- unstruct.org – Unstructured Information Management
- One-Way and Collision-Resistant Functions [PDF]
- Just out of curiousity: Comparative Review of Secure GUI FTP Clients, Daring Fireball: MacSFTP,
- the Anomy mail tools – once you get started w/ mail processing tools, it can be downright addictive
- Gush – Jabber/XMPP IM + news aggregator; must look into it
- Blogdigger Development Blog
- PubSub vs. Feedster
The key difference between PubSub.com and previous free systems is that we provide, or *will* provide, “Push” delivery mechanisms. There are other differences, but that’s probably going to be the most noticeable one for awhile.
- PubSub – PubSub blog
- Alarm Clock with iTunes & Cron Solution
- iTunes Scripts for iCal v1.5.1
- Want her? You cadaver! – fascinating sculpture made from plastinated cadavers (creepy)
- Social Routing
This is my attempt to build a model of how implicite SocialNetworkingSoftware could work. The reasons why explicite SocialNetworkingSoftware I presented in CritisizmOfExpliciteSocialNetworkingSoftware. Alternatively one can treat that as a ThinkingFramework of how to analyze SocialNetworkingSoftware.
- XNS Public Trust Organization
The XNS Public Trust Organization (XNSORG) works with the Internet community to determine the future direction of the open eXtensible Name Service (XNS) protocol. XNS is an open, XML-based protocol for identifying and linking any resource participating in any kind of digital transaction. You’ll find the complete technical specifications on this site.
- Re: Shell based text editor for writing prose
Most unix text editors cannot (easily?) be set up to reflow a paragraph
automatically if you edit it somewhere in the middle. In vim this means
a bit too much typing of the gqip command when editing a paragraph to
reflow it. Like changing modes, this becomes second nature — I’ve
probably done it at least twice while composing this paragraph. - Alex King’s Blog – some good webdev content; I really like his Tasks tool as well
- RASMUS’ TOYS PAGE
- Jamie Zawodny blogs about his house-buying experiences
- Common Sense for a New Century – Howard Dean’s platform makes sense