See it w/o giving your first born http://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/02/technology /circu its/02next.html?ex=1251777600&en=1cb1803faa02fdd0& ei=5090&partner=rssuserland
I use Livemarks. Everyone not using FF Nightlys will see in 1.0. It makes an rss into a folder in your bookmarks...
"RSS feed integration into Firefox... specifically:
- when a page is encountered that has the link tag in the display an icon in the status bar that opens an Add Bookmark dialog to add the feed as a bookmark. - RSS Feed bookmarks behave like folders in that they can be opened, showing the posts as bookmarks underneath. They should be immutable folders however (cannot cut, delete from them, cannot insert into them, drag operations blocked). - the major RSS formats should be supported (1.0 RDF, 2.0 XML etc)
A suggested approach is to decorate such bookmarks with a flag, e.g. LIVE_BOOKMARK="true" and when the bookmarks datasource is asked for children of that container, it can see that it's a live bookmark and fetch the content. Caching of results can be implemented if there are update problems.
As a side note Live Bookmarks are the perfect use case of Scheduled Update Notifications... they are files that change often and there's a real value in having the icon change subtly or something similar when there's a new post. This should not be seen as a pre-requisite for the former however.
I'm not likely to get to this for 1.0 so I'm looking for help to implement... this would be a great project for someone to get their feet wet in RDF/Bookmarks code."-- Ben Goodger
iRate Radio
Just use a lightweight wiki on a local-only apache server.
I personally use roWiki, mainly because it's easy for me to hack new features onto.
Dude, Slashdot is going XHTML/CSS soon.
Works fine with Helix on my Slackware box.
Granted the codecs arn't free/libre
http://www.madpenguin.org.nyud.net:8090/cms/html/4 7/3542.html
*Posted w/o Karma bouns
you forgot a dozen Google V. MSN stories...
oops, didn't finish reading the post...
Such a friggin' idiot...
Why not have torrent sites share their torrents
.torrents and Site A can use that to help its index. It's up to the site owner what feeds he trusts.
Site X has an RSS feed of all their
This would allow sharing and (hopefully) end the segmentation. One site goes down, the others pick up the slack.
Article Link, Sans first born
I am still in disbelief of what happened over at ZDTV...
Talk about a great network gone bad... yuck.
its not that pat wants one DE its that gnome is taking too much effort for so little when dropline is good enough.
where is the moderation option for Amen when you need it.
See it w/o giving your first borny /circu its/02next.html?ex=1251777600&en=1cb1803faa02fdd0& ei=5090&partner=rssuserland
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/02/technolog
sure its Right Here
http://stopie.com/ its similar but cool
0 4/ 08/23/2328212
http://browsehappy.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=
but i bet if enough disobayed then the '04 olympics could flutter dead....
No ticket sales and if enough get kicked then its really nothing...
PS: yes i know no one will endanger their being there and say FUCK THEM....
ah i get it....
Duke Nukem Forever
DNF== Did Not Finish!!!!
Is there any review process or monitoring to keep a domain from being a pr0n site..
Is that why this is a YRO, cause your filtered...
I use Livemarks. Everyone not using FF Nightlys will see in 1.0. It makes an rss into a folder in your bookmarks...
8 #c1
"RSS feed integration into Firefox... specifically:
- when a page is encountered that has the
link tag in the display an icon in the status bar that opens an Add
Bookmark dialog to add the feed as a bookmark.
- RSS Feed bookmarks behave like folders in that they can be opened, showing the
posts as bookmarks underneath. They should be immutable folders however (cannot
cut, delete from them, cannot insert into them, drag operations blocked).
- the major RSS formats should be supported (1.0 RDF, 2.0 XML etc)
A suggested approach is to decorate such bookmarks with a flag, e.g.
LIVE_BOOKMARK="true" and when the bookmarks datasource is asked for children of
that container, it can see that it's a live bookmark and fetch the content.
Caching of results can be implemented if there are update problems.
As a side note Live Bookmarks are the perfect use case of Scheduled Update
Notifications... they are files that change often and there's a real value in
having the icon change subtly or something similar when there's a new post. This
should not be seen as a pre-requisite for the former however.
I'm not likely to get to this for 1.0 so I'm looking for help to implement...
this would be a great project for someone to get their feet wet in RDF/Bookmarks
code." -- Ben Goodger
Source: http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=24407
What says this is gonna fix piracy if you can get the full version for $5 on the street?
Plus, what says this can't be hacked & ta-da we have an engilsh version...
or anti-virus & firewalls will issue warnings about IE.
Ok i could make some sick Gary Colman joke but im a better berson than that.
*crickets*
because GMail has other features going for it that just size.
hell ill still use it if it wasn't 1 Gig
Disclaimer: this is my opinion & you don't have to agree with it. But please respect it as i do yours.
Haiku is a very nice name for 2 reasons:
1. It flows well
2. is stands for a light weight form of poetry
Light weight & flowing poetry are great things to associate w/ an OS in my opinion.
Im fresh out...
/.'ed good thing yahoo gave me 100MB ;)
don't cry though i will have more in a few days...
my box is getting