An example semantic web site which does attempt to combine your various social online identifies is http://qdos.com. Qdos gives each person a rank score, based on your online persona, i.e. the higher your social activity the higher your Qdos, you can also log in using OpenID, and you can get all of your data back in a triple notation. You can claim your name, and add your various sites to the profile, and raise your ranking, if you are that way inclined:
I run fedora 8 on my desktops at home and at work, mainly due to installation ease, and also due to the fact that all of our servers run RHES - consistency being the key. In brief, yum has improved vastly since earlier fedora core releases, the addition of packages yum-fastestmirror and yumex (Yum Extender), allow for a better yuming experience.
The Gnome-online desktop is something else worth mentioning, the incorporation of your various social networks into your desktop is more exciting than anything else reported in the desktop OS world, and the fedora team seem to be on the right track with this one. Dont get me wrong, the infrastructure is in its infancy, but could this be the future Windows killer?
An example semantic web site which does attempt to combine your various social online identifies is http://qdos.com. Qdos gives each person a rank score, based on your online persona, i.e. the higher your social activity the higher your Qdos, you can also log in using OpenID, and you can get all of your data back in a triple notation. You can claim your name, and add your various sites to the profile, and raise your ranking, if you are that way inclined:
Perez Hilton (what a waste of space) in html:http://qdos.com/celeb/5030c86ab21d08595fcd9a93f4480d45/html
Perez Hilton in triples:
http://qdos.com/celeb/5030c86ab21d08595fcd9a93f4480d45/turtle
CmdrTaco in html:
http://qdos.com/celeb/4e24374b2e9d0209221f2a6a0fc6a100/html
CmdrTaco in turtle:
http://qdos.com/celeb/4e24374b2e9d0209221f2a6a0fc6a100/turtle
I run fedora 8 on my desktops at home and at work, mainly due to installation ease, and also due to the fact that all of our servers run RHES - consistency being the key. In brief, yum has improved vastly since earlier fedora core releases, the addition of packages yum-fastestmirror and yumex (Yum Extender), allow for a better yuming experience.
The Gnome-online desktop is something else worth mentioning, the incorporation of your various social networks into your desktop is more exciting than anything else reported in the desktop OS world, and the fedora team seem to be on the right track with this one. Dont get me wrong, the infrastructure is in its infancy, but could this be the future Windows killer?