Recovered from the Wayback Machine. I was, and was not, surprised to see Mike Sanders hang up on weblogging today. I could see glimpses of burn out in his recent posts. In addition, he’s involved in new conflicts that would leave a sour taste in anyone’s mouth who is witness to them. My decision to do away with a […]
Creative Commons and RSS Syndication
Recovered from the Wayback Machine. I am applying some pushback in regards to RSS and the Creative Commons License over at the RSS Development Group discussion group. My original statement: I’ve already incorporated this into my weblog template and into my PostContent system for weblog resources. However, there is no defined semantics defining the understanding how licensing […]
RDF Browser
Recovered from the Wayback Machine. Thanks to 0xDECAFBAD for pointing out another amazing RDF product from the HP Semantic Lab – Brownsauce. Brownsauce is based on the Jena Java API and uses the lightweight Java web server, Jetty, to serve the application pages. Or, if you prefer, you can install it into your own Tomcat server. The only […]
Recovered from the Wayback Machine. Joe Clark, author of Building Accessible Webs in a Jonathon Delacour interview: And of course we’ll also have to fire the boy racers’ clueless Dockers-wearing manager dweebs, who consider themselves old-timers because they got online in 1998 (!) and whose entire experience of the Internet is the commercial Web as rendered through […]
Office and XML
Recovered from the Wayback Machine. Sam Ruby has an interesting thread going about Microsoft’s next version of Office and its support for XML: On one side, the ability of MS tools to adapt to formats that users can describe will be an incredible step forward. On the other hand, this doesn’t explain an unwillingness to working […]
