James Joyner asks
Grok Headline matches for James Joyner asks
"James Joyner"
"James Joyner"
05/12/2004 05:27 PMJames Joyner
James Joyner
07/21/2004 09:42 AMgood roundup .. round-up ..
abuzz
outsidethebeltway.com/archives/6937
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"James Joyner notes"
"James Joyner notes"
05/06/2004 09:52 PM"This piece by James Joyner"
"This piece by James Joyner"
06/19/2004 02:50 AMRick James - www.RickJames.com - The
Internet Home of The King of Funk...Rick
James
Rick James - www.RickJames.com - The
Internet Home of The King of Funk...Rick
James
08/07/2004 02:09 PM#20 Rick James .. original
rickjames.com
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Self Made Millionaire Mark Joyner
Returns to Internet Marketing Promoting
"Make Your Own Software"
Self Made Millionaire Mark Joyner
Returns to Internet Marketing Promoting
"Make Your Own Software"
09/07/2004 02:47 AMMark Joyner returns to internet marketing with his stamp of approval
on the new petent pending software called: Make Your Own Software.
[PRWEB Sep 7, 2004]
P. D. James
P. D. James
03/12/2003 06:03 PM“What a child doesn’t receive he can seldom later
give.” [Motivational Quotes of the Day]...
James Surowiecki
James Surowiecki
05/31/2004 12:35 PMThis gentleman writes regularly in
The New Yorker on issues of
business and economics, and is one of the reasons I regularly buy that
magazine. Today he’s got a
fascina
ting essay in
Wired on collective corporate wisdom.
Seems to me that there’s a good case to be made that the companies
who figure out how to put this to work are the ones that are going to
win.
James Lileks
James Lileks
08/27/2004 09:31 PMJames Lileks: Is Kerry's Problem Nuance? Or Is It
Obfuscation?
jewishworldreview.com/0804/lileks.html
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Jonathan James
Jonathan James
09/10/2004 01:32 AMTechTree Sep 10 2004 5:48AM GMT
He was Rick James, b...
He was Rick James, b...
08/06/2004 02:49 PM
He was Rick James, b...
Funk singer Rick James, best known for the 1981 hit "Super
Freak," died Friday, apparently of natural causes, police said.
r.i.p. rick james
r.i.p. rick james
08/06/2004 02:47 PMcocaine is a hell of a drug
See James Fall
See James Fall
10/30/2003 02:43 AMMy boss at work wants to see my trip and fall. I tend to run into
things and stumble, but I never fall. However...
"James Wolcott"
"James Wolcott"
09/05/2004 09:48 AM"James Lileks"
"James Lileks"
09/02/2004 02:52 AMJames K. Polk?
James K. Polk?
03/06/2004 02:08 AMIn 1844, the Democrats were split. The three nominees for the
presidential candidate were Martin Van Buren, a former president and
an abolitionist; James Buchanan, a moderate; Louis Cass, a general and
expansionist. From D.C. came a dark horse riding up: he was Ralph
Nader, Independent of the Stump....
James Project 2.0.0
James Project 2.0.0
04/14/2004 06:22 AMA framework which enhances collaborative groups by making use of the
Web.
James Wolcott
James Wolcott
12/26/2004 02:36 PMrecently discovered blog .. Big Media blogger .. starting a blog ..
Wolcott, James .. this new blog .. now blogging .. blogger .. Wolcott
.. blog .. more
jameswolcott.com
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"Caryn James"
"Caryn James"
08/22/2004 07:54 AMJames Tauber gets into the conversation
James Tauber gets into the conversation
09/25/2004 01:47 PMI just received this comment from James Tauber:
More on Aggregation Versus Hosting
Previously on
this blog, I've called for a separation of hosting from
aggregation. I want to be able to maintain authoritative data on one
site and have other sites use it for their aggregation.
When I read Ted Leung's entry Microcontent
personality disorder and Steve Mallett's comments on it, my
immediate thought was that they could both have what they want if we
could separate where we host our data with where it is aggregated and
made "social".
Marc Canter (whose work around Digital Lifestyle Aggregators is
definitely worth following) resp
onds to Steve Mallett. Marc is spot on that people have their
information all over the place. But I still believe that if systems
are built to support a separation between hosting and aggregation,
they'll support both the distribution of primary data and the kind of
"self-hosting" that a certain segment like Steve and myself want.
Bottom line is all combinations of centralized/decentralized
hosting/aggregation should be possible.
It's not that hard to do. Sites that aggregate just need to provide
a mechanism where users can point to their data hosted somewhere else
rather than have to re-enter their data in multiple aggregators.
Aggregators then keep customers based on the value of their
aggregation, not the lock-in of being the hosts of people's valuable
data. People who want hosting for their pictures, blogs, etc can use
hosting services to do it. But their choice of hosting service should
not impact their participating in aggregation and the social aspects
of micro-content that follow.