ctrl-ault-del ” Blog Archive ” Salon and Technorati
Salon now features Technorati trackers that tell you who is blogging in response to any given Salon story. This would be a great feature for lots of sites.
Salon now features Technorati trackers that tell you who is blogging in response to any given Salon story. This would be a great feature for lots of sites.
Salon now features Technorati trackers that tell you who is blogging in response to any given Salon story. This would be a great feature for lots of sites, and while I can imagine some workarounds that would allow sites to effectively achieve this, the…
The Great Flickr Tools Collection: From Quick Online Tips — the people who brought the world the del.icio.us tools collection — an equally fabulous collection of tools to make your all-Flickr lifestyle that much better. Flickr is a terrific photo sha…
Tim Yang’s list of fifteen things to do with RSS is the blog meme of the week. Only fifteen! What does he do with all the hours left over?
Keep an eye on this space for many more — today’s posts re: Feedster should give a few hints.
It's official: we're now planning our move to Toronto, aiming for August 05. As a result our FABULOUS house is up for rent or exchange — and our ideal situation is to find some charming soul in Toronto who will trade houses with us for some extended peri
A nice summary of different options for creating RSS feeds for searches you want to access on an ongoing basis. Includes pubsub and technorati, among others.
This blog post outlines one workflow for using Furl and del.icio.us togther, treating Furl as a personal archive and del.icio.us as a way of sharing resources. It’s an interesting reflection of the strengths and limitations of each tool: Furl is certainly a better option for archiving and retrieval purposes, while del.icio.us is far more powerful as a social and collaborative tool. It’s also a reminder of why Spurl is uniquely valuable for its combination of archiving and sharing functions: by facilitating both personal archiving and social bookmarking via del.icio.us, it allows personal information management to be integrated with collaboration. This seems like a much more realistic way of making collaboration a natural part of workflow, since it makes sharing a byproduct of work effort rather than another item on the to-do list.
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