Slashdot Mirror


DURL, a Search Tool for del.icio.us

Roland Piquepaille writes "I've been a strong advocate of the social bookmarking service named del.icio.us since it started (check here for an example). And almost every single day, a new tool appears and enhances the use of this service. This new one, DURL, written by Robin Millette, lets you type an URL and see if some other people already "delicious'ed it." And this is very efficient because it leads you to people who not only bookmarked the URL, but also assigned to it some pertinent keywords or tags, giving you new and fresh ideas. Services like Bloglines or Technorati among others certainly can return hundreds of links, so they are good for 'popularity contests.' But for building social communities and introducing you to sources you wouldn't have thought of, they don't compare to del.icio.us. This overview contains more comments, examples and screenshots."

174 comments

  1. Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting


    Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot: Is there a connection?

    I think most of you are aware of the controversy surrounding regular Slashdot article submitter Roland Piquepaille. For those of you who don't know, please allow me to bring forth all the facts. Roland Piquepaille has an online journal (I refuse to use the word "blog") located at www.primidi.com [primidi.com]. It is titled "Roland Piquepaille's Technology Trends". It consists almost entirely of content, both text and pictures, taken from reputable news websites and online technical journals. He does give credit to the other websites, but it wasn't always so. Only after many complaints were raised by the Slashdot readership did he start giving credit where credit was due. However, this is not what the controversy is about.

    Roland Piquepaille's Technology Trends serves online advertisements through a service called Blogads, located at www.blogads.com. Blogads is not your traditional online advertiser; rather than base payments on click-throughs, Blogads pays a flat fee based on the level of traffic your online journal generates. This way Blogads can guarantee that an advertisement on a particular online journal will reach a particular number of users. So advertisements on high traffic online journals are appropriately more expensive to buy, but the advertisement is guaranteed to be seen by a large amount of people. This, in turn, encourages people like Roland Piquepaille to try their best to increase traffic to their journals in order to increase the going rates for advertisements on their web pages. But advertisers do have some flexibility. Blogads serves two classes of advertisements. The premium ad space that is seen at the top of the web page by all viewers is reserved for "Special Advertisers"; it holds only one advertisement. The secondary ad space is located near the bottom half of the page, so that the user must scroll down the window to see it. This space can contain up to four advertisements and is reserved for regular advertisers, or just "Advertisers". Visit Roland Piquepaille's Technology Trends (www.primidi.com [primidi.com]) to see it for yourself.

    Before we talk about money, let's talk about the service that Roland Piquepaille provides in his journal. He goes out and looks for interesting articles about new and emerging technologies. He provides a very brief overview of the articles, then copies a few choice paragraphs and the occasional picture from each article and puts them up on his web page. Finally, he adds a minimal amount of original content between the copied-and-pasted text in an effort to make the journal entry coherent and appear to add value to the original articles. Nothing more, nothing less.

    Now let's talk about money. Visit http://www.blogads.com/order_html?adstrip_category =tech&politics= [blogads.com] to check the following facts for yourself. As of today, December XX 2004, the going rate for the premium advertisement space on Roland Piquepaille's Technology Trends is $375 for one month. One of the four standard advertisements costs $150 for one month. So, the maximum advertising space brings in $375 x 1 + $150 x 4 = $975 for one month. Obviously not all $975 will go directly to Roland Piquepaille, as Blogads gets a portion of that as a service fee, but he will receive the majority of it. According to the FAQ [blogads.com], Blogads takes 20%. So Roland Piquepaille gets 80% of $975, a maximum of $780 each month. www.primidi.com is hosted by clara.net (look it up at http://www.networksolutions.com/en_US/whois/index. jhtml [networksolutions.com] [networksolutions.com]). Browsing clara.net's hosting solutions, the most expensive hosting service is their Clarahost Advanced (http://www.uk.clara.net/clarahost/advanced.php [clara.net]) priced at £69.99 GBP. This is roughly, at the time of this writing, $130 USD. Assuming Roland Piquepaille pays for the Clarahost Advanced hosting service, he is out $130 leaving him with a maximum net profit of $650 each mont

    1. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by nizo · · Score: 3, Funny
      Roland Piquepaille has an online journal (I refuse to use the word "blog") located at www.primidi.com [primidi.com]. It is titled "Roland Piquepaille's Technology Trends". It consists almost entirely of content, both text and pictures, taken from reputable news websites and online technical journals.

      Sweet I will have to go check out this website, thanks for the link! Oh wait maybe I should read the rest of your post first....

    2. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by JaffaKREE · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think part of the problem is also that your submitted stories generally suck and stick out as "one of those slashdot Story-Ads". Why the secrecy anyway ? Does /. make money off your submissions or not ? We're not opposed to it, we're just opposed to all the weird shadiness...

    3. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Yes, but you arnt providing any content. All you are doing is copying and pasting other peoples hard work, and making money doing it!

    4. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by nizo · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      If my article is marked as offtopic and the parent is marked as a troll, does that mean my response is actually insightful???

    5. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by electrichamster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So, aggregate the content in a slashdot article and link to the original sources instead of your profiting weblog.

      No hosting costs for you, and you perform the same job as everyone else that submits a slashdot article.

    6. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      A prime example of someone who consumes information and never produces any!? Isnt the point of Slashdot to CONSUME information.. not to PRODUCE it.. especially for your own monetary reasons!?

      It cant take a lot of money to get a crappy web hosting provider to host a crappy article site where all the said content is mostly copied verbatim.

    7. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You are a prime example of someone who consumes information and never produce any

      So what did you ever produce, Roland? Outside of gratuitously long quotes from original sources and adding your own snippet like "This is interesting" or "The technology has gone long ways"? What's your addition to the value chain that you're so intrigued with? If we disconnect the Internet line at your house, would you be capable of producing anything first-hand, using just word processor and your own brain?

    8. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by bhima · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      It's strange, occasionally someone shows up on slashdot who quickly becomes nearly universally hated. Honestly I don't really get why they're hated but they are...

      Maybe you should change your name to John Katz

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    9. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by slungsolow · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Try it yourself some day, you might realize it takes time and money to produce content that many people seem to enjoy.

      I am sure the people who originally wrote the articles you copy and pasted would say something similar to you.

      That said, I refuse (and have refused in the past) to click through to your website. If someone could kindly just paste the article text from his site to /. it would solve the problem of him recieving click-throughs and $$!

    10. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why bother to post the garbage from his website? It's just a copy of the original article.. click on that instead.

    11. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Usually people with views that skew different than the average Slashdotters get hated. Those who don't like Linux, don't like pirating, etc.

    12. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Yes but this isnt the case with ole Roland. He's just a plagiarising asshole that everyone hates.

    13. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by CortoMaltese · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Yet Roland has friends and fans, but no foes...

    14. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
      This leaves Roland Piquepaille with $647 each month


      The Slashdot readership that can see through Roland Piquepaille's farce objects on the basis that he stands to make a generous amount of money


      Wow, a whole $647 per month! What would I possibly do with that much money. I can't even dream that big!
    15. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by mOoZik · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Newsflash: that's how all newspaper sites make their money! They mostly copy the content from original sites, add in a few pieces of opinion, and make money on subscriptions, but usually just advertisement. Hell, that's what Slashdot does, too! How do you think Slashdot makes money? And it is my belief that they make tens of thousands. But that's not the point: the point is that Slashdot does it, Roland does it, everyone else does it: that's how it is. Stop bitching.

    16. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Xshare · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Foes are chosen by the guy. Your looking for freaks, people who chose Roland as a foe.

    17. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by slungsolow · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Newspapers actually pay for services like the AP or UPI or Reuters.

      Roland makes money by copy and pasting articles and then writing a few sentences about them. I have nothing against his blog. I do have something against him profiting from it.

    18. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Funny...upon visiting primidi.com I don't see any advertisements as you claim. Yes, it could be a very recent change, but before you post a flame book maybe you should verify your claim. Looks to me like he's using geeklog as his syndication engine btw.

    19. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by emilymildew · · Score: 1

      He sure is making money off of those Goooooooogle ads, though.

    20. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by mOoZik · · Score: 1

      Not all, not all the time: they even cite the sources, and comparing them to the articles, they are very much similar. And what about Slashdot? It wantonly encourages such behaviour. Hell, Roland's site is essentially a Slashdot. Don't think I care about him OR his site, but I think you're being very unfair and elitist.

    21. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish it were possible to ignore all articles submitted by a particular person.

    22. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by CortoMaltese · · Score: 1, Informative

      And judging by the accepted submissions, it's in fact rpiquepa, not Roland Piquepaille. And they both have freaks.

    23. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man WTF are you smoking and can I have some? It's right there, right-hand side, a big farking cactus, "Reserve your Blogad."

    24. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by slungsolow · · Score: 1

      I am just asking for bad karma here
      I can completely see where you are coming from. Yes, slashdot does something similar. But 99% of the articles that slashdot links to are original content, where the originator PROFITS (through advertisements) from the link from slashdot (or in some cases loses tons of money from the extra bandwidth, but that is bit beyond the matter at hand).

      If Roland wants to provide the information that he provided, he could have submitted what he wrote on his website instead of a summary. There is no reason for him to profit from the click-throughs. It's shady, and dishonest.

    25. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by TrollBridge · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      That pays the rent for a lot of decent 1 bedroom apartments. Hell, that would cover most of my mortgage. I'd love to have my mortgage paid for by an hour's worth of work.

      --
      There's a Mercedes gap too. I want one and can't afford one, but it's not government's job to do anything about it.
    26. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by daniil · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Hey, it might not be much for you, mister multi-millionaire, but for the rest of us, some extra cash will always come in handy, especially during the Christmas season.

      And i do think the guy deserves some credit for finding a way to make some money off the Internet.

      --
      Man is a slave because freedom is difficult, whereas slavery is easy.
    27. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by mshiltonj · · Score: 1

      It's called "editing." It's a profession. I'm completely ignorant of Roland other than what you say here, but I find nothing objectionable about the practice (so long as he cites the source material and does not plaigerize).

      But I've heard people talk about the rise of "freelance editors" (cherry-pick the best stories from multiple sources, add context, etc.) for a while. Maybe he's the first?

    28. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by mOoZik · · Score: 1

      The originator also profits from Roland's site, as the visitor will click on the source to view the content. I see no difference.

    29. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by hunterx11 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Roland Piquepaille (780675) is a troll. rpiquepa (644694) is the real Roland Piquepaille. Just look at which one has accepted stories. Whether you like him or not, don't attribute the parent's idiocy to him.

      --
      English is easier said than done.
    30. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? I guess the huge "advertisers" block on the side of the site must have slipped by your crack investigation skills.

    31. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So we finally know what happened to Jon Katz!

    32. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by slungsolow · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The only difference, would be Roland profiting for doing absolutely nothing. He could have just as easily put the article text on slashdot.

      I hate to use the phrase "site whore", but that is essentially what he is doing. I feel the same way when anyone else uses the same dishonest tactic. There is no need for a middleman in the process when slashdot is already providing this service.

    33. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by daniil · · Score: 2, Insightful
      This Roland cat isn't providing any service not already adequately met.

      Yet each month, a hundred thousand people read the things he posts. It appears that he does serve some function. What he does is saving some people the trouble of having to search for this "interesting" stuff by themselves.

      --
      Man is a slave because freedom is difficult, whereas slavery is easy.
    34. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My thoughts exactly! Slashdot is the middleman.. I use the article text as the basic summary to decide whether or not to click and RTFA. I've boycotted all links to RP's site.. plagiarising bastard.

    35. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Uh, which one are you calling a troll. The real one is the annoying one who keeps spamming slashdot. I never even noticed the fake one, so he can hardly be counted as a troll.

      Just because someone's parodying him, doesn't mean he's not an annoying troll.

    36. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah - the idea of 'saving some people the trouble of having to search for this "interesting" stuff by themselves' is the whole POINT of Slashdot.. I come here to find the interesting stuff so I dont have to search for it. I dont need some asshole copy-and-pasting the article just to throw in his pointless comments to generate ad dollars.

    37. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      online journal (I refuse to use the word "blog")

      Uhm, you just did..

    38. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know what's ironic? This entire post was plagurized (poorly) from another thread.

      Next time you might want to include the links, so that instead of "www.censorware.org [google.com]" we would see the correct "www.censorware.org".

      Here's another tip. Go to View, and select Source. Do a search for NAME="post number" the number of the post (in this case, NAME="11073033"). Below that you'll see some table tags, which leads into the original source. Copy and paste that into an "HTML Formatted" reply box, and you'll be a successful copy-paste troll in no time!

    39. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Scratch-O-Matic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      the point is that Slashdot does it, Roland does it, everyone else does it: that's how it is.

      All of this is news to me, but it seems to me that the real point is the apparent 100% acceptance rate of these articles. If there is some sort of arrangement between Slashdot and Roland, basic ethics would dictate that the connection be disclosed to readers -- like on TV News when they say "XYZ Company, which is owned by the parent company of this network, announced today..."

      There is nothing wrong with posting links to articles others have written in order to generate traffic and make money, which, as you point out, both Slashdot and Roland do. But publishing a news service and selecting your news based on a financial arrangement is a little shady.

      --


      Evil is the money of root.
    40. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by eno2001 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Bah. Idiot mods. They usually have no sense of humor, no insight, and well... no sense at all. However, I will say this. I've noticed that if someone says something that may annoy one of the Slashdork crew, you tend to get a ton of "Offtopic" or "Overrated" mods. I wish I could meet one of the mods in person just once. Just once... ;P

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    41. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by bhima · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      All I can say is that the moderation of my comment is more proof that slashdot is a legion of windows ME users... I feel like I'm in an X-Files episode.

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    42. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only reason I clicked on this story was to make a comment about how worthless Piquepaille's submissions are. Thank you for sparing me the effort. Glad to see you got modded up for it, and glad you haven't been mod-bombed by the /. staff.

      Regards,
      -SNS

    43. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by kesuki · · Score: 1

      we all know AC is jealous, he wants $647 a month to read and copy/paste news articles.
      It sounds to me like roland has a nice little side gig going on whereby he can make loads of 'extra' income just for doing what he likes to do which is read news. oh wait, that sounds like what the slashdot editors are doing too, only people actually do all the submitting FOR them... hey wait! if this roland fellow is evil, then /. must be even worse!! because they don't even RTFAs they just get money for ads and subscriptions just for accepting/rejecting articles and they even let peers moderate dthe resulting discussion GASP you're doing all the work for them!!! damn.

    44. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by The+Hobo · · Score: 1

      An idea: maybe he's both, uses Roland Piquepaille to post, and rpiquepa to submit to keep his karma high.

      --
      There is another kind of evil which we must fear most, and that is the indifference of good men. -- Boondock Saints
    45. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What upsets me the most is that I didn't think of it first. :-/ What an incredibly easy way to trade karma for dollars (and I don't mean the slashdot brand of karma.)

    46. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by rasjani · · Score: 1

      You do know that same if not most news papers print out news that are usually written by news agencies like STT, Reuters, Itar-Tass and such..

      And many "news" websites do this too. I used to be admin in the one of the biggest portals in Finland and we had straight feed from STT, they would send article material with ftp into our servers and data would get automatically appended into the article database and show to the users..

      Atleast this guy goes to the net and gathers the interesting things by himself to maintain "the quality" of news..

      --
      yush
    47. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet each month, a hundred thousand people read the things he posts.

      For "posts", read "copies from other people".

      What he does is saving some people the trouble of having to search for this "interesting" stuff by themselves.

      As a mere agreggation service, that would be fine. Slashdot provides this kind of service. But Slashdot is a one or two sentence summary with a link to the original. Roland's website copies the source articles wholesale and there isn't much point to reading the original. If he didn't act like a sleazeball, I might consider reading his website regularly. But he does so I won't.

    48. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Rotund+Prickpull · · Score: 0
      Yet each month, a hundred thousand people read the things he posts. It appears that he does serve some function.
      I'm sure that each month, even more people have to scrape the soles of their shoes. It appears that dog shit does serve some function.
    49. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not the mods - well it's one of them - it's that fat queer michael abusing his infinite mod points & bitchslap script. The fucking coward.

    50. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Rotund+Prickpull · · Score: 0

      So what, your only jealous because I am better than you. Yeah, I make money by palgiarism, and that's why I don't live in my mom's basement like what you does, asshat.

    51. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by edittard · · Score: 0
      "I feel like I'm in an X-Files episode."

      Luxury! It's like one of Kafka's operas from where I'm standing.

      --
      At the bottom of the /. main page it says 'Yesterday's News'. Well they got that right.
    52. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It sounds to me like roland has a nice little side gig going on whereby he can make loads of 'extra' income just for doing what he likes to do which is read news. oh wait, that sounds like what the slashdot editors are doing too
      And your point would be like what, fucktard? That they do it and that's OK so he isn't a total asswipe? Or that he's a cuntsplat and therefore they are asswipes (second-hand ones to boot) too?
    53. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you look at the postings and journal entries for the Roland Piquepaille person (as opposed to rpiquepa), it becomes pretty obvious he's a troll.

    54. Re:Roland Piquepaille and Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      really...compare this comment to the socalled "troll's": http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=107916&cid=918 1040

      ITS THE SAME DAMN MANGLED ENGRISH!!!

  2. Nnooooo... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not another Roland article spamming his stupid site for advertising dollars!

    1. Re:Nnooooo... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lets all boycott any slashdot articles posted by this fool. I would personally rather give the advertising cash to the media outlet that originally came up with the story, and NOT someone who copies and pastes for profit.

      1. Copy content from reputable news sources.
      2. Paste on to your blog.
      3. Add minimal original content.
      4. Sign up for traffic related advertisement service.
      5. Post articles to /.
      6. Endure slashdotting.
      7. PROFIT!!!

    2. Re:Nnooooo... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow - this got modded as Flamebait when the article itself should have been. BBBooooo! Down with Roland!

  3. Doh by nizo · · Score: 5, Funny
    I've been a strong advocate of the social bookmarking service named del.icio.us....

    Nothing says "thanks for providing a great service" like a good post-holiday slashdotting. Note: the burning smell coming from the server room isn't fudge cooking.

    Oh and I noticed they have a "most active" list of links, but no porn section???

    1. Re:Doh by dr.badass · · Score: 1

      Oh and I noticed they have a "most active" list of links, but no porn section???

      I can't vouch for it's quality, but there does exist porn.a.licious. I'm not so sure I want to see how random people on the web categorize porn, but it's there if you do.

      --
      Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
  4. Nice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... shameless self promotion link. I hate when people use Slashdot to promote their blog.

  5. Reminds me of... by EpsCylonB · · Score: 1

    This sounds a little bit like the firefox extension Wikalong. With this extension installed you can make comments about a particular website and read what other people have written. Its kind of like meta data for web pages.

    1. Re:Reminds me of... by majid_aldo · · Score: 1

      ...kind of like slashdot.

      --
      --- widget evolution: enhanced, plus, super, ultra, extreme, exxxtreme, ultra-extreme, ..etc.
  6. After reading the headline by antifoidulus · · Score: 2, Funny

    I thought it was a way for me to quickly compare all the mortgage offers I get in my email....

  7. Delicious Firefox Plugin by pridkett · · Score: 5, Informative

    The delicious firefox plugin from http://delicious.mozdev.org/ is a little better than this because you can right click on a page and see who else has bookmarked without going to the page. It also gives tons of other nice feature, such as caching of you del.icio.us bookmarks for a sidebar. It's really nice.

    --
    My Slashdot account is old enough to drink...
    1. Re:Delicious Firefox Plugin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would I want to share my bookmarks with other people? They're my bookmarks. This "social bookmarks" thing is as stupid sounding as iNeighborhoods and Friendster and Makeoutclub and all this other gay ass "nerds try to be interactive" bullshit.

    2. Re:Delicious Firefox Plugin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no, you're just ignorant, sorry.

      maybe you should try it before you decide that you are a gay ass nerd.

    3. Re:Delicious Firefox Plugin by HorsePunchKid · · Score: 1

      If you're interested in the delicious extension, I've made a hacked version that allows you to select multiple tags (for a tag intersection) and select multiple bookmarks (to open the whole selected items in tabs). It's not an official version, though I have submitted bugs and patches for them. Something similar will hopefully be incorporated soon.

      --
      Steven N. Severinghaus
  8. Looks good on paper by Haxx · · Score: 0, Offtopic



    The quote goes like this, "Communism works in theory but when you add the human element it fails because absolute power corrupts".

    This is more proof that Capitalism is the same, it looks good on paper. Apparantly any power at all corrupts.

  9. Smut by superstick58 · · Score: 5, Funny
    I am shocked by the amazing lack of smut on this page. Not that I would want more myself. I am more curious on how this content stays off the lists. Maybe the site has not reached that crowd yet?

    Were has all the pr0n gone?

    1. Re:Smut by hoagieslapper · · Score: 2, Funny

      I don't know about you, but I don't bookmark my smut. My wife might find out what a pervert I am.

    2. Re:Smut by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      She already knows. That's why I and the mail man bang'er nightly.

    3. Re:Smut by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      should have married one that likes perverted men instead. you know, you don't have to marry the first one you run across.

  10. Well, it WAS a useful tool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but the /.ers pretty much put an end to that just now ...

  11. WHADDAYAKNOW by blair1q · · Score: 3, Funny


    sla.shdo.tted

  12. del.icio.us In A Nutshell by smug_lisp_weenie · · Score: 5, Informative

    So you sign up at del.icio.us (a rather akward domain name) and you make yourself a user name. After you've signed up, you get a special web link you can put on the bookmark toolbar of your browser.

    Then later, whenever you then find a page on the 'net you like and want to "bookmark", instead of using your browser to bookmark it, you click on your link to delicious and a window pops up where you can type in a few "tags" that you think describe the page you're visiting.

    What makes delicious so cool is that you don't need to make a complex hierarchy to organize your links: Instead, the program lets you slice 'em and dice 'em based on the tags: Just go to "del.icio.us/userid" and you can browse all your bookmarks.

    Like Wikis, delicious is so powerful because it is so incredibly simple: For instance, typing "del.icio.us/tag/waffles" gives you a list of all sites everyone on delicious has bookmarked about waffles. This simplicity also makes it easy for others to create extensions for firefox (foxylicious) and such.

    Also cool is that if you find other people who create good bookmarks you can set up to be notified when they post new stuff.

    From my expereince, delicious is by far the fastest website dispersing mechanism that exists: Before the big blogs have the latest coolest links, delicious users will already know about it way beforehand, because of the excellent way it can be used to track niche interests on the web.

    1. Re:del.icio.us In A Nutshell by cicho · · Score: 2, Insightful

      1) So what am I going to do with the three thousand plus bookmarks I've collected over the years? There seems to be no import mechanism

      2) If there is a way to import existing bookmarks, this has interesting security implications. A quick search through my Firefox bookmarks yielded two URLs with username/password included as CGI vars. No website does that for anything important (I hope), these are some forum and mailing list sites, for which I use a low-value password, but people who use the same password for everything they do online are going to be seriously screwed.

      3) What's the gain of opening up my bookmarks file to the world? I mean, why should I care that so many other people bookmarked this or that page? How does it let me find interesting stuff easier than Google?

      4) Social network through browser bookmarks... give me a break. If I view someone else's bookmarks or subscribe to their RSS feed, do we get marked as "friends"?

      --
      "Only the small secrets need to be protected. The big ones are kept secret by public incredulity." - Marshall McLuhan
    2. Re:del.icio.us In A Nutshell by emilymildew · · Score: 1

      I use it because I often find things while at work that would be useful to know about in the future. I can find a link that I thought was interesting a month ago when I'm at home, or at a friend's house, or whatever.

      I don't know about importing, or the security, but come on. Don't use a high-level password for this kind of thing.

    3. Re:del.icio.us In A Nutshell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      3) What's the gain of opening up my bookmarks file to the world? I mean, why should I care that so many other people bookmarked this or that page? How does it let me find interesting stuff easier than Google?

      I started using del.icio.us recently, and I like it very much. I chose a unique username for that site, and that username is nothing like my real name. So although the bookmarks are visible to the world, they are essentially anonymous.

      As far as finding neat stuff, it works well enough. Google is much better if you know what you want, but del.icio.us is good if you want to browse categories. It's similar to browsing dmoz.org, but more timely.

      One nice feature is being able to browse by tag intersections. So if you want to find all links about linux go to http://del.icio.us/tag/linux. But if you want to see all links about programming in linux, you can do an intersection between linux and programming like so: http://del.icio.us/tag/linux+programming. And you can intersect more than two tags also.

      I also like being able to browse my bookmarks from any computer. You don't even have to log into the site, just go to the right URL.

      Unfortunately, I think del.icio.us is down now due to Slashdot :-( I'm getting 503 errors when I click the above links, so I can't test them. I think they're correct, though.

    4. Re:del.icio.us In A Nutshell by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      Now, only to find a way to name it without the stupid dots. I tolerate (at best) the capitalization of the second letter of a name, like iPod and nVidia, I hate most products with the letter X in it, or extreme, Xtreme, ultra, etcetera, but this is altogether retarded on a new level.

    5. Re:del.icio.us In A Nutshell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Del.icio.us itself doesn't provide one, but scripts exist.

      2. "Doctor, it hurts when I do this."

      3. What's the loss? The important bit (to me at least) is that if you can see who bookmarked a page, you can see what other things they've bookmarked. Googling for "rdf tutorial" turns up a massive amount of links, many of which are duplicate or unrelated. OTOH, Tag-surfing del.icio.us turns up links that have been hand-picked and meaningfully described by people.

      4. It's not really social networking in the usual sense; AFAIK there's no way to contact other users. It's not about making friends, it's about finding useful and/or entertaining links.

    6. Re:del.icio.us In A Nutshell by patro · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What makes delicious so cool is that you don't need to make a complex hierarchy to organize your links: Instead, the program lets you slice 'em and dice 'em based on the tags: Just go to "del.icio.us/userid" and you can browse all your bookmarks.

      Anyone tried Spurl or Furl? They seem very similar to del.icio.us. Any recommendations about which one to use?

    7. Re:del.icio.us In A Nutshell by millette · · Score: 1

      I'm still looking for the one ring to rule them all. Actually, Durl will probably turn into something like that, given enough time... see my Durl update for more info.

    8. Re:del.icio.us In A Nutshell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      check out jots.com. It caches the pages you bookmark

  13. Re:Del.icio.us by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 2, Funny

    Dear Sirs at del.icio.us,

    You should try hostname v. It'll give you the version of the hostname utility. No really, you should try it!

    Regards,

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
  14. Yummmm by 10101001011 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Obviously this site is really del.icio.us since Slashdot already ate it....

  15. this reminds me by Irashtar · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    of stumbleapon. stumbleapon.org/

    1. Re:this reminds me by N0decam · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think you mean StumbleUpon

    2. Re:this reminds me by jacksonj04 · · Score: 1

      Similar concept, but not quite the same. I think del.icio.us is going to go exactly the same thing plus more soon though, since it's in more active development.

      Oh, and mods? Offtopic? Come on!

      --
      How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
  16. Searching SlashDot on DURL by mahesh_gharat · · Score: 3, Funny

    I searched for http://slashdot.org on http://tools.waglo.com/durl
    The result showed hundreds of entries for slashdot with different descriptions.
    At the bottom the last entry description was like this: Community weblog - for coders and geeks. Has interesting reputation management system - "Karma". Despite crap in discussions very frequently points to interesting links.

    I don't know why we have such image in other people's minds.

    On the site 2004weblogawards.com, though slashdot was discussed for the weblog awards, we didn't made it.
    Check the following URL and see what they are talking about: http://2004weblogawards.com/archives/000071.php
    Check for the following comment: I would recommend Slashdot if they weren't so UNIX slanted, and full of idiots.

    I think we (at SlashDot) should enhance our image infront of the world.

    1. Re:Searching SlashDot on DURL by koreaman · · Score: 1

      It's true you know.

    2. Re:Searching SlashDot on DURL by v01d · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think we (at SlashDot) should enhance our image infront of the world.

      I don't think it's the image that is the problem. Slashdot really is predominantly a load of crap packed with idiots who think they're God's gift to computers. There is occasionally a link to some other side which is actually interesting, but it's getting more and more rare.

    3. Re:Searching SlashDot on DURL by hyfe · · Score: 1
      I think we (at SlashDot) should enhance our image infront of the world.

      If the rest of the world think you're raving lunatics, you ain't got an image problem, you got a 'too many raving lunatics'-problem.

      --
      "" How about taking the safety labels off everything, and let the stupidity-problem solve itself? """
    4. Re:Searching SlashDot on DURL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Worse -- by slashdotting del.icio.us, the load has been driven up making it effectively unusable by those of us who depend on it. Yuck.

  17. Article Text = no $$ for roland!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
    DURL, a Search Tool for del.icio.us

    I've been a strong advocate of the social bookmarking service named del.icio.us since it started (check here for an example). And almost every single day, a new tool appears and enhances the use of this service. This new one, DURL , written by Robin Millette , lets you type an URL and see if some other people already "delicious'ed it." And this is very efficient because it leads you to people who not only bookmarked the URL, but also assigned to it some pertinent keywords or tags, giving you new and fresh ideas. Services like Bloglines or Technorati among others certainly can return hundreds of links, so they are good for 'popularity contests.' But for building social communities and introducing you to sources you wouldn't have thought of, they don't compare to del.icio.us. Read more for lots of examples...

    As I'm not sure if I convinced you, let's start with a real blog, Smart Mobs .

    If I feed the URL http://www.smartmobs.com/ to Bloglines by submitting the search string "http://www.bloglines.com/citations?url=http://www .smartmobs.com/&submit=Search," I receive 3358 unsorted results.

    If I do the same with Technorati , I find 1,614 links from 1,234 sources, sorted by date.

    In both cases, this produces a number of references which is hard to browse. Why a particular site has quoted Smart Mobs? It's not obvious to find an answer.

    So, it's time to use DURL, which returns a more manageable number of 45 results from del.icio.us.

    http://www.primidi.com/images/durl_1.jpg

    Here is a screen capture of the page returned by DURL. You can see that some people are reading Smart Mobs because they associated it with the concepts of "creativity" or "ubiquitous computing". Others are using tags such as "collaboration," "mobile" or "community." (Credit: Robin Millette/del.icio.us).

    Let's check for example the tag "Social Software."

    http://www.primidi.com/images/durl_2.jpg

    It brings us to del.icio.us/hbryant/social_software . (Credit: del.icio.us). Wow! Exciting! New tools for del.icio.us! Let's visit Soooo del.icio.us people can't stand it! .

    In a summary, with only two clicks, I found a gold mine. Do you know another service which is that efficient?

    Now, let's return to the previous page and check the link to the "community" tag.

    http://www.primidi.com/images/durl_3.jpg

    This time, this leads us to del.icio.us/oubiwann/community . (Credit: del.icio.us). From there, I can now read a "definition of Mundialization" or discover what is the "World Government of World Citizens."

    The more I use del.icio.us, the more I like it. This doesn't mean I'm not using Bloglines or Technorati, but I'm using them for 'exhaustivity,' not for 'discovery.'

    [And here is an additional note for Robin Millette, the author of DURL. In fact, you can do the same search on del.icio.us by adding the string "http://del.icio.us/url?url=" (without the quotes) before the URL you want to see if it has been delicioused. But it might be too geeky for some of you.]

    Source: Robin Millette, December 20, 2004; and various websites

    1. Re:Article Text = no $$ for roland!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please filter out links within the article text that link to his site, in the future. Thank you.

    2. Re:Article Text = no $$ for roland!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes yes, it's soo bleeding evil people actually make money using the internet.

      I hope to soon see all ads stripped from slashdot, because mostly it's very little commentary, a quote from the site and stupid comments. We shouldn't be giving slashdot hits, someone please find a place to post everything from slashdot with all slashdot related links stripped from it and no ads. I can't live knowing that my traffic somehow ads value to a website.

    3. Re:Article Text = no $$ for roland!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People go to Slashdot because it is a news aggregate (much like drudge report) - or a "trade" paper for the IT folks, if you will. People go to Rolands website because they are under the impression that they are about to see original content (like you would get from most /. articles).

      People aren't aware that he profits from the articles that he submits to /., and some people are pissed.

    4. Re:Article Text = no $$ for roland!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Use AdBlock Filter=http://ads.osdn.com/

    5. Re:Article Text = no $$ for roland!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really don't think he would appreciate you blatently copying content from his site..

  18. Re:tubgi8l by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If tubgirl is th3 future, it evidently won't hold it very well.

  19. I had this idea a while back by CrazyJim1 · · Score: 1

    My other multimillion dollar idea is:
    ascendtopresident

    Everyone is rated on their forum postings on news articles like hot or not.
    Everyone can click their own personal bias: such as rep/dem, con/lib, prolife/prochoice. And the highest ranking of them will ascend to the top, so you can read the top people's comments on news articles. Being on the top will encourage people to spend more time on their responses too.

  20. Clever by ezzzD55J · · Score: 1

    No mods (with a sense of humour) seem to have got it yet.

    1. Re:Clever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no, it just isn't funny...

  21. spurl by camcorder · · Score: 2, Informative

    As an alternative to deli.cio.us spurl is a good service for online bookmarking.

    Actually I found spurl's interface best of its kind, and it has really nice browser workarounds to get you ready to spurl easy and fast. Even a spurl firefox extension is out. Spurl has a plugin for IE as well.

    1. Re:spurl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      correct link is spurl.net

  22. other services also.. by joeldg · · Score: 1

    I like delicious so I made my own version that is multi-lingual here:
    http://historyagent.com/
    Has firefox extensions, and HTML segment (images/formatting etc) commenting via selection. You just select a portion of the page, including images, to use as the comment and hit the bookmarklet and it is added.

    Also I wanted more feeds possible, for examples see: http://feeds.historyagent.com/joeldg/

    Anyway, just wanted to point out that del is no the only alternative out there.

  23. DURL is redunadant by EqualSlash · · Score: 2, Informative

    I wonder why the slashdot editors allowed this one to be published in the first place. I am sure any geek on slashdot worth his salt can just easily use this for the same thing:
    http://del.icio.us/url?url=http://www.myurl.com/
    it would be trivial to create a javascript bookmarklet to do just that.

    1. Re:DURL is redunadant by millette · · Score: 1

      Almost... when I wrote it, I didn't know about that trick. I figured the parameter was an md5 string, and gave instructions on how to use that. But soon, I wrote a small script to turn the result of a URL search into an RSS feed, something del.icio.us itself doesn't yet provide. I never thought it would make slashdot though - not really prepared for that at all!

    2. Re:DURL is redunadant by i.r.t · · Score: 1
      or you could drag this bit of javascript to your toolbar:
      <a href="javascript:location.href='http://del.icio.us /url?url=' + location.href;">Del.icio.us History</a>
      (came from here)
    3. Re:DURL is redunadant by jes5199 · · Score: 1

      this is how i set up my bookmarklet:

      javascript:location.href='http://del.icio.us/url &u rl='+encodeURIComponent(location.href)

      it works.

      --
      monkeys.
  24. Nice, fun, unreliable by desierto · · Score: 1

    I was waiting for a tool like delicious to come around, I float around to many computers at different locations, and I wanted my bookmarks online. I was trying a php bookmark app that was damned difficult to use hosted on my own server when I discovered delicious. It ingenious I think, but what good is it if it's not available? I often get the 403 service not available in the popup (using the firefox extension) and often can't access my bookmark page. I've been using Furl at times like this. What is a geek to do, I've subscribed to the del.icio.us mailing list, to figure out what's going on with the development, but I wonder if it will ever be stable. Whine whine, I know, but has anyone else thought about a distributed del.icio.us?

    1. Re:Nice, fun, unreliable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you have been on the mailing list long you will have noticed that the owner of the site is planning on migrating from BSD to Linux to 'fix some issues' regarding the mysql database locking up. Things should be becoming more stable soon. However, now that the site has received slashdot linkchage I believe that not to be the story.

  25. Awesome Slashdot Moderation by scribblej · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Only here could the submitter of the article in question be moderated (-1, Troll).

    Not that I think that's a wrong choice. The guy could at least respond to the accuasations instead of saying "Oh, poor me, the slashdotters don't understand how hard it is...!"

    Hey, screw you buddy. Some of us have real jobs.

  26. Why not use this service on Roland? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Everybody got to http://del.icio.us/ and add "http://www.primidi.com/" under "Useless, plagiarizing cunt"? Just a thought :)

    (anony because I modded like mad :)

    .02

    cLive ;-)

  27. I had to do this search by Lurker+McLurker · · Score: 1

    Searching for http://www.primidi.com gave 21 results, with only a couple of comments. I thought every slashdotter who used del.icio.us would have commented on this site by now.

    --
    Mod parent up!
  28. His profits used to be higher... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After recent rants on /. some ads were pulled. Also the Adsense stuff (which used to occur several times on his front page) recently fell back to "Public Service Ads" which don't yield money.

    This guy is stealing other people's work. How this stuff ends up on /. once a week is beyond me.

  29. Obligatory Ghost in the Shell reference by imbaczek · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Even the 10x10 finger guy seen in Ghost in the Shell wouldn't be able to type THAT in about a minute.

    Hello, mr. AC bot.

    1. Re:Obligatory Ghost in the Shell reference by brad3378 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Mr. AC is probably a paying slashdot subscriber. When you subscribe, you have access to slashdot articles before nonpaying members.

      --

    2. Re:Obligatory Ghost in the Shell reference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Nah, it's a (poor) copy-and-paste troll. Notice all the [example.com] stuff? It's because those were originally links that the troll didn't bother correcting when he pasted the troll into the reply box.

      As an example, when I copy-and-paste the above from the preview window, I get:

      Nah, it's a (poor) copy-and-paste troll. Notice all the [example.com] stuff? It's because those were originally links [slashdot.org] that the troll didn't bother correcting when he pasted the troll into the reply box.
      Note the text "[slashdot.org]" that Slashdot added, but the link is missing.

      It's a copy-and-paste troll, that's all. One that managed to get moderated up instead of redundant, but, whatever.
    3. Re:Obligatory Ghost in the Shell reference by imbaczek · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Oh well. Another conspiracy theory down.

  30. everybody loves Roland - OTT moderation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting
    So, this gets a +5 and then drops like a stone to a two - OK, it's a repeat, but still bears examination. Then Roland, the troll, replies himself.

    Now, there are a lot of insightful replies - all of which dropped like a stone from 3/4/5 insightful to 0/1 insightful in the space of two minutes.

    In my mind this leaves two options:

    1. Lots of people love Roland, but they are shy, and only moderate and don't post
    2. Roland is sleeping with Hemos

    Y'know, I used to respect the anarchy of Slashdot. Now, I don't think there's any way we can trust the objectivity of the editors a bit.

    Or am I really the only one here who think's Roland is a plagiarizing c*nt?

    cLive ;-)

    1. Re:everybody loves Roland - OTT moderation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Now, there are a lot of insightful replies - all of which dropped like a stone from 3/4/5 insightful to 0/1 insightful in the space of two minutes.

      Actually, virtually every comment in the thread received a -1, Offtopic, it looks like the whole thread was slapped with an editor's moderation stick.

      Or am I really the only one here who think's Roland is a plagiarizing c*nt?

      He's not plagiarising, as he attributes the material to somebody else. Plagiarising is when you try and pass it off as your own.

      It's still scummy behaviour though, and almost certainly copyright infringement. I've seen people compare his "service" to Slashdot's - which is utter nonsense, as Slashdot articles aren't usually a blatant copy and paste from the original, but simply a one sentence summary with a link to the original.

  31. THAT IS NOT EDITING! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry for shouting.

    If you are an editor (or publisher) you have to pay other people (or news agencies etc.) for the content they deliver.

    Is RP paying anyone? No.

    In these days content has a certain monetary value. It generates traffic. The traffic in turn generates money through ads, subscriptions etc.

    1. Re:THAT IS NOT EDITING! by mshiltonj · · Score: 1

      If you are an editor (or publisher) you have to pay other people (or news agencies etc.) for the content they deliver.

      I disagree that payment for content is a defining characteristic of editing.

      Pick up a copy of the latest Writer's Market. There are *tons* of *print* publications that publish and edit (and sell) content submitted by writers that don't get paid -- voluntarily.

      I don't want to be defending the guy -- he may be a sleazebag for all I know. If it's plaigarism or even unauthorized (but credited) reproduction, then yeah, it's a legal issue. But if he's "adding value" and the parent post suggests he is, then he's adding value. I didn't RTFA, so I don't know.

      It seems some people think he's cheating. Maybe he is. I don't know. But the parent post describes 'editing', and evidently thinks he's a bad editor and is overpaid. That may be the case.

      The slashdot connection is interesting, however.

    2. Re:THAT IS NOT EDITING! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do yourself a favor and look at his site.

      What RP does is basically as follows:

      Step 1: Browse the web for news that might be interesting to the /. crowd (RSS feeds help a lot with this)

      Step 2: Copy the stuff verbatim (i.e. 100% of the text and the images)

      Step 3: Write a 5-10 line intro to the topic

      Step 4: After every 20 or so lines of the original content put some ELIZA style comment into it, like "This technology will take years to mature" or "I was sceptical, too" etc.

      Step 5: Always end the whole stuff with "make sure to visit..." with a link to the original content.

      Looking closely at RP's site you will also notice that he usually get's his content from universities or other non commercial sources who won't object his procedure.

  32. adsfsdfdsaf by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks for posting this link, I didn't want to use del.icio.us today, anyway.

    fuckers.

  33. CiteULike by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's also CiteULike which uses a del.icio.us model to handle academic papers: http://www.citeulike.org/

  34. Off-line alternative? by MasTRE · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm looking for a stand-alone alternative. del.icio.us is great, but when the site goes down (as it did when this was posted), you are f-d. What's a good alternative that will do something akin to it? Something that requires a database/server install is fine (and actually preferred, as it's accessible over the net) - the main requirement is that there be some way to back up my data and, in case the server crashes/burns, I can set up a new serv[er|ice] and simply reload my backup. Which I can't do with del.icio.us. I like knowing my data is safe on a DVD-R somewhere.

    I am loathe to use the service because I forsee investing a lot of time and energy in organizing my huge collection of personal bookmarks and I do not wish to risk wasting it in case del.icio.us goes offline (as it certainly will in 1 [week|month|year|decade|century]).

    Ideally, the software would also create a local copy of the page(s) bookmarked, as all pages certainly will go offline (see above).

    --
    Must-not-watch TV!
    1. Re:Off-line alternative? by Oori · · Score: 1

      Totally agree.
      One step towards that would be implementing import/ export options of popular bookmark file formats.
      But wait, here's another idea -- wouldn't it be great if we could keyword search our bookmarked pages? They should run Gatherers on the bookmark files (Anyone remember the "Harvest" system?).
      So, if anyone has some process cycles to spare, and an online Linux server, email me -- I'd be willing to try and set up indexers that build separate indexes for each bookmark file. exsched@r-emove.yahooTHIS.com

  35. Slashdot Request by gclef · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Editors/Slashdot managers,
    in the interest of keeping the discussion on Roland's stories civil, I'd like to make a Slashdot enhancement request: Could you please create a category for Roland's stories, which interested users could remove from the front page (like many people did with the Jon Katz years ago)?

    If people could remove his stories, many of the whining about his stories would vanish, since they'd have a way to avoid him.

    1. Re:Slashdot Request by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People have been suggesting he be made an editor for quite some time now, just so they can do as you suggest.

      It's not going to happen.

    2. Re:Slashdot Request by bedessen · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Yes, agree. I would much rather not see any piquepaille tripe whatsoever, and having it as a section would be ideal.

    3. Re:Slashdot Request by HorsePunchKid · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I'll second this motion. Thanks for the constructive suggestion!

      --
      Steven N. Severinghaus
  36. new name for the service by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

    sla.sh.dot.us

  37. Too much information! by sean.peters · · Score: 2, Funny

    I was wondering where the "hoagieslapper" nickname came from!

    Sean

  38. del.icio.us spam? by teneighty · · Score: 1

    I haven't used del.icio.us myself - can anyone tell me if it's prone to being spammed or not? If not, what do they do to prevent it from being overrun by link whores and the like? (it's sad that we even have to think about that, but the brutal reality seems to be if anything can be ruined in the name of a making money, it will be)

  39. Simpy: Link History with a time graph by otisg · · Score: 1

    Simpy[1] is a service like Delicious (but with a superior full-text search). It offers something very much like DURL, but it also shows you the popularity of a given link over time, as a chart![2]. If you don't have a Simpy account, you can try the demo account[3].

    [1] Simpy
    [2] Link History bookmarklet
    [3] demo/demo

    --
    Simpy
  40. Why slashdot the tool? by qod · · Score: 1

    I do not understand why the tool should get a big fuss, it is already available with foxy.licio.us and the coding of this tool does not need much brains or skill(It is in del.icio.us's API). The author also does not give us any source code so it is obviously not GPL. Anyways I have coded two scripts that do exactly what this tool does using the del.icio.us API, and it only required about 7 minutes of research on the web. Here they are they do not do rss fead but you could make it do it just search of an rssgen, comments as apreciated.

    #___________First Method_______________
    #!/usr/bin/env python
    #PyURL1.py
    import md5
    from urllib import urlopen
    from sys import popen
    site = raw_input("Enter the site's address")
    if site[:7] != 'http://': site = 'http://' + site
    hash = md5.new(site)
    popen('/usr/bin/firefox %s' % ('http://del.icio.us/url/' + hash.hexdigest( )))

    #___________Second Method_______________
    #!/usr/bin/env python
    #PyURL2.py
    from urllib import urlopen
    from sys import popen
    site = raw_input("Enter the site's address")
    if site[:7] != 'http://': site = 'http://' + site
    popen('/usr/bin/firefox %s' % ('http://del.icio.us/url?url=' + site))

    QoDS ec

    1. Re:Why slashdot the tool? by millette · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the source, I did the same thing on my end. See my Durl update for more info.

  41. Delicious SPAM potential. by Oori · · Score: 1

    So I just made myself an account, added GMAIL as a bookmark, and then decided to see which other users did the same. In fact, there were 331 others, all identified by their Deli's usernames, and practically all of them linking to gmail's login page. Ditto for the 126 with links to My Yahoo!. Etc' Etc'.

    Best to have a Deli' account that is different from the one used for email services... I can easily see Spam mail originating from these sorts of lookups.

  42. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    let people block him and they'll stop complaining.

  43. The Speculative Search Game: Another Approach by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The Speculative Search Game is a different approach to finding interesting new sites that is inspired by artificial game markets and The ESP Game.

    The Speculative Search Game allows you to predict which web pages will rank more highly on Google in the future. The output of the game will be used to build a Speculative Search Engine that ranks those web pages more highly today.

    http://cgi.cse.unsw.edu.au/~amichail/spec/

    http://cgi.cse.unsw.edu.au/~amichail/spec/faq.html

    1. Re:The Speculative Search Game: Another Approach by amichail · · Score: 1
      The Speculative Search Game is a bit like BlogShares.

      However, the Speculative Search Game allows you to make predictions about any web page -- not just blogs. Moreover, The Speculative Search Game has a much simpler model than BlogShares and most other artificial game markets -- and perhaps this would encourage more people to play.

      The Speculative Search Engine is not available yet, but will be if/when the game attracts many players and generates some interesting data.

  44. DURL alternative with time-line graph by otisg · · Score: 1

    It amazes me to see such simple stuff celebrated and drawing so much attention. I find the DURL output quite hard to read. On the other hand, Simpy[1] is a service like Delicious (but with a superior full-text search, full Boolean support and so on) and it offers something very much like DURL. However, unlike DURL, it also shows you the popularity of a given link over time, as a chart![2]. This makes is _much_ easier to visualize things.
    If you don't have a Simpy account, you can try the demo account[3].

    [1] Simpy
    [2] Link History bookmarklet
    [3] demo/demo

    Example: link history for Slashdot: chart.

    --
    Simpy
    1. Re:DURL alternative with time-line graph by pnatural · · Score: 1

      It amazes me to see such simple stuff celebrated and drawing so much attention.

      Not me. The main reason del.icio.us has gotten so much attention, IMO, is the simplicity. It's a tool, it does one or two things and does them well. Oh, yeah, plus you can bring in bookmarks into any app via RSS.

      As to your site... I fail to see why I would want a chart of a links popularity. But that's just me... maybe there are lots of folks who do.

      BTW, you should tweak your stylesheet a bit more. The stock plone css is pretty boring.

    2. Re:DURL alternative with time-line graph by millette · · Score: 1

      Good idea, I'm planning on implementing the same thing in the next little while... see Durl Update. Also note that del.icio.us will soon be provinding the RSS feed itself, so I have to think of more stuff for Durl ;)

  45. Porn Links by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Porn is definately there at http://del.icio.us/tag/porn so similar searches

  46. del.icio.us vs. furl by epistemology · · Score: 1

    Doesn't del.icio.us do what furl does, but without saving content? Does anyone know both these services?

  47. Hyperlinkomatic by judzillah · · Score: 1

    A similar service called Hyperlinkomatic is available. I have been using it for a while and although it hasn't been updated since the summer, it has been very useful for me, and whenever my friends are bored, I can send them to my personal page chocked full of url goodness.

  48. Check out furl.net by cthrall · · Score: 1

    Similar...and there's a RSS feed.

    Furl.net

  49. MemeStreams does this... by Decius6i5 · · Score: 1
    Here is a screen capture of the page returned by DURL. You can see that some people are reading Smart Mobs because they associated it with the concepts of "creativity" or "ubiquitous computing". Others are using tags such as "collaboration," "mobile" or "community." (Credit: Robin Millette/del.icio.us).

    I run a small internet community called MemeStreams that has had a feature like this for some time. MemeStreams has a thread bookmarklet. You can click on it when viewing any URL and see a discussion thread about that page if users of MemeStreams have commented on it. These discussions could clearly be moderated although there is not enough traffic to warrant it right now.

    The idea is that any web page could be associated with a open, threaded discussion that is available one click away.

  50. As usual, Roland lies about being l33t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Roland Piquepaille writes "I've been a strong advocate of the social bookmarking service named del.icio.us since it started "

    Pardon my French, but I call bullshit on this one.

    Roland is the stereotypical crass self-promoter who likes to claim he "discovered" or is at the forefront of technological trends just so he can get invited on junkets and trips at others expense, and promote his largely plagiarized blog.

    del.icio.us has been around since 2003. The link that johnny-come-lately Roland provided to demonstrate he's a cutting edge "advocate" is from NOVEMBER 2004. Hardly "since it started" as he claims. Roland, take your tech poseur l33t-ness back to Smart Mobs where people are fooled by your sycophant BS.

  51. I, Roland by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    How do you know Slashdot accepts every Piquepaille submission? His Slashdot "homepage" lists only those accepted, not those rejected (or pending); unprivileged Slashdot users can't see the rejections. Unless it's you, CowboyNeal ! Posting as AC in a deliriously crafty unredisinformation campaign to dispel any criticism of your fat Piquepaille/Slashdot nexus, which might threaten your $129.40:mo (20% of Piquepaille's $647) kickback! With over 800K registered users (and counteless other ACs), that's at least $0.00016175 per Slashdotter you're skimming off the top, every month! All just because you bend other Slashdotters' work, nerdy story submissions and carefully distorted English summaries, into the Slashdot we know and hate to love to hate.

    Now the truth can finally be told: this whole subthread is really an ad for BlogAds. For totality in reflexive, postmodern Slashdot journalistic disintegrity, I note that I am Roland Piquepaille, and I rejected this message.

    --

    --
    make install -not war