Vocabulary Builder 1.3Vocabulary Builder 1.3Vocabulary Builder 1.3 07/13/2004 03:35 AM A program to build your vocabulary. This is a GrokNews Entry: (what is grok?)Vocabulary Builder 1.3Grok Headline matches for Vocabulary Builder 1.3Vocabulary Builder 1.2Vocabulary Builder 1.2 06/28/2004 12:18 AM A program to build your vocabulary. Vocabulary Builder 1.32Vocabulary Builder 1.32 01/05/2005 04:34 PM A program to build your vocabulary. NetWeaver and the New SAP VocabularyNetWeaver and the New SAP Vocabulary 05/26/2004 09:18 PM ZDNet May 27 2004 0:49AM GMT What Is A Controlled Vocabulary?What Is A Controlled Vocabulary? 12/17/2002 04:33 AM TeXML: an XML vocabulary for TeXTeXML: an XML vocabulary for TeX 04/13/2004 08:41 AM TeXML is an XML vocabulary for TeX. The processor transforms TeXML markup into the TeX markup, escaping special and out-of-encoding characters. Intended audience is developers who convert documents from XML to TeX. Dog Trained on 200 Word VocabularyDog Trained on 200 Word Vocabulary 06/12/2004 08:24 PM Cisco Adds 'G' To Its VocabularyCisco Adds 'G' To Its Vocabulary 11/13/2003 02:52 PM AtNewYork Nov 13 2003 2:43PM ET Schmies Vocabulary TestSchmies Vocabulary Test 06/14/2004 10:08 AM Here's another nifty IQ-like test for you .. Schmies's Word Classification Test .. IS THAT SUPPOSED TO BE GOOD ? .. interesting vocabulary quiz .. ultimate vocabulary test, .. 155 out of 200 .. test eskimo.com/~miyaguch/schmies.html Publishing-scam vocabularyPublishing-scam vocabulary 09/21/2004 06:23 AM Cory Doctorow: Teresa Nielsen Hayden's latest blog-essay on publishing scams explores the vocabulary choices that tip off the likelihood of a sleazy publishing scam: This is a segment of a larger piece, the working title of which has been "Ambient Misinformation about Publishing and Writing, and the Cultivation of the Reader Mind: A Rant I Didn't Get to Deliver at Noreascon." It has occurred to me that I could write about this one for a very long time without exhausting the subject.Link Round Up: Everyday vocabularyRound Up: Everyday vocabulary 08/31/2004 01:27 PM newmediazero Aug 31 2004 5:44PM GMT A 2003 vocabulary quizA 2003 vocabulary quiz 01/02/2004 07:31 PM Runners-up included the high-tech term "blog" (Web log, or Internet journal); the newly minted verb "google" (to rummage through the Web using the search ... Vocabulary Trainer (Java)Vocabulary Trainer (Java) 03/22/2005 03:34 PM Release 1.0-1 FOAF Vocabulary SpecificationFOAF Vocabulary Specification 02/01/2005 09:20 PM FOAF Vocabulary Specification http://xmlns.com/foaf/ 0.1/#sec-foafvocab The FOAF project is based around the use of machine readable Web homepages for people, groups, companies and other kinds of thing. To achieve this they use the "FOAF vocabulary" to provide a collection of basic terms that can be used in these Web pages. At the heart of the FOAF project is a set of definitions designed to serve as a dictionary of terms that can be used to express claims about the world. The initial focus of FOAF has been on the description of people, since people are the things that link together most of the other kinds of things they describe in the Web: they make documents, attend meetings, are depicted in photos, and so on. The FOAF Vocabulary definitions presented here are written using a computer language (RDF/OWL) that makes it easy for software to process some basic facts about the terms in the FOAF vocabulary, and consequently about the things described in FOAF documents. A FOAF document, unlike a traditional Web page, can be combined with other FOAF documents to create a unified database of information. This has been added to World Wide Web Reference Subject Tracer™ Information Blog. United international Vocabulary ProjectsUnited international Vocabulary Projects 05/18/2004 04:42 PM Site under Construction Biggest security threat is vocabulary?Biggest security threat is vocabulary? 04/06/2005 03:43 PM Phishing, Trojan horse, wardialer... all terms that many Ars readers take for granted. But a new study shows that for most people, such words are just so much unintelligible jargon. Does that translate into a security problem? Microsoft's strategy: Blur the F/OSS
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