stargeek
PHP news website logo.
home    PHP scripts    articles    seo tools    links    search    contact    shop    realtors


PlanetaMessenger.org Libraries







PlanetaMessenger.org Libraries

PlanetaMessenger.org Libraries 11/01/2003 10:43 AM

JMML 0.4 released




This is a GrokNews Entry: (what is grok?)





Similar Items

PlanetaMessenger.org Libraries

Grok Headline matches for PlanetaMessenger.org Libraries

PlanetaMessenger


PlanetaMessenger 11/16/2003 07:20 PM
PlanetaMessenger.org MSN Plugin broken. JMML will be updated

The amount of office space that
corporations allocate to their libraries
has fallen by 8.36% over the past five
years, according to a new survey of
corporate libraries "Corporate Library
Benchmarks, 2004-05 Edition" ISBN:
1-57440-069-X.


The amount of office space that
corporations allocate to their libraries
has fallen by 8.36% over the past five
years, according to a new survey of
corporate libraries "Corporate Library
Benchmarks, 2004-05 Edition" ISBN:
1-57440-069-X.
09/03/2004 02:51 AM
Reports on results of a major survey of corporate and other business libraries. Gives extensive data on management policies and practices and details on spending trends for salaries, electronic and print materials, and library services. [PRWEB Sep 3, 2004]

Merge old iPhoto libraries on CD with
iPhoto 5 libraries


Merge old iPhoto libraries on CD with
iPhoto 5 libraries
03/19/2005 02:40 AM
I had several iPhoto libraries burned to CD backups from iPhoto 3 or 4 that I wanted to merge with my nearly complete iPhoto 5 library. However, because I burned the libraries directly to CD from the Finder or Toast, and not ...

Essential in Libraries?


Essential in Libraries? 04/27/2004 10:48 PM
SMS an Essential Communication Tool

"The Mobile Data Association (MDA) reports that 2.1 billion text messages were sent in March 2004 in the U.K which is a 25% rise on the total from the same month last year.At present, on average, around 69 million text messages are sent each day in the UK.This article from the BBC states.'It is evident that in the last five years texting has grown from a popular craze among teenagers to an essential communication tool.'
Text messaging reaches new high" [Smart Mobs]


slack-get 0.2 (Libraries)


slack-get 0.2 (Libraries) 05/04/2004 04:41 PM
A tool like 'apt-get' for Slackware.

'UK libraries out of use by 2020'


'UK libraries out of use by 2020' 04/26/2004 09:46 PM
The public will stop using libraries if visitor numbers and book loans continue to fall, according to a new report.

2D Graphics Libraries


2D Graphics Libraries 05/05/2004 07:45 PM

While platforms these days have fairly good 2D graphics support like Quartz on OSX, GDI+ on XP, and , and Gnome Canvas, developers like me often have to use third-party libraries for whatever reasons.  On Win32, for example, GDI+ support is missing in legacy platforms which means either giving up on fancy graphics, redistributing GDI+ binaries, use a third party library, or writing one yourself.  Writing one yourself is fun (I have done it a couple of times over 20 years) but, unless it offers some unique features, you'll always end up migrating to a third party library.

BTW, Flash has an excellent 2D graphics engine but it's lacks an API so it's like a sports car without a driving wheel.  Yes, you can embed the Flash ActiveX and generate SWF on-the-fly but it's unwieldy for dynamic interaction and even handling gets tricky.  Embedding Adobe SVG ActiveX is just as unwieldy if not more.

While there are proprietary 2D engines out there, typically written by a few guys at a small company, they tend to disappear within a couple of years, either bought by companies (i.e. Apple, Adobe, Macromind, and Microsoft), or abandoned out of lack of interest or workable revenue model.  Besides, they charge fairly steep fees so I tend to avoid them.

Out of all the freely available 2D libraries out there, Libart stands out in features and quality. It offers fast anti-aliased rendering and it's use in Gnome Canvas over the years means most of the bugs have already been stepped on.  Libart is also used to drive librsvg, a SVG engine, and Java 2D, Java's graphics API, although Sun made extensive changes to tap hardware acceleration.  While Libart can and has been used cross-platform, it's not exactly cakewalk to use in non-Linix platofrms.  Cairo has some interesting features and rising interest could mean it will replace Libart someday, but it's still in development.

Third-party 2D graphics library I really like these days is Anti-Grain Geometry (AGG) which, although dormant for the last two years, has been rejuvenated with the released of version 2.1.  AGG is written in C++ and uses templates extensively like ATL does.  AGG is lightweight, very fast, flexible, and full of features.  It even comes with a partial implementation of SVG viewer as an example.  AGG supports Win32, X11, and SDL as is.  It doesn't yet support features variable stroke effects like Creature House's Expression 3 engine and Fractal Design's Painter support but then it's just me being unreasonable. :-)

I should note that subpixel graphics was first done 20 years ago in Word Handler to display 70 columns of hi-res text on Apple II.Silicon Valley Systems, the company that published Word Handler, was based just 5 minutes from where I live now and I enjoy fond memories of working there every time I pass by the old office on El Camino.  I guess everybody remembers their first job.  LCD screens were just starting to replace LED on calculators at the time, so Steve Gibson and Microsoft ClearType can claim to be the first to use subpixel graphics on LCD screen.  Lenny Elekman, where are you now?


slack-get 0.3 (Libraries)


slack-get 0.3 (Libraries) 05/26/2004 10:49 PM
A tool like 'apt-get' for Slackware.

Libraries 8, Amazon 0


Libraries 8, Amazon 0 12/09/2003 12:13 PM

Have You Ever Wondered....

"Have you ever wondered if the library were like Amazon.com?" [The J-Walk Blog]


England Libraries May All Get Wi-Fi


England Libraries May All Get Wi-Fi 12/04/2003 01:07 PM
The majority of libraries in England already have broadband access but now the government is working on adding Wi-Fi: Most of the libraries in King County, outside of Seattle, have Wi-Fi. It's a great, low-cost way for libraries to offer Internet access without having to provide computers for everyone. My library always has a line of people waiting to get on its computers so perhaps with Wi-Fi some people could come in with their own computers to use the Internet. But I wonder how many of the people I see waiting in line there actually have laptops that they could bring with them instead....

Libraries and the Internet


Libraries and the Internet 12/19/2004 03:00 PM
Kudos to Google and its new university allies -- including my alma mater, the University of Michigan, as well as Harvard, Stanford, and Oxford -- for their exciting project to open the stacks (Wall Street Journal, via Paul Kedrosky). It's a great day for the dissemination of knowledge! Bloggers from these institutions are relaying the emails received from their administrators: ...

New IM Record in Libraries


New IM Record in Libraries 03/14/2005 06:23 PM

I've been so short on time lately that I've been trying to avoid using what little blogging time I do have to simply repost what other library bloggers are already putting up. This one, however, was just too good to pass up.

when was the last time you had this kind of response to a new library service?

"Brian didn’t give me permission to publish a portion of his email, but I’m so excited about it I’m going to throw caution into the wind. He wrote [emphasis mine]:
'Rule number 1: Don’t send out IM reference fliers to every middle school and jr. high classroom on the same day!

Had to have been at least 100 IMs in the first 2 hours after the kiddies got home. For a while, I had about 20 IM windows up at once.' "

Someone recently observed that there are a lot of Eeyo res in the library community, but I think we can officially declare IM reference a Martha-Stewart-good-thing for (at least) public libraries and move it to Pooh status.

Cost of purchasing the AIM software: $0.
Cost of staff time to "man" the AIM service during those two hours: already paid for.
Satisfaction of having 100 kids respond positively and view the library in a new light: PRICELESS.


"http://p2p.libraries.psu.edu/"


"http://p2p.libraries.psu.edu/" 11/18/2003 03:32 AM

Echidna Libraries


Echidna Libraries 07/15/2004 07:16 AM
Added 8Bit Targa Support

It’s the Libraries, Stupid


It’s the Libraries, Stupid 06/09/2004 11:39 PM
Via Jeff Dillon, some insightful words on programming in Java and in the C#/.NET/Mono ecosystem. I hadn’t thought about it that way.

Salon in Libraries?


Salon in Libraries? 03/19/2003 10:45 PM

Last year I said I thought Salon should look into licensing content to libraries, and now they're finally doing something about it. Adrienne Crew, their Content Licensing Manager, sent me the following:

"Thought you'd like to know that Salon's Premium Institutional Subscription program for libraries is finally up and running.... Currently we are offering a one year subscription in the $300-400 range and feeds all access to the articles on the site via an IP authentication system or a single password."

More details as I get them.


NB Parser Libraries


NB Parser Libraries 06/11/2004 09:55 AM
Project started

Merlin Libraries


Merlin Libraries 06/06/2004 05:02 AM
Merlin Libraries v0.1.103 (unstable) Released

YSL Coding Libraries


YSL Coding Libraries 12/11/2003 06:12 PM
Transfer of CVS repository in progress

Libraries and culture, from a trench


Libraries and culture, from a trench 07/02/2004 01:28 PM
Today (July 1, 2004) marks a new chapter for many libraries across the US of A. Today is the first day of mandatory Internet filtering, if your library accepts federal telecommunications funds. Mine does.

Ham Radio Control Libraries


Ham Radio Control Libraries 02/16/2004 08:07 PM
Hamlib 1.2.0 released

Ham Radio Control Libraries 1.2.0


Ham Radio Control Libraries 1.2.0 02/18/2004 01:18 PM
Shared libraries for HAM radio equipment control.

Arran4's Libraries (A4lib)


Arran4's Libraries (A4lib) 08/20/2004 09:28 PM
Project registered

Libraries Wired, and Reborn


Libraries Wired, and Reborn 04/21/2004 09:03 PM
Public libraries have been transformed over the last decade as Internet - connected computers have increased their traffic - and, in some cases, even their book budgets.

RSS Screen Saver for Libraries!


RSS Screen Saver for Libraries! 08/27/2004 01:54 PM

C# Express RSS Screen Saver Starter Kit 

"One of my favorite features of C# Express is the built-in RSS Screen saver Starter Kit. If you’ve never built a screensaver before, or if you have never written code that uses RSS, then you’ll find the RSS Screen saver a great way to start programming.

In a nutshell, the RSS Screen saver is a screen saver that lets you select and validate an RSS feed, select a background directory for images to loop through, and the screensaver will loop through the items in the RSS feed." [Dan Fernandez's Blog, via del.icio.us/tag/rss]

I'm not enough of a programmer to run with this one, but this could be a very cool tool for libraries. Imagine being able to display your current news on your workstations via the screensaver in real-time without any manual intervention. Just update your "what's new" blog and it magically appears on all of your workstations. Major, major woot with a happy dance thrown in for good measure!

 


Libraries try to fit into a Google world


Libraries try to fit into a Google world 06/21/2004 09:16 AM
Source: News.com - Librarians have increasingly seen people use online search sites not to supplement research libraries but to replace them....

Islamic Tools and Libraries 0.6


Islamic Tools and Libraries 0.6 08/29/2004 03:47 AM
Islamic tools and applications, including an Islam-centric library.

Enlightenment Foundation Libraries


Enlightenment Foundation Libraries 08/02/2004 05:18 PM

BBC NEWS | UK | 'UK libraries out of use
by 2020'


BBC NEWS | UK | 'UK libraries out of use
by 2020'
04/28/2004 11:04 PM
die britischen Bibliotheken im Jahre 2020 unbenutzt seien .. 'UK libraries out of use by 2020' .. failing users .. BBC

news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3661831.stm
track this site | 5 links


Advice for Libraries from My Aggregator


Advice for Libraries from My Aggregator 04/29/2004 11:11 PM

PC Mag Says Death to 802.11b (Almost)
"PC Magazine rounds up several 802.11g routers, and says they're cheap enough, they're good enough: 802.11b no longer enjoys a large enough (or any) price differential for quality Wi-Fi gateways that include WPA encryption support, PC Mag says. So while you can still find 802.11b devices on the market, they recommend new gear have 802.11g built in...." [Wi-Fi Networking News]
Lesson: Make sure you buy 802.11g for your library.

Making CD-R's Last
"From Doug Kaye I learned of an interesting article on how long CD-R's will last and things you can do to increase or decrease that time. I've always just popped down to Staples and bought the cheapest disks I could find. For some of my uses (the latest Suse distro, for example) that's fine. But this article makes the point that if you're using the disk to archive important material, you need to be more careful. The article contains information on how to select good media and media that's appropriate for the drive that you'll be recording on. This may be especially important for organizations building large collections of CD-R's that they need to keep to meet regulatory or other business requirements." [Windley's Enterprise Computing Weblog]
Lesson: If your library is using CD-Rs for backups, archiving, or preservation, pick the right ones!


New List of Wi-Fi Consultants for
Libraries


New List of Wi-Fi Consultants for
Libraries
06/03/2004 11:42 PM

Bill Drew has started a list of consultants on The Wireless Librarian site. Get help with your own Wi-Fi implementation or help the list grow by sending in additions.


Forcing SQL Performance Libraries into
WMI


Forcing SQL Performance Libraries into
WMI
06/03/2004 03:15 PM

CyberInfrastructure Needs Libraries and
Archives


CyberInfrastructure Needs Libraries and
Archives
07/12/2004 06:00 AM
CyberInfrastructure Needs Libraries and Archives
http://www.clir.org/pubs/issues/issues40.html#comm

A new American Council of Learned Societies initiative provides a unique opportunity for libraries and archives to collaborate with scholars in defining the requirements of the new digital infrastructure -- what the National Science Foundation calls the "cyberinfrastructure." Libraries and archives are asked to redefine their roles, responsibilities and funding strategies while focusing on the needs of scholars in the humanities and social sciences. Humanists, social scientists and engineers will define and build this infrastructure to meet the needs of researchers and scholars in all disciplines. The ACLS commission's areas of emphasis will be applications like Geographic Information Systems, three-dimensional modeling of built environments, and text mining -- ones that have already begun to change the ways in which scholars interrogate primary sources. Libraries and archives are encouraged to attend public information-gathering sessions, participate in discussions, and contribute to the commission's work. The commission is especially interested in these groups' understanding of the impact of current intellectual property and privacy rights on access to information; the value of standards for information markup and searching; the need for interoperable information technology systems; and the imperative of preservation in a world of scholarly inquiry founded on an uninterrupted record of research.

Robots get bookish in libraries


Robots get bookish in libraries 07/21/2004 04:21 AM
BBC Jul 21 2004 8:39AM GMT

Trusting Libraries for Your Aggregator


Trusting Libraries for Your Aggregator 05/24/2004 01:41 AM

TV News in a Postmodern World: The Busine$$ of RSS

"Want a glimpse of tomorrow? Innovators Bill French and Harry Hayes are SmartStream Alliance™ and have a product that's so compelling that news executives of every sort will be scrambling to be first in their market with it....

RSxStream is a sophisticated and ingenious software engine that takes RSS, Atom, RDF, XML, any other sort of feed or data stream, or any other content that lives on the Internet and makes it available to the desktop via a contextual reader. End users are given a state-of-the-art reader — capable of grabbing anything from live TV to music to video-on-demand to simple RSS text feeds. If it's available via the Internet (today), it can be routed through the RSxStream engine. The end users have complete control of what sources they choose, as they would with any other RSS reader. The difference is those choices are drawn indirectly, through the RSxStream software....

What's crucial to understand with this is that whoever provides the reader to the public also owns the engine, and THAT is the business end of RSS. It means advertising can be crafted into the design of the reader and delivered based on the choices, habits and interests of the end user. It's contextual advertising nirvana. This type of business currently does not exist, but it's ideal for local media outlets. Why? Because we're in the information distribution business, and getting the reader onto the public's desktops is the key to its success. Moreover, if the local media entities don't do it, somebody else will, and they will take all those ad dollars with them." [DONATA Communications, via JD on MX]

I love the idea of providing the reader and even pre-populating it with feeds relevant to the intended audience,  but I hate the idea of some company monetizing it. I'd much rather get a grant and have libraries provide this information-centric software. We're in the "information distribution" business, too, except we're interested in people getting information without strings attached.


Webl0gs: Do They Belong in Libraries?


Webl0gs: Do They Belong in Libraries? 08/01/2004 06:44 AM
Weblogs: Do They Belong in Libraries?
htt p://www.ariadne.ac.uk/area-dna-155ue40/public-libraries/

Penny Garrod takes a look at weblogs and weblogging activities in libraries and considers some of the ways they can be used to support public library users.

SSTTR Java Libraries 1.1


SSTTR Java Libraries 1.1 05/09/2004 04:42 AM
Miscellaneous Java libraries for XML, crypto, and other things.

None of which Could *Possibly* Apply to
Libraries, Too


None of which Could *Possibly* Apply to
Libraries, Too
06/09/2004 06:58 PM
The Internet Search on Mobile Race

"IDC analyst Mr Keith Wayras expects 30 million people, or 17 per cent of US mobile subscribers, to use the web on phones in 2006,while currently in Japan about 44.8 million people, or 58 per cent of internet users, access the web on their mobile phones.Internet access will be available on most of the approx 600 million mobile phones expected to be sold worldwide this year.While it is already possible to run a Google search on phones, it is not always easy with websites built for desktop computers and not small-screened devices.This article says that "Google itself said in April that if it doesn't launch products that improve Web searches on handheld devices, it will fail to win a significant share of an increasingly important part of the online market."The article goes on to analyse Microsoft,Yahoo and AOL's moves in the internet search on mobile race.
Google could change the wireless internet" [Smart Mobs]


Building Testing Libraries


Building Testing Libraries 05/07/2004 07:22 PM
Save time, test more, and use what the CPAN has made available to enhance your development. Casey West demonstrates examples of good techniques when testing Perl-based software.
Grok Description matches for PlanetaMessenger.org Libraries
GrokA matches for PlanetaMessenger.org Libraries

PlanetaMessenger.org Libraries

The following phrases have been identified by the grok system as matching this entry:

















Also check out:


Grok

Ipod Porn on the
Rise

Brief Abstract of
Wikipedia's
Mesothelioma Cancer
page

Get first aid
instructions in your
cell phone

IE is crap
JSPWiki gains
podcasting support

singapore
SqlDump
XPP - Extreme PHP
Portal

Seeing double
Techfocus Under
Attack

PC familiarity turns
messy

Cisco optimistic
about local market

High-tech bulldozers
for Israeli troops

Govt-funded
super-computing grid
launched

Koss marks milestone
Panther stalks
Windows

There's no need for
cold feet over
energy efficiency

Stent advisory
sparks patient fears

Ultra Portable
Windows Computer
Available Next Week

PluggedIn: Digital
Music Migrates to
the Home Stereo

Ban on
Internet-service
taxes runs out

Google report
surprises Microsoft
execs

Sponsor Announcement
- Toy Palace

Hallowe'en
True Launch Bar
v2.2.0.8 Beta

stemma
xMess GUI
Panther system
stalking Windows

It's nice, but it's
gonna mess 'em up

Halloween banned in
Russia

Israeli chief of
staff Moshe Yaalon
makes public the
split between the
IDF and other parts
of the Israeli
government on how to
handle the West Bank
and Gaza

Image restoration
and inpainting

PHPFact
sketchboard
Atpdec
YABOG4U
AccounteX
Meta conversation on
metadata

Stewart-Watchin'
Deanies

Ireland domain
registry CEO resigns

jabberokayrpclib
0.0.1

Kile 1.6 (Stable)
samhain 1.8.0
beltane 1.0.4
leads4web 0.1.6
E-Mail Virus Hits
Corporate Users,
Heads for Homes

Way open for taxing
Internet

How to tell if
you'll be employee
with the right 'fit'

Patient tests on
medical device are
called into question

Execs urged to help
fix state

M'soft Specter
Stalks Google

Utility Computing:
Perceptions and
Reality

SQLpp: A SQL query
generation framework

Squarefish
Pandora Bots
what is grok?