NetNewsWire Lite 1.0.7
Grok Headline matches for NetNewsWire Lite 1.0.7
NetNewsWire and NetNewsWire Lite 1.0.7
released
NetNewsWire and NetNewsWire Lite 1.0.7
released
12/22/2003 02:58 PM
This release of
NetNewsWire and NetNewsWire
Lite 1.0.7 adds support for favicons and feed URLs, boosts
performance, and fixes dozens of bugs. The full version includes a new
widescreen view especially suited for laptops.
See
Wha
t’s New in NetNewsWire 1.0.7 for details.
NetNewsWire, NetNewsWire Lite updated to
v1.0.7
NetNewsWire, NetNewsWire Lite updated to
v1.0.7
12/22/2003 06:30 PMRanchero Software today released NetNewsWire 1.0.7, the latest version
of its easy-to-use RSS newsreader for Mac OS X...
NetNewsWire and NetNewsWire Lite 1.0.8
NetNewsWire and NetNewsWire Lite 1.0.8
02/10/2004 02:51 AM
NetNewsWire and NetNewsWire
Lite 1.0.8 fix a couple small but important bugs and add a bunch
of feeds to the Sites Drawer.
See
Wha
t’s New in 1.0.8 for details.
NetNewsWire Lite 1.0.8
NetNewsWire Lite 1.0.8
12/17/2004 06:35 PMNetNewsWire Lit is an easy-to-use RSS Web newsreader for Mac OS X. Its
familiar three-paned interface - similar to Apple Mail and Outlook
Express - can fetch and display news from thousands of different
websites and weblogs, making it quick and easy to keep up with the
latest news.
About NetNewsWire Lite
About NetNewsWire Lite
05/20/2004 01:12 PMPeter R. Wood asked on the comments for the previous post if there
would be any commitment to releasing new versions of NetNewsWire
Lite.
Yes. We plan to continue NetNewsWire Lite. It will continue to be
free. The next release of Lite will ship on or about the same day
NetNewsWire ships.
NetNewsWire full and Lite 2.0b41
NetNewsWire full and Lite 2.0b41
04/13/2005 03:30 PMFull and Lite versions of NetNewsWire 2.0b41 can be downloaded from
the
NetNewsWire
betas page.
This release fixes a bunch of bugs and brings NetNewsWire 2.0 closer
to shipping. Here are the
full version change notes and
Lite
version change notes.
NetNewsWire (full and Lite) 2.0b37
NetNewsWire (full and Lite) 2.0b37
04/04/2005 01:22 PM
NetNewsWire (full and Lite) 2.0b37 has been posted to the
NetNewsWire betas
page.
(Side note: woo-hoo!)
New features include tag subscriptions, syncing, feed detection for
the browser, per-feed podcast settings, and more. Bugs were fixed,
performance was boosted. See the
change notes for all the details.

One of the new features has quickly become one of my favorite
features: tag subscriptions. They’re kind of like search engine
subscriptions, but instead of subscribing to a search you subscribe to
a tag at Del.icio.us, Flickr, or Technorati.
For instance, I like cat pictures (to
not like cat pictures
would be to not like the web), so I created a tag subscription for the
tag
cats using Flickr. (Choose File > New Special Subscription
> Tag to create a tag subscription.)

We’ve been calling this beta the “almost-there”
beta. Here’s what remains to do before shipping 2.0:
1. Fix some more bugs.
2. Add a bit more polish.
3. Review and edit the Help book.
As always, your feedback and bug reports are very helpful.
NetNewsWire Lite 2.0b22: user interface
makeover
NetNewsWire Lite 2.0b22: user interface
makeover
02/05/2005 10:12 PM
NetNewsWire Lite 2.0b22 has been posted to the
NetNewsWire Betas
page.
We hadn’t done a beta of the Lite version since 2.0b6—which meant,
among other things, that Lite users didn’t have the user interface
changes that were in recent betas of the full version.
The idea was in part to make the interface more attractive, give it a
more modern look—but the main reasons have to do with usability.
In
Pushing the
Edge, Jonathan “Wolf” Rentzsch wrote: “The controls have
been pushed to the absolute bottom. The lists abut the left and right
sides of the window. Not a pixel of margin. The new UI looks simpler
but actually does more.”
Just for jazz, here a couple more screen shots: one with the
tool
bar hidden and one using the
Graph
ite appearance.
This release of NetNewsWire Lite gets some other new features too,
such as per-feed refresh settings, datelines, and subscriptions
sorting. See the
chan
ge notes for more details.
K-Lite Coded pack 2.24 Final & K-Lite
Mega Codec Pack 1.00 Final
K-Lite Coded pack 2.24 Final & K-Lite
Mega Codec Pack 1.00 Final
02/19/2004 05:00 PMNetNewsWire 1.0.8
NetNewsWire 1.0.8
12/17/2004 06:35 PMNetNewsWire is an easy-to-use RSS Web newsreader for Mac OS X. Its
familiar three-paned interface -- similar to Apple Mail and Outlook
Express -- can fetch and display news from thousands of different
websites and weblogs, making it quick and easy to keep up with the
latest news.
NetNewsWire 1.0.6
NetNewsWire 1.0.6
10/29/2003 07:09 PMThere are so many good things to say about NetNewsWire that it is
hard to find anything wrong with it. By Bryron Hinson (ActiveMac via
MyAppleMenu)
NetNewsWire 1.0.7
NetNewsWire 1.0.7
12/23/2003 04:29 PMAn easy-to-use RSS web newsreader for Mac OS X.
NetNewsWire 1.0.7b7
NetNewsWire 1.0.7b7
12/18/2003 01:08 PM
NetNewsWire and
NetNewsWire Lite 1.0.7b7 have been posted.
In the process of working on 1.1, we fixed a mach port leak and some
performance bugs, and we didn’t want to wait until 1.1 before
making these fixes available, so we decided to do a 1.0.7 release.
1.0.7 also contains a few of the smaller features that were planned
for 1.1: a new
wid
escreen view is especially suited to laptops;
favicons<
/a> are now displayed in the Subscriptions pane; NetNewsWire now
responds to the f
eed URL scheme.
See the
change notes for more new features and bug fixes.
The
features
chart comparing NetNewsWire and NetNewsWire Lite has been updated.
NetNewsWire 1.0.1 out
NetNewsWire 1.0.1 out
03/15/2003 08:20 AMRanchero reports on the release of NetNewsWire 1.0.1, the greatest RSS
reader for the mac, and the only shareware product...
NetNewsWire 1.0.1
NetNewsWire 1.0.1
03/14/2003 06:18 PMNetNewsWire is a scriptable RSS reader and weblog editor.
Cha
nges in this release include bug fixes in both the news reader and
the weblog editor.
NetNewsWire 1.0.1b5
NetNewsWire 1.0.1b5
03/11/2003 02:00 PMNetNewsWire
1.0.1b5 fixes some crashing bugs, partly fixes a bug regarding
Movable Type categories, and moves commands from the View menu to the
Window menu. (Commands that should have been in the Window menu to
begin with, since they have to do with opening and hiding windows.)
Read the
cha
nge notes for the full scoop.
NetNewsWire 1.0.1b4
NetNewsWire 1.0.1b4
03/11/2003 09:44 AMNetNewsWire
1.0.1b4 fixes some news-reading bugs.
Read the
cha
nge notes for the full scoop.
NetNewsWire
NetNewsWire
03/13/2003 10:16 AMBrent has a new beta of NetNewsWireLite out. This one contains
redirection and bandwidth monitoring, the two hot topics du...
NetNewsWire 1.0
NetNewsWire 1.0
02/12/2003 01:04 AMNetNewsWire 1.0 has officially shipped. Which is great news. Thanks to
Brent for all the work he did in getting this out. The only problems
NetNewsWire 1.0.1b3
NetNewsWire 1.0.1b3
03/11/2003 09:44 AMNetNewsWire
1.0.1b3 includes a variety of bug fixes.
One of the most common causes of problems in both the news reader and
the weblog editor is unencoded ampersands—and NetNewsWire is now
more forgiving of this error.
Downloading categories from Radio UserLand weblogs should work again.
(It was broken in a recent beta.)
See the
cha
nge notes for more info.
NetNewsWire 1.0.1b2
NetNewsWire 1.0.1b2
03/11/2003 09:44 AMNetNewsWire
1.0.1b2 contains mostly fixes for the new XML-RPC code the weblog
editor uses.
It’s still a beta! There are plenty more bugs to fix.
By the way, I hope to release my new XML-RPC client under a BSD
license some time this week.
NetNewsWire and Atom
NetNewsWire and Atom
12/22/2003 05:24 PMWe’re getting some people asking about our plans for Atom
support in NetNewsWire. Here’s the deal:
A future version of NetNewsWire will support the Atom syndication
format. The weblog editor will also support the Atom API.
That’s it. There isn’t really anything else to say.
NetNewsWire and Jaguar
NetNewsWire and Jaguar
07/03/2004 06:04 PMTo be clear, in my previous
post I’m thinking out loud about requiring Panther for
NetNewsWire 2.0.
It’s just thinking, though. No decision has been made, I’m
just bringing up the topic.
But if you’re a NetNewsWire user who uses Jaguar, I’d
especially love to hear what you think. (And I’d like to know
why you’re still on Jaguar. I’m sure there are good
reasons I haven’t thought of.)
Mac OS X security bug and NetNewsWire
Mac OS X security bug and NetNewsWire
05/19/2004 05:48 PMRecently a security bug was reported in Safari. Clicking on certain
URLs could cause a script to run on your machine.
Sylvain
Carle alerted us to the fact that this security bug is not really
a Safari bug, it’s a bug in WebKit.
WebKit is Safari’s rendering system, provided by Apple as part
of OS X, which other applications use too—including
NetNewsWire.
NetNewsWire uses WebKit to display feed descriptions, so NetNewsWire
(and other WebKit-using applications) may be vulnerable to this
bug.
We certainly expect that Apple will fix the bug with a security
update, and that should solve the problem. In the meantime we’re
looking at the possibility of fixing it just for NetNewsWire, in case
Apple doesn’t come through with a fix.
For reference: here’s the
report on the bug, and
here’s a
CNET article
about it, which states that Apple is aware of the issue.
If you have any questions, please feel free to email me at
brent@ranchero.com.
NetNewsWire Updated
NetNewsWire Updated
12/22/2003 05:26 PMRanchero Software has updated
NetNewsWire, its popular newsfeed aggregator for
Mac OS X. Version 1.0.7 offers many improvements, including support
for newsfeed favicons, a new widescreen view format, quick subscribing
from feed: URLs, and other performance enhancements.
NetNewsWire is $39.95. A free version, with less functionality, is
also available.
NetNewsWire 2.0 will run on Jaguar
NetNewsWire 2.0 will run on Jaguar
07/05/2004 07:16 PMAfter listening to all the feedback (here and elsewhere) on this
issue, we’ve decided to support Jaguar in NetNewsWire 2.0.
Jaguar was the first really good OS X release, and we’d support
it forever if we could, but some day we’ll have to drop it. Not
yet, though.
In case you’re curious, here’s why we decided to continue
to support Jaguar:
1. We can provide the Panther-only features we want to provide without
dropping Jaguar support.
The main thing is searching. SearchKit is part of Panther but not part
of Jaguar, so Jaguar users just won’t get this feature, but
Panther users will.
2. It would be more work at this point to switch over to Panther-only
than to stick with Jaguar compatibility.
To switch over to using things like Cocoa bindings—which make
our life easier but don’t provide new features to
users—would mean more work. At some point, yes, we’ll make
the switch, but only when there are other compelling reasons to drop
Jaguar support.
Anyway, that’s the scoop.
Thanks for all the feedback!
New NetNewsWire 2.0 betas
New NetNewsWire 2.0 betas
02/05/2005 09:06 PMRanchero Software today announced new public beta versions of
NetNewsWire and NetNewsWire Lite. I've been a beta tester for a while
now, and I have to say (along with a lot of other people) that Brent
runs the best damn...
Switched to NetNewsWire
Switched to NetNewsWire
01/15/2003 01:42 AMWell, it's official. Last Friday I switched to NetNewsWire Lite even
after I managed to break it. I've found that AmpehtaDesk is a memory
hog and I simply don't have the time to deal with upgrading, making
sure that AmphetaOutlines...
NetNewsWire 2.0 Status
NetNewsWire 2.0 Status
08/19/2004 08:47 PMSo—where’s NetNewsWire 2.0?
Well, we’re working quite hard on it—which is why I
haven’t been doing much posting, and why if you’ve sent me
email I may not have replied.
It’s not ready for a public beta yet. The main new features are
all in place. What remains is fixing bugs, adding a couple small
features, updating the Help, adding polish, basically just taking care
of all the many little details.
In other words, we’re in the final sprint. The to-do list is
down to 95 items.
(If you’d like to help test, and you have a NetNewsWire license,
just send me email. Bravery is required, though, because it does still
have bugs. Most of the 95 items on the to-do list are bugs to
fix.)
What remains to do
Only a few of the remaining items are big things like updating the
Help book. Most are small, it’s just that there are many of
them. To give you a flavor...
- A smart list will cause a crash if you unsubscribe from a feed and
the smart list includes headlines from that feed.
- The Atom feed parser doesn’t support base64 encoding.
- The order of columns in the headlines table is not remembered
between runs.
- The 32K limit to the HTML differences feature should be removed.
- Etc.
Each of the above—and most of the rest of the list—are
small, easy-to-fix items.
This, luckily for me, is my favorite part of software development. I
enjoy fixing bugs much more than I enjoy adding big new features,
probably because I can fix a bunch of bugs in a few hours. It’s
like eating chocolates throughout the day instead of eating one big
steak once a week.
That’s not to say that there aren’t lots of big new
features in 2.0. There are. What we’re doing right now is making
sure that it’s not just ambitious but good.
(A reminder, in case you missed it: NetNewsWire 2.0 will be a free
upgrade for everyone who has bought or will buy NetNewsWire
1.x.)
Random discussion of one small part of one
feature
Here’s what tabs ended up looking like.

How many different ways can tabs be done? You’d be surprised. We
tried just about every configuration.
I really wanted the favicons because they perform a usability
function: the icons make it easier to find the tab you’re
looking for. It’s not just for looks. (We’re Mac
users, right? We like icons.)
But the close button needs to be on the left since that’s where
it is in Safari, and since close buttons appear in the upper left of
Aqua windows. (When we tried putting them on the right, testers could
just not get the hang of it.)
We could have put them together—close button, favicon, then
title—but that looked very jumbled.
Another option, which had its supporters, was to combine them. The
favicons would become close buttons on mouseover. Slick, yes, but at
the cost of explicitness. If you didn’t mouseover, you
didn’t know there were close buttons.
Another option was to do it like Firefox. In Firefox, tabs have
favicons on the left, and there’s just one close button to the
right of all the tabs. (But when we tried it, the feedback was almost
completely negative, even though many NetNewsWire testers use Firefox.
I personally liked this approach, but that’s just me.)
It’s funny, though, because the Firefox style had a unique
selling point: it meant you could close an “overflow” tab
by clicking a close button. Try it in Safari—open a bunch of
tabs so that you get the little tabs menu widget on the right. Select
one of the tabs from that menu. Is there something you can click to
close that tab? No, you have to use the Close Tab command. With
Firefox you can still click the close button.
In the end we went with the configuration pictured above, and we
decided to make it possible to turn off the favicons, since it became
one of those 50-50 things: some people really wanted them, but other
people really preferred a cleaner look.
All of the above is just to say that software development is about
trade-offs, and this is a textbook case because the trade-offs are
obvious and there is no one best way to do it.

By the way, I’ll be doing a session called “Using WebKit:
User Interface Challenges” at O’Reilly’s Mac OS X
Conference this October. I probably won’t talk about the
specifics of tabs design—it will be at a higher, more conceptual
level.
NetNewsWire 1.0.8fc1
NetNewsWire 1.0.8fc1
01/24/2004 09:30 PMNetNewsWire and
NetNewsWire Lite 1.0.8fc1 are the same as 1.0.8b1 except that the
Sites Drawer has been updated with new feeds. Two new categories,
Movies and Music, were created.
We’re looking for deal-stopper bugs. If none are found,
we’ll change the version number to 1.0.8 and release it.
NetNewsWire and Keynote
NetNewsWire and Keynote
03/19/2003 10:44 PMAn
interesting
feature request for NetNewsWire appeared on Tom Bridge’s
weblog today—creating Keynote presentations from RSS feeds.
Tom Bridge writes: “Imagine for just a moment with me. You wake
up, and on the way to the shower flip open your powerbook, fire up
NetNewsWire and go get clean. When you've come back, NNW has
created a Keynote presentation for you.”
It’s a good idea!
But... I have a few things to do first—fixing some bugs, adding
new features to the weblog editor—before I could work on this.
It will be a few weeks before I can do much with this idea.
NetNewsWire 1.0.1 released
NetNewsWire 1.0.1 released
03/14/2003 07:33 PMRanchero Software today released NetNewsWire 1.0.1, the latest version
of the company's popular RSS news reader and weblog editor...
AppleScripting NetNewsWire
AppleScripting NetNewsWire
03/13/2003 10:16 AMA screenshot of AppleScripting NetNewsWire from Brent Simmons. This
rocks my world. For those without the joy of Mac in...
NetNewsWire 1.0.1fc1
NetNewsWire 1.0.1fc1
03/12/2003 08:08 PMNetNewsWire
1.0.1fc1 fixes a weblog editor bug with saving drafts and includes
a couple other minor changes.
See the
cha
nge notes for the whole scoop.
This is a final candidate release. We’re looking for
deal-stopper bugs, bugs bad enough to prevent this from being released
as 1.0.1.
Once 1.0.1 is released, we’ll go back to fixing bugs—and
also adding new features, such as supporting more Movable Type
options, allowing Radio users to specify that a post shouldn’t
go on a home page, and so on.
NetNewsWire 1.0.2 progress
NetNewsWire 1.0.2 progress
03/19/2003 10:44 PMIn case you’re curious on how NetNewsWire 1.0.2 development is
going...
It’s a four-step process:
1. Move low-level, relatively bug-free code into separate frameworks.
The RSS parser, for instance, goes into a framework. (The main reason
is that it makes code maintenance and testing easier, and it makes it
so I can re-use this code easily in other software.)
2. Fix a bunch of small quick-hit bugs. Things like bugs with date
display and keyboard shortcuts. A particular crashing bug in the
weblog editor. That kind of thing.
3. Fix—or at least dramatically improve—performance and
memory issues when one has lots of subscriptions and lots of unread
headlines.
4. Add a few new features—mostly weblog editing features such as
supporting more Radio and Movable Type options. (Some other things
too.)
I gave myself a week to do step 1—but it’s already
finished. I did it over the weekend. It was totally fun, by the way.
If you’re a Cocoa developer, but you’ve shied away from
building frameworks, you should know that it’s a piece of
cake.
So now I’m in the middle of step 2, doing a bunch of quick-hit
bug fixes. This is one of my favorite things to do, because it’s
all about polish, getting the details right. With some good hours of
brain-time you can knock off bugs by the anthill.
Later this week I’ll move on to performance and memory issues,
then on to adding new features probably next week. Then I’ll
release the first beta of 1.0.2.
What’s New in NetNewsWire 1.0.7
What’s New in NetNewsWire 1.0.7
12/23/2003 04:58 AMNetNewsWire
ranchero.com/netnewswire/whatsnew/netnewswire107.php
track
this site | 4 links
Beta: NetNewsWire 2.0b3
Beta: NetNewsWire 2.0b3
09/23/2004 11:22 AMThe RSS and Atom newsreader adds flagged items that are kept
indefinitely, incremental searches, an embedded web browser, and other
changes.
NetNewsWire 1.0.1 Ships
NetNewsWire 1.0.1 Ships
03/14/2003 05:06 PM
NetNewsWire 1.0.1 has
been released! Here’s the
Wha
t’s New in NetNewsWire 1.0.1 page. The biggest changes since
1.0 are crashing bug fixes.
But there are some other nice things too—the news reader, for
instance, is more forgiving of feeds with errors, so parsing failures
will happen less often.
Today I’m starting work on 1.0.2, which will include more bug
fixes but also some new features. Based on the feedback I’ve
been getting, it sounds like what’s most wanted are new features
for the weblog editor—specifically, support for more Radio and
Movable Type options.
NetNewsWire Goes To Version 2
NetNewsWire Goes To Version 2
09/22/2004 10:44 AMThe
public beta
of NetNewsWire 2.0 is out, and it has a ton of new, and interesting
features. In particularly for me, the Smart List feature is
really interesting. Look likes the role of MyAppleMenu.com
plays in the grand scheme of things is diminishing.
Grok Description matches for NetNewsWire Lite 1.0.7
GrokA matches for NetNewsWire Lite 1.0.7
"Darling Nikki" came back, but no one
really noticed
"Darling Nikki" came back, but no one
really noticed
01/17/2004 10:48 PMi hesitate to mention that the song came out 20 years ago this summer
only-latest-0.01
only-latest-0.01
11/04/2003 05:16 AMThe Latest In Lie Detecting
The Latest In Lie Detecting
11/05/2003 02:55 AMEverybody knows that the old polygraph test is a joke that isn't
particularly accurate. So, the next question is whether or not it's
possible to build a system that can actually catch people telling a
lie? It looks like there are a
lot of different projects underway to invent the
next generation of lie detector. Researchers are trying out all
different methods, many of them sponsored by the Department of
Defense. There are certainly a number of ethical issues with "looking
into someone's mind", but the researchers appear to have come to terms
with those issues (or, perhaps we should test them on their own
machines to see how they feel on that issue...).
The Latest On The Father Of The DVD
The Latest On The Father Of The DVD
06/28/2004 05:22 AMA year and a half ago, we wrote about
Warren
Lieberfarb getting fired from Warner Brothers. Lieberfarb is
often credited as the "father of the DVD," who fought long and hard to
get everyone on the same page to offer the DVD. Newsweek is now
running an article looking at the story a year and a half later, where
Lieberfarb is still
not particularly
liked in the industry he helped save. The article also has the
overall background story of how he got warring parties together in
order to build the DVD. While he's still fighting with Time Warner
over his compensation, he's now working for Microsoft on the next
generation of DVD technologies. It would have been a lot more
impressive if he would have taken his deal making skills and energy to
get the entertainment industry to realize the power of peer-to-peer
networking, rather than just trying to rehash his last success story.
The story is positioned as if Lieberfarb realized the importance of
getting everyone together on this particular "disruptive" technology.
It's too bad he doesn't appear to be paying attention to the much
bigger disruptive technology that's out there.
Madonna's Latest Self, a Mix of Her Old
Ones
Madonna's Latest Self, a Mix of Her Old
Ones
05/26/2004 11:57 AMOn the first date of her Re-Invention World Tour, Madonna often found
herself shadowboxing with her own past lives.
latest news...
latest news...
03/24/2005 04:41 AMWelcome to my desktop
mikebutler.editthispage.com
track this
site | 8 links
Latest OS Updates
Latest OS Updates
03/20/2003 04:19 PMThe latest works
The latest works
07/13/2004 07:06 PMTons of crazy optical illusions .. motion-related
illusions
ritsumei.ac.jp/~akitaoka/saishin2e.html
track this
site | 4 links
The Latest in Bluetooth
The Latest in Bluetooth
04/14/2005 01:43 PMEntrepreneur.com Apr 14 2005 3:54PM GMT
MCI to consider latest $8.9m Qwest bid
MCI to consider latest $8.9m Qwest bid
04/04/2005 08:26 AMComputer Business Review Apr 4 2005 12:25PM GMT
the latest Blu-ray roadmap
the latest Blu-ray roadmap
08/03/2004 09:26 PMSony showed
the
latest Blu-ray roadmap in Japan (scroll down, the images are in
English). I'm glad to see that they're considering advanced codecs and
their focus on "absolute best quality video" (does that mean 1080p?).
The bad news is that the Blu-ray movie format is not finished, so the
$4,000 Blu-ray players that people already bought probably won't be
able to play Blu-ray movies (suckers!).
Whats New in Latest Adobe CS
Whats New in Latest Adobe CS
04/11/2005 11:25 AMApple's Latest
Apple's Latest
06/28/2004 10:06 AMHeading this morning to Apple's Worldwide Developers
Conference in San Francisco, where Steve Jobs will deliver the
keynote. There's never any WiFi connectivity inside the hall at such
things, so I'll be letting you know later what's what.
Deflectors on full: Entering Reality Distortion Field...
Latest Scam: Pay Us For Using @
Latest Scam: Pay Us For Using @
08/17/2004 03:23 PMTheRegister has picked up one of the more amusing scam emails
apparently making the rounds. It's not entirely clear how much
they're actually asking for (the quoted email shows a few different
amounts), but those behind the scam are suggesting that they've
copyright
ed the "@" symbol and users need to pay (somewhere around $10 to
$20) for an unlimited one-year license. The thing is... some people
might actually fall for something like this.
"latest reports"
"latest reports"
12/29/2004 03:31 AMNext big thing--or the latest fad?
Next big thing--or the latest fad?
03/31/2005 11:29 PMZDNet Apr 1 2005 12:20AM GMT
RSS: The Latest Feed
RSS: The Latest Feed
12/27/2004 06:52 AMRSS: The Latest Feed by Judith Wusteman
h
ttp://www.ucd.i
e/wusteman/lht/wusteman-rss.html
Abstract
The number of library-related
RSS and Atom applications is increasing daily. But, as yet, the
formats and technology involved are far from stable. This article
looks at the current state of the field, discusses future developments
and considers implications for the library. This has been added to my
Bots, Blogs and News
Aggregators presentation.
Win five of the latest DVD re-writers
Win five of the latest DVD re-writers
12/27/2004 06:44 AMZDNet UK Dec 27 2004 9:08AM GMT
Latest SP2 News
Latest SP2 News
08/18/2004 03:25 AMWolfe’s Latest
Wolfe’s Latest
06/06/2004 01:51 AMI just finished reading
The Knight, by Gene Wolfe, one of
only two or three living authors whose works I’ll pick up without
regard to reviews or word-of-mouth...
Latest W3C publications
Latest W3C publications
02/25/2003 10:16 AMThe following documents have been published recently by the W3C: SVG
Printing Requirements, OWL Language Reference, DOM Level 3 Events,
Voice XML 2.0 (Candidate Recommendation), and XML Protocol Abstract
Model
The latest Shirky
The latest Shirky
02/18/2004 12:13 PMA couple of pictures. Insert your "Awwwwwwww" here:
_____________________. Awwwwwwwwwww!...
MEMRI: Latest News
MEMRI: Latest News
01/01/2004 07:55 AM"Allah willing, this unjust state will be erased - Israel will be
erased; this unjust state, the United States, will be erased; this
unjust state, Britain, will be erased." .. Memri has some sobering
sermons .. Read the rest
memri.org/bin/latestnews.cgi?ID=SR2403
track
this site | 4 links
Ralph's latest woes
Ralph's latest woes
06/29/2004 02:04 PMThe latest from the outsourcing trenches
The latest from the outsourcing trenches
02/15/2004 09:28 AMLatest Spyware Even More Evil
Latest Spyware Even More Evil
04/30/2004 01:32 PMLast year we wrote about how some fairly evil spyware called
Xupiter
was making the rounds, installing itself without alerting the
user, changing homepages and generally causing a nuisance. Well, it
appears things are getting even worse. Wired News is now reporting on
an
even
more evil piece of spyware called CoolWebSearch that does all of
the above plus more. It will disable your ability to visit websites
that tell you how to remove it. It disable certain firewalls. Plus,
it appears to get constant updates for itself. It's gotten to the
point where some who have ended up with it say their computers have
become useless.
ICANN's latest challenge
ICANN's latest challenge
05/14/2004 12:08 AMUSA Today May 14 2004 4:30AM GMT
Red Hat unveils latest Fedora
Red Hat unveils latest Fedora
02/16/2004 05:27 AMZDNet UK Feb 16 2004 8:37AM GMT
ATI unwraps latest GPU technology
ATI unwraps latest GPU technology
06/01/2004 05:40 AMMobile and desktop launches
Gnomedex 4.0: Latest Updates
Gnomedex 4.0: Latest Updates
02/16/2004 05:35 AMGnomedex Updates
gnomedex.com/updates
track this
site | 4 links
NetNewsWire Lite 1.0.7