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


O'Reilly Network:







O'Reilly Network:

O'Reilly Network: 07/30/2004 02:58 AM

O'Reilly has a page up about their new magazine called Make

make.oreilly.com
track this site | 6 links




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





Similar Items

O'Reilly Network:

Grok Headline matches for O'Reilly Network:

O'Reilly Network: O'Reilly Network --
2004 Emerging Technology Conference
Coverage [Jan. 16, 2004]


O'Reilly Network: O'Reilly Network --
2004 Emerging Technology Conference
Coverage [Jan. 16, 2004]
02/11/2004 08:18 AM
O'Reilly Network: O'Reilly Network -- 2004 Emerging Technology Conference Coverage [Jan. 16, 2004] .. the DDTI's own aggregation page

oreillynet.com/et2004
track this site | 6 links


O'Reilly Network: WURFLing Your Way to
WAP


O'Reilly Network: WURFLing Your Way to
WAP
04/15/2004 07:46 AM
Given that more and more people are connecting to sites with their moblie devices (phones, PDAs, Blackberries, etc), more and more sites are creating WAP-friendly versions of their own pages. Well, there's a project that's talked about over on the O'Reilly Network that helps that effort in leaps and bounds.

Showing off XML (O'Reilly Network)


Showing off XML (O'Reilly Network) 07/22/2002 06:46 PM

Beyond the XML mirage (O'Reilly Network)


Beyond the XML mirage (O'Reilly Network) 09/13/2002 06:40 PM

XML complexity as war of attrition
(O'Reilly Network)


XML complexity as war of attrition
(O'Reilly Network)
09/24/2002 08:11 AM

XML efficiency, alternatives (O'Reilly
Network)


XML efficiency, alternatives (O'Reilly
Network)
08/21/2002 12:04 PM

Using XML modules in Perl (O'Reilly
Network)


Using XML modules in Perl (O'Reilly
Network)
07/10/2002 01:42 PM

O'Reilly Network: Pitfalls of
Transactions with PH


O'Reilly Network: Pitfalls of
Transactions with PH
12/19/2003 11:25 AM
The O'Reilly Network has a new article this morning about one of the newest (and most anticipated) features of MySQL - transactions - and how to use them effectively while avoiding common pitfalls.

"Does XML suck?" revisited (O'Reilly
Network)


"Does XML suck?" revisited (O'Reilly
Network)
08/07/2002 01:28 PM

O'Reilly Network: Hands on X11 [Mar. 14,
2003]


O'Reilly Network: Hands on X11 [Mar. 14,
2003]
03/15/2003 01:21 PM
O'Reilly Network: Hands on X11 [Mar. 14, 2003] .. new article on using X11 under OS X

track this site | 7 links


O'Reilly Network: Securing Web Forms
with CAPTCHA


O'Reilly Network: Securing Web Forms
with CAPTCHA
04/01/2005 11:46 AM
With all of the issues surrounding spam on comments and emails, it only makes sense that people have developed ways to try to curb them both. Thankfully, these methods have made their way to PHP, and th is new article from the O'Reilly Network spotlights one of them - PEAR's Text_CAPTCHA.

The O'Reilly Network Speaks: Intro to
Files in PHP


The O'Reilly Network Speaks: Intro to
Files in PHP
10/08/2002 07:10 AM

O'Reilly Network: Prime-Time Hypermedia


O'Reilly Network: Prime-Time Hypermedia 08/07/2004 05:04 PM
O'Reilly Network: Prime-Time Hypermedia .. wird sich schnell ndern

oreillynet.com/pub/a/network/2004/08/03/primetime.html
track this site | 3 links


O'Reilly Network: Building a PHP Front
Controller


O'Reilly Network: Building a PHP Front
Controller
07/12/2004 07:37 AM
I recently had the opportunity to implement some small (noncommercial) web sites in PHP. One of many decisions I faced concerned the templating strategy: duplicated, include()-based template pages weren't quite future-proof, while a formal, external template library would have been overkill.

O'Reilly Network: Movable Type 3.0 and
Eating. [May. 13, 2004]


O'Reilly Network: Movable Type 3.0 and
Eating. [May. 13, 2004]
05/13/2004 11:03 PM
less than economically feasible .. Movable Type 3.0 and Eating .. Tim Appnel nails it .. O'Reilly Network

oreillynet.com/pub/wlg/4870
track this site | 6 links


O'Reilly Network: Calculating Entropy:
Data Miners


O'Reilly Network: Calculating Entropy:
Data Miners
03/28/2005 11:03 AM
On O'Reilly's PHPDev Center there's a new article about C alculating Entropy for Data Miners. Paul Meagher writes about the movement of data from low organization to higher organization (entropy).

O'Reilly Network: Confessions of the
World's Largest Switcher [Oct. 29, 2003]


O'Reilly Network: Confessions of the
World's Largest Switcher [Oct. 29, 2003]
10/30/2003 08:15 PM
Confessions of the World's Largest Switcher .. O'Reilly MacOSX conference .. new Switch ad

macdevcenter.com/pub/a/mac/2003/10/29/osxcon_g5cluster.html
track this site | 6 links


O'Reilly Network: Inside the Homebrew
Atari 2600 Scene [May. 20, 2004]


O'Reilly Network: Inside the Homebrew
Atari 2600 Scene [May. 20, 2004]
05/24/2004 02:50 AM
passion of programmers who've continued to make new Atari 2600 games .. O'Reilly Network: Inside the Homebrew Atari 2600 Scene

oreillynet.com/cs/user/print/a/4849
track this site | 5 links


O'Reilly Network: The Fuss About Gmail
and Privacy: Nine Reasons Why It's
Bogus [Apr. 16, 2004]


O'Reilly Network: The Fuss About Gmail
and Privacy: Nine Reasons Why It's
Bogus [Apr. 16, 2004]
04/16/2004 10:22 PM
why GMail isn’t a threat, and why it’s a good thing .. Tim O'Reilly seems to be sucked in

oreillynet.com/pub/wlg/4707
track this site | 5 links


O'Reilly Network Column Discusses New
User Interface Possibilities Offered by
XUL


O'Reilly Network Column Discusses New
User Interface Possibilities Offered by
XUL
04/09/2004 04:05 PM

"Statscout - Highly Scalable Network
Monitoring Software - FREE Evaluation on
your network"


"Statscout - Highly Scalable Network
Monitoring Software - FREE Evaluation on
your network"
05/10/2004 10:08 AM

Network Protocols Handbook For Cisco
CCNA, CCIE, CCNP, and MCSE, Network+ and
Security+


Network Protocols Handbook For Cisco
CCNA, CCIE, CCNP, and MCSE, Network+ and
Security+
02/01/2005 10:07 PM
The newly released "Network Protocols Handbook" by Javvin is now distributed by Ingram Books. This book is an excellent reference for Internet programmers, network pros and for people who are taking networking technology courses or trying to pass networking related certifications such as Cisco certification CCNA, CCIE, CCNP, Microsoft Certification MCSE, CompTIA certification Network+ and Security+. [PRWEB Jan 26, 2005]

Free! Network Marketing Brilliance Call
with Tim Sales: A St Patrick's Day That
Will Change the Lives of Network
Marketers


Free! Network Marketing Brilliance Call
with Tim Sales: A St Patrick's Day That
Will Change the Lives of Network
Marketers
03/14/2005 06:14 PM
Overcoming Objections Defines Success in Network Marketing... and Tim Sales will teach Network Marketers how to get on the path to success this Thursday evening. [PRWEB Mar 14, 2005]

HaiTel Expands Wireless Network in Haiti
with Nortel Technology; Country's First
3G Network Expected to Boost


HaiTel Expands Wireless Network in Haiti
with Nortel Technology; Country's First
3G Network Expected to Boost
04/12/2005 01:51 PM
Business Wire UK Apr 12 2005 3:30PM GMT

Vernier Broadens Network Admission
Management Capabilities Through Support
of Network Access Protection Technology
from Microsoft


Vernier Broadens Network Admission
Management Capabilities Through Support
of Network Access Protection Technology
from Microsoft
02/01/2005 09:14 PM
Vernier Networks Joins Microsoft’s Network Access Protection Partner Program to Deliver Secure Network Admission Management [PRWEB Jan 12, 2005]

MIT vs. Tim O'Reilly


MIT vs. Tim O'Reilly 02/10/2004 02:56 AM
The MIT technology review just published this interesting article on the 10 Emerging Technologies That Will Change Your World (registration required). It's a good article to read in preparation for the O'Reilly Emerging Technologies Conference that I'm going to next week. It is interesting to contrast Tim O'Reilly's vision with MIT -- O'Reilly is much more centered around software and the sociology and politics of software, with a little bit on hardware and biology, while MIT's article selects technology to highlight from a somewhat broader field....

Q Television Network Documentary
Chronicles Struggle for Gay Marriage
Rights; Network Committed to Developing
Programs That Reflect the Concerns of
the Gay and Lesbian Community


Q Television Network Documentary
Chronicles Struggle for Gay Marriage
Rights; Network Committed to Developing
Programs That Reflect the Concerns of
the Gay and Lesbian Community
06/11/2004 08:47 PM
[PRWEB Jun 11, 2004]

Fighting Network threats with a Network
Analyzer


Fighting Network threats with a Network
Analyzer
07/02/2004 02:53 AM

Connecting to Your Corporate Network
Using a Network Card


Connecting to Your Corporate Network
Using a Network Card
09/16/2004 12:54 PM

O'Reilly OS X Conference Day Two


O'Reilly OS X Conference Day Two 10/29/2003 02:21 AM

O'Reilly Radar


O'Reilly Radar 02/10/2004 01:17 PM
I've heard this talk a couple of times, so Im just listening for something new and cool Timisms. One bit of commentary, its great that wikis are on the O'Reilly Radar, but there is an even better reason for it...

maybe o'reilly will shut up


maybe o'reilly will shut up 08/11/2004 02:55 AM
The producer strikes back. After crowing Monday about how he made mincemeat of NYT columnist Paul Krugman on The Factor, O'Reilly gets rebutted on Tuesday via quicktime on the blog of Outfoxed co-producer Jim Gilliam.

O'Reilly OS X Conference Day One


O'Reilly OS X Conference Day One 10/29/2003 12:13 AM

The O'Reilly Radar


The O'Reilly Radar 10/29/2003 12:13 AM

CC at O'Reilly Etech


CC at O'Reilly Etech 02/10/2004 02:41 AM

Creative Commons will be an exhi bitor at the O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference in San Diego next week.

Etech is regarded by many as the best tech conference of the year, always in step with the latest creations and aspirations of the alpha geeks, having evolved from the Peer-to-Peer Conference in early 2001 and P2P & Web Services in late 2001 to the current multi-tracked annual conference starting two years ago. (Incidentally, the Creative Commons concept was in troduced at ETCon 2002. How time flies.)

Matt Haughey and Mike Linksvayer will be attending. Stop by the Creative Commons booth, or better yet our parti cipant session (time and location yet to be announced). We'll be introducing a new CC metadata-enhanced application. Hint: it's described in one of our tech challenges, heretofore unmet.

If you're in the area but not an attendee, you can still reg ister for a free exhibits pass, or an exhibits plus keynotes and birds-of-a-feather (participant sessions) pass for only $50. Hope to see you there!


O'Reilly OS X Conference Day Three


O'Reilly OS X Conference Day Three 10/30/2003 12:34 PM

O'Reilly Intro


O'Reilly Intro 02/10/2004 02:51 AM
Changing the world by spreading the knowledge of innovators. Digital Democracy is an emerging area of innovation. Wonderful moment to hear from the pioneers. Joe is the Edison of the Movement (Brit Blaser), although we are not sure if he...

O'Reilly and the Cold War


O'Reilly and the Cold War 12/19/2004 03:40 PM
Thanks for the amazingly thoughtful and interesting comments on the O'Reilly show. I want to answer one questions about that because several people raised it: Why would any sensible person agree to be a guest on that show? Truth be told, I've always in the past declined to be on the Factor and other shows like it. I agreed this time because the issue "Is dissent disloyal?" is important, I've thought a lot about it, and I thought I might be able to contribute something useful. And I would have, had he not changed the issue! But, since the main thrust of my guest stint on this blog is learning lessons from past mistakes, I won't do it again! (The reason, by the way, is not because it's unpleasant, but because no one should allow himself to be used by a demagogue.) Speaking of which, let's return to our history. We left off with the Japanese internment. As several comments noted, the Supreme Court in 1944 upheld the internment in the case of Korematsu v. United States. In effect, the Court held that, in wartime, we all have to make sacrifices, and it couldn't say that the decision to internment these people was not a rational military decision at the time it was made. Korematsu has gone down as one of the most profoundly embarrassing decisions in the history of the Supreme Court, and the nation has in many ways confessed the unconstitutionality of the internment in the sixty years since the decision. (As an interesting aside, by the way, I sumbitted a friend of the Court brief on behalf of Fred Korematsu --he is still alive and flourishing -- in the Guanatamo Bay, Hamdi, and Padilla cases in the Supreme Court last spring.) At the end of World War II, Americans were optimistic. We had the strongest military in the world, we had just won a "great" war and we had clearly been on the side of the angels. The world was at peace. Within a short time, however, everything changed. Although the Soviet Union had been our ally during the war, relations collapsed beween the U.S. and the Soviet Union as the need for that alliance disappeared. Within a stunningly short period of time, the American economy took a nosedive, there were revelations of Soviet espionage, the Soviet Union exploded its first atomic bomb, China fell to the Communists, Americans began to build bomb shelters as they prepared by nuclear bombs to rain down upon our cities, and the Korean War burst upon the scene. Who was to blame? How did the Soviets get the bomb? Why had China fallen to the Communists? A group of anti-New Deal Republicans and conservative Southern Democrats had the answer -- it was American Communists who had sold us out and were working to further the Soviet cause. Men like Richard Nixon in California and Joseph McCarthy in Wisconsin began to play the Red Card in order to get elected, and they did. In the 1946 elections, the Republicans, who now portrayed the choice as one between Communism and Republicanism, picked up 54 seats in the House. After being out of power for 16 long years, the Republicans had found a strategy that could propel them back into power. Democrats, who were overwhelmed by the growing anti-Communist hysteria, jumped on the bandwagon, afraid to resist. Within a few short years the United States had a new federal loyalty program for over four million government employees, the House Un-American Activities Committee investigated thousands of individuals to determine if they were secret Communists, state and federal governments adopted their own loyalty programs, investigations, blacklists, and anti-Communist laws. Tens of thousands of people were threatened, intimidated, fired, humiliated, and even prosecuted. Who were these people? Were they spies and sabotuers? No doubt, there were Soviet agents in the United States. But they were almost never the target of these actions. They were too well-hidden for that. Rather, these actions were cynical efforts to make political hay by taking advantage of, and exacerbating, the fear that was already upon the land. So, who were these people? After the Depression, many Americans began to search for answers to what had happened to the nation. Many toyed with communism. At this time, the Communist Part of the United States was a lawful political party that ran candidates for public office throughout the nation. It stood for such causes as women's rights, the rights of labor, and public housing; it opposed the rise of fascism in Europe and racism at home. As many as 250,000 Americans joined the CPUSA in this period. Moreover, many millions more participated in CPUSA events or joined other organization that shared some of the goals and programs of the CPUSA. During World War II, we fought side-by-side with the Soviet Union, and FDR encouraged Americans to see the Soviets as our allies and friends. After the war, though, all this fell apart. And suddenly the most dangerous question in America was: "Are you now or have you ever been a member of the Communist Party or a member of any organization that is or was affiliated with the Commnist Party or have you ever attended an event sponored by the Communist Party, or signed a Communist Party petition, or attended a Communist Party rally, or read a Communist book?" An affirmative answer to any of these questions would immediately cast doubt on the patriotism and loyalty of the individual. After all, how do we know you're not still a Commie who is secretly working to subvert the government of the United States. This was the heart of McCarthyism.

The O'Reilly Factor


The O'Reilly Factor 12/19/2004 03:40 PM
I'll get back to the history tomorrow (Saturday). For now, though, I want to tell you about my experience tonight as a guest on the Bill O'Reilly show. I received a call this afternoon (Friday) from the producer inviting me to debate O'Reilly on the question: “Is dissent disloyal?” After the producer and I discussed this issue, O’Reilly (according to the producer) decided to redefine the question: “Can an American want the United States to lose the war in Iraq and still be patriotic?” Of course, this is a loaded question. It not-so-subtly implies that those who oppose the war want the United States to lose and, even worse, want American soldiers to die. One of Joseph McCarthy’s favorite tactics was to imply that anyone who believed in the social or economic principles of communism also supported the violent overthrow of the government. The tactic of guilt-by-inference is all-too-familiar in American history. (I'll return to McCarthyism in my next entry.) In any event, in our “debate” O’Reilly insisted on his “narrow” framing of the question and, when I called him on the issue, denied that he intended to imply anything about those who merely oppose the war. I accepted his framing of the question (it is, after all, his show) and argued that a patriotic citizen could in principle want the nation to lose a war if the war is unjust and if losing meant that fewer American soldiers would die for no good reason. O'Reilly maintained that losing a war necessarily means that more American soldiers will die than continuing the war and that no one could therefore patriotically wants the nation to lose. O’Reilly tossed out such ugly phrases as “despicable,” “traitor,” and “disloyal” to describe those who would disagree. The purpose, of course, was to excite his audience. After the show, I received dozens of emails, most of which were along the following lines: “You ought to be arrested, tried, convicted of wartime treason. And I don't have to tell you the penalty for that.” “I hope they are checking you out for being a traitor!!!” “You are not only despicable, but should go ahead and move out of the USA.” “I must imagine, Mr. Stone, that you will look over your shoulder a little bit, because maybe some soldier in a foxhole somewhere might be a tad angered with you and your lunacy. There may be a few G.I.s in Chicago even that would like to ‘speak’ with you.” “There is the tendency for citizens to take the law into their own hands in these cases. Decent, ordinary people, not of the left, are angry enough at the far left to be willing to go along with things you would consider unconscionable.” “You're a despicable Piece of feces, A Gutless Traitor. and I strongly suggest that you get your Terrorist Sympathizing Worthless ass out of this country while you can still walk and talk.” And so on. What do you make of all this in light of our on-going conversation?
Grok Description matches for O'Reilly Network:
GrokA matches for O'Reilly Network:

O'Reilly Network:

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

Dilbert for 30 Jul
2004

Sleeping pills delay
Zeta hearing

Powell in Iraq on
surprise visit

MS Office
Interconnect Beta
Manages Contacts,
Digital Busine

Hsinchu's
science-based
industrial park X
Taiwan's Silicon
Valley 2004/7/30

PC penetration
'pathetic' in India:
Maran

PCs Sales Are on the
Move

Go slow on nano
Trouble ahead
Semel scores again
New name at #2
Giving Google rope
Working a new angle
A second chance
Common-sense SEO -
Google AdWords vs.
Wordtracker

ValuEngine Upgrades
Ryland, Armor, KB
and Yahoo a '5'
Rating

Intel to delay 4GHz
version of Pentium 4
chip

Real Instigates iPod
War

Microsoft to
Increase XP Starter
Edition Saturation

RSA quits life
insurance business

Missing woman's
family await tests

Call for tighter
shipping safety

Three die in
separate accidents

Plan puts caravans
in slow lane

Fresh appeal to Iraq
kidnappers

Beijing warns of war
with Taiwan

UN set for Sudan
resolution vote

Olympic bid 'up for
sale'

Return Of The
Wookiee

Collector's
Collections Gallery:
John Sloan

BitTorrent public
tracker needed

Just-in-time-product
ion?

New comment spam
technique

Calvoter.org hiring
Lockergnome
Download: FileAsoc

Internet Information
Services 6.0
Migration Tool 1.1

Lookout v1.2
Office 2003 Resource
Kit SP1 ADM updates

SQL Server Health
and History Tool
(SQLH2)

Tender Stories From
Family Position
Kerry in a Soft
Light

SpaceShipOne
seeks$10M prize

Tech companies
discuss profit
potential of blogs

China to train first
woman astronaut

New foe for
downloaders

Tokyo stocks close
lower, dollar higher

How digital became
essential

Virus overwhelms
Google, three other
search engines

New Species of Worms
Discovered in Ocean

United Airlines
union sues over
pensions

Sun still wielding
the axe

what is grok?