Friday, March 21, 2008

I'm Teaching Again!

Yes, its true. I am lined up to teach again this summer - June through July. The class is called
Crossing the Digital Divide What Print Professionals Need to Know. I am still trying to decide whether to host it at my place or at a NYU computer lab on 42nd Street. Any thoughts on this would be most appreciated. Have a look at the class description and let me know if you have any questions.

Monday, March 17, 2008

SeaDragon Rocks the Hard Rock

Last year Microsoft demonstrated their SeaDragon software that easily allowed users to zoom in dynamically on images. This tech is now part of Silverlight 2 and referred to as Deep Zoom.

A great example can be found at the
Hard Rock Memorabilia site

John Udell also commented on this tech here going into some depth about the facility for making persistent links to parts of the images.

Definitely worth a look!

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Ask.com Leaves General Search Market

I was blown away to learn that just this week that Ask.com announced that it would be narrowing its search engine to focus on topics for women in their late 30s and older, who already make up a disproportionate amount of Ask’s users. According to newly appointed CEO Jim Safka. (Summary at TechCrunch) Ask will lay off about 40 employees, or 8 percent of its work force.
With Yahoo and Microsoft continuing to duke it out over a potential takeover, it certainly seems like Google has even more room now to continue to balloon further into the unstoppable monster that it has become.

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

A Unit of Knowledge

KnolStuff.com is a new social networking community for Google's Open Encyclopedia.


From the site: The days of our beloved, AD-FREE, one-spot knowledge source for all our questions, Wikipedia, might be numbered. Google, the giant search and advertising company, has announced Knol ("which stands for a unit of knowledge") as an alternative to Wikipedia.

Sunday, March 2, 2008

Netscape gone!?! The end of an era.

While this probably comes as no surprise to anyone. "Netscape Navigator, now owned by AOL, will no longer be supported after 1 March 2008, the company has said." See article by BBC here. For those of us old timers it is a sad day. Mozilla/Netscape helped get many of us started. I remember eagerly awaiting the new release of Netscape to see what cool new HTML thing I could code. It was also fun riding the rapids between the HTML "standards" of IE and Netscape.

Well its legacy is not dead. It lives on in the Mozilla open source community. If you haven't already given Firefox and Flock a try. You may never go back to IE.

The lights may be out Netscape, but you will never be forgotten.

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