Key Rules For Success
Technology Review reports: "Virtual collaborations for sharing data and insights are increasingly key to scientific success. When they work, that is. Paul M. Fitts Collegiate Professor of Human Computer Interaction at the U-M Gary Olson If you're a researcher studying... From
Kolabora.com on November 23, 2004 at 2:54 p.m..
Desktop or internet?
Yesterday I was buzzing around the web and wanted to grab a quote that appeared on this blog last year. I clicked an icon on my jump page...and got a blank page! Drat. The Learning Circuits blog had disappeared. This blog runs off a server run by iPowerWeb in Santa Monica. InternetTime.com inhabits the same machine. I was attracted to iPowerWeb because they had a spotless reputation, staffed their help function with real people 24/7,... From
Learning Circuits Blog on November 23, 2004 at 2:53 p.m..
Conflicted about the Edublog Weblog Awards
http://incsub.org/awards/index.php James Farmer has taken up the challenge and created a site to vote for the Inaugural Edublogs Awards. I fell pretty conflicted about this: - on the one hand, it's great to recognize excellence and all of the hard work some folks have put in. - on the other hand, this feels somewhat antithetical to the sense of collaborative community that some feel is emerging through the blogosphere. I placed a few votes, but as I did so I kept feeling I was highlighting one piece of good work a From
EdTechPost on November 23, 2004 at 1:52 p.m..
Alternative Uses for Mind-Mapping in The Writing Classroom
I'm sure that a majority of those who teach writing at one point or another introduce students to the invention strategy called "mind mapping" -- a form of brainstorming that supposedly draws the more artsy "right brain" (as opposed to the logical "left brain") into the process. I think of... From
PEDABLOGUE on November 23, 2004 at 12:52 p.m..
New Directions in Learning
Eine Präsentation von Stephen Downes mit - wie immer - einer Fülle von inspirierenden Stichworten. Die Aufhänger sind "Knowledge", "Learning" und "Community". Eine kurze Leseprobe: "The Big Idea - E-learning not as static, course-based resources assembled and delivered by institutions... From
www.weiterbildungsblog.de on November 23, 2004 at 12:52 p.m..
Leaves on surfaces
I got my Canon S60 in part because Tim Bray recommended his S50 so highly, and I've been very happy with it. Tim's posted some photos he took with his camera before he upgraded to the S70. They're lovely. The subject of one reminded me of a picture I took last week after our autumnal snowfall here in Boston. These photos by Max Lyons, on the other hand, make me want to leave for Scotland immediately.... From
Joho the Blog on November 23, 2004 at 12:49 p.m..
Citizen Deliberative Councils
Jock Gill points to an article from a year ago in which Tom Atlee compiles a fascinating set of links about Citizen Deliberative Councils: "A Citizen Deliberative Council (CDC) is a temporary council of citizens convened to deliberate about public concerns (either about a specific issue or the general state of the community and its future) and to provide guidance for officials and the public." (Quote from here.) Atlee writes that in British Columbia, Canada, one Citizens Assembly "on electoral reform, been given the power to put a proposal directly to a vote by the people in a regular election From
Joho the Blog on November 23, 2004 at 12:49 p.m..
Podcasting mechanics
After I posted yesterday's audio interview,
Paul Schaeflein wrote to point out that I ought to be using RSS 2.0 enclosures in my feed so that enclosure-aware aggregators can download media objects. ... From
Jon's Radio on November 23, 2004 at 12:46 p.m..
RSS in 3 Dimensions
On being able to fly through your feeds, this time without a helmet, and get a bird's eye community view From
Monkeymagic on November 23, 2004 at 11:54 a.m..
Mercury Wars Autism...When Are Our Leaders Going to do Something.
One in five U.S. women have unsafe Mercury levels and hundreds of thousands of Children are at risk. A site now offers screening for potential Autism victims. There is still no concerted Governmental action to reduce the exposure of our families to this horrendous toxin. [PRWEB Nov 22, 2004] From
PR Web on November 23, 2004 at 11:45 a.m..
Collaboratories
Interesting article in today's Technology Review on "big science" collaboration. The National Science Foundation is funding a "Science of Collaboratories" project. And what is a collaboratory? Gary Olson at the University of Michigan defines it this way: an organizational entity that spans distance, supports rich and recurring human interaction oriented ... From
Gardner Writes on November 23, 2004 at 10:59 a.m..
Ladder of Participation now available online
One of the most powerful models for thinking about how much influence people have in public programmes is Sherry Arnstein's Ladder of Participation, developed 25 years ago. Her eight rungs range from Manipulation to Citizen Control. I developed a version... From
Teaching and Developing Online. on November 23, 2004 at 10:52 a.m..
The Greatest Canadian
This is one of the neatest website designs I have ever had the pleasure of surfing. Check it out I am sure you will agree. CBC.ca - The Greatest Canadian - Canucktions... From
Teaching and Developing Online. on November 23, 2004 at 10:52 a.m..
Tolerable planet
What is the use of a house if you haven’t got a tolerable planet to put it on?
Henry David Thoreau
¶ From
Open Artifact on November 23, 2004 at 8:58 a.m..
The knowledge-model driven enterprise
Andy Schriever has written an article on the use of metadata to create a knowledge-model driven enterprise. To quote: We think the importance of a centralized metadata repository is a key insight. We'd go much further, in fact, and suggest... From
Column Two on November 23, 2004 at 8:47 a.m..
Carlos Castaneda: Routine Prey
An underlying theme in Carlos Castaneda's Journey to Ixtlan [refer: The World We Know Is Only A Description] connects the idea of hunting to learning. In other words, a learner is a kind of warrior that seeks power. In this... From
Experience Designer Network on November 23, 2004 at 7:59 a.m..
Premios BOBs: fase final
El dÃa lunes 6 de diciembre se darán a conocer los ganadores de los premios The BOBs - The Best of The Blogs (Deutsche Welle International Weblog Awards 2004). Hasta el dÃa 5 inclusive se aceptarán los votos de los... From
eCuaderno v.2.0 on November 23, 2004 at 7:52 a.m..
Divertida campaña de Virgin Atlantic
En el ejemplar de noviembre de la revista Fast Company (sugerente artÃculo central 101 ideas, people & trends that will change the way we work & live in 2005), me topé con un divertido anuncio de la compañÃa aérea Virgin... From
eCuaderno v.2.0 on November 23, 2004 at 6:52 a.m..
You, Too, Can Assassinate Kennedy
Detractors are horrified, but the developer of a video game that lets players simulate the assassination of President Kennedy says the point is to bolster the lone-gunman theory and debunk the conspiracy theorists. From
Wired News on November 23, 2004 at 6:46 a.m..
A Kinder, Gentler Copyright Bill?
The Senate passes a copyright bill that is not as bad as digital rights activists had feared. The bill drops language that would have banned tech that would have allowed people to skip commercials. By Katie Dean. From
Wired News on November 23, 2004 at 6:46 a.m..
Court Documents Not Fit for Web?
States are rethinking their policy of publishing all court documents -- divorces, medical histories, arrests -- on the web. On one hand is the citizens' right to know how their government operates. On the other is their right to privacy. By Jacob Ogles. From
Wired News on November 23, 2004 at 6:46 a.m..
Echoes Repeats Success
Don't junk that GameCube: Metroid Prime 2 provides gorgeous atmosphere, a sweet score and fun gameplay to create a winner. By Chris Kohler. From
Wired News on November 23, 2004 at 6:46 a.m..
Software Detects the True Artist
Dartmouth College computer scientists create software that uses statistical techniques to authenticate art, to sort out real works from fakes. Their first finding: A painting purportedly by Perugino may have been done by four different artists. By Noah Shachtman. From
Wired News on November 23, 2004 at 6:46 a.m..
Shhh ... Do You Hear Gunfire?
Police departments around the country turn to sound-analysis technology to detect and report gunshots. By Amit Asaravala. From
Wired News on November 23, 2004 at 6:46 a.m..
Airport 'Pat-Downs' and Fear of Retaliation
The New York Times is running
a story about U.S. airport screening and its increasingly humiliating treatment of women who are undergoing invasive pat-downs. Two lines in the article stand out, quite apart from the overall questions it raises:"Routinely, my breasts are being cupped, my behind is being felt," Ms. Chekowsky said. "And I feel I can't fight it. If I were to say anything, I picture myself From
Dan Gillmor's eJournal on November 23, 2004 at 5:47 a.m..
Justin F. Kimball Alumni Association Achieves Tax-Exempt Status To Raise Funds For Alma Mater
Justin F Kimball Alumni Association, a high school alumni group of all graduating classes covering 45 years of the school, filed and received tax-exempt status from the IRS as a 501(c)(3) educational organization effective October 21, 2004. The Association will receive donations from its alumni and other business organizations to provide funds for needed projects of the faculty and student body of Justin F. Kimball High School in the Dallas Independent School District. The Alumni Association currently lists over 10,000 former graduates of the school in their database and soon to add approxima From
PR Web on November 23, 2004 at 4:45 a.m..
State and Local Government on the Net Directory Hits 10,000 Entries
The State and Local Government on the Net Directory (SLGN), the popular gateway to official state, county and city government web sites, recently added its 10,000th record. This online directory, which is available for free public access, is located at www.statelocalgov.net. [PRWEB Nov 23, 2004] From
PR Web on November 23, 2004 at 4:45 a.m..
Free Holiday Security Awareness Materials
The Security Awareness Company today released its free annual holiday security awareness poster, designed by renowned artist, Dennis Busch, one of the four award-winning artists that work with the company. "Security Through Unity" is the theme of the piece with a broad array of characters representing cultures and religions throughout the world. [PRWEB Nov 23, 2004] From
PR Web on November 23, 2004 at 4:45 a.m..
Podcast #1
As Adam Curry would say ... Boi-oi-oing!!. Time for me to hop on the podcast bandwagon. Here's podcast #1. Show notes Opening Music - Things to do When You're Alone by 46 Ounces Alec Couros blogging presentation. Alec blogs at http://www.educationaltechnology.ca/couros Fostering Critical Thinking in an Online Environment Communities of Inquiry website Nine Myths About Design - ... From
Just Another Ant on November 23, 2004 at 3:59 a.m..
Videoblogging with Blogger
Very cool and I am sure easily adaptable to other blogging systems. I really want to do some video blogging and podcasting next year! From
Videoblogging with Blogger.: QUOTEAlmost everyone who owns a computer has the ability to edit and publish video. Several hundred thousand people already have photoblogs and there are more than 1,5 million text-bloggers. How come there are so few videobloggers around? Is it really that hard to make a videoblog? No, in fact it has become From
Roland Tanglao's Weblog on November 23, 2004 at 3:52 a.m..
Talking Communities
The
Global Learn Day event last Sunday was made possible through
Talking Communities, an application designed to facilitate web conferencing through a combination of voice and text based chat. While there were a few minor technical glitches with a few of the Asia-based participants, it worked quite well. I was especially impressed with the convenient 'page pushing' feature, that is, the speaker or any other moderator can paste URLs into the main window of the interface for participants to view From
apcampbell News on November 23, 2004 at 2:55 a.m..
Computers as Authors? Literary Luddites Unite!
For some people, writing a novel is a satisfying exercise in self-expression. For me, it's a hideous blend of psychoanalysis and cannibalism that is barely potent enough to overcome a series of towering avoidance mechanisms - including my own computer. From
DEC Daily News on November 23, 2004 at 2:51 a.m..
Teaching at A Distance: From Concept To Practice
You are invited to join other distance educators in a 5 week online learning experience focused on distance education. Modeling the very best in distance education pedagogy, "Teaching At A Distance: From Concept to Practice" involves you in every aspect of distance education by involving you as a distance education learner. From
DEC Daily News on November 23, 2004 at 2:51 a.m..
Getting your degree online
As if taking English 101 in your pajamas wasn't good enough, now McHenry County College - and soon other area colleges - will offer whole degrees from the comfort of your computer. From
DEC Daily News on November 23, 2004 at 2:51 a.m..
I've turned comments off for now
I'm so tired of dealing with spam comments that I've turned comments off at the present time. I've been getting over a hundred comment spams every day, and even with MT-Blacklist I've still got to go through and delete them all, which is just too time consuming for me. I'll probably re-enable comments that have been authenticated using
TypeKey, but I've got some work to do to reconfiguring Movable Type before I can do that - maybe I'll find some time over the long weekend to do that work. In the meantim From
Oren Sreebny's Weblog on November 23, 2004 at 1:59 a.m..
SkillSoft Releases Courseware to Support Project Management Institute's The PMBOK Guide -- Third Edition
Linda Galloway Apollo Associates LLC203-790-1591lgalloway@apolloassociates.comNASHUA, N.H., Nov. 22 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- SkillSoft PLC (Nasdaq: SKIL), a leading provider of content resources and complementary technologies for integrated enterprise learning, today announced the release of 12 courses supporting The PMBOK Guide(R) -- Third Edition, the newest release of the Project Management Institute's (PMI(R)) definitive handbook of information and best practices for project management. The new edition, released on November 1, will become the foundation for the Institute's Proje From
DEC Daily News on November 23, 2004 at 1:48 a.m..
For My Holiday List
I'll take one of
these, please. You can have a lot of faith in the sensible writing of
Danny Goodman, who long ago for me threw all kinds of new light on HyperCard, and later JavaScript... My job in this book is to translate the gobbledygook spouted by all sides of the email wars into language that any email user can understand. My main goal is to snap email users out of their passive roles, waiting for others to solve the "email problem." The real power, it turns out, lies in all of our hands From
cogdogblog on November 23, 2004 at 1:46 a.m..