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Review: CSS: Separating Content from Presentation







Review: CSS: Separating Content from
Presentation

Review: CSS: Separating Content from
Presentation
12/10/2002 02:40 AM

If you're ready to cross over to the world of cascading style sheets, or if you know the basics but want a better grasp of the overall picture and the practical details, authors Owen Briggs, Steve Champeon, Eric Costello, and Matt Patterson have done an excellent job of showing the way.




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





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Review: CSS: Separating Content from Presentation

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The Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas showcases the latest and coolest tech gadgets, but often the new products on display fail to live up to the breathless promotion that accompanies them. Steve Friess reports from Las Vegas.

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Major League Baseball made news last year for claim ing to own all in-progress game data - saying they were going to go after websites that reported what was happening at a game in real-time. It didn't matter that the law is pretty clear that you can't copyright facts - MLB believes that just presenting the data is a "rebroadcast" of the game. That said, I guess it's no surprise to hear that they now believe that web audio and video broadcasts of games should work the same way as television broadcasts with a content provider paying a huge upfront fee for the rights to the games, and then telling them they can make it back in ad revenue and subscription fees. Of course, the various internet sites they've approached with this plan have been laughing them out the door, and pointing out that they're not television stations, and they just want to provide something useful to their users - but aren't going to lose money to do so. While MLB has been at the forefront of offering streaming video and audio, it appears they still look on this as a broadcast medium, and not the interactive medium it actually is. They're doing their best to squeeze more money out of existing fans, rather than attract new fans, which is dangerous for the future of the sport. Not only do you anger your biggest fans, you also make it less likely that you're going to pick up new fans.

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Addendum to Our RSS Presentation 11/05/2003 01:14 PM

A quick note for those who attended yesterday's presentation about RSS. Unfortunately, when Steven and I were putting together the presentation, we lost a slide, perhaps the most important slide - the one that told you how to get started. We didn't realize this until it was too late, so in an attempt to rectify this omission, here is what you should do now that RSS is on your radar.

  1. Go to BlogLines at http://www.bloglines.com/
     
  2. Sign up for a free account.
     
  3. Find 5-6 feeds that interest you and subscribe to them in BlogLines. If you're looking for library feeds to help you stay current, try LISFeeds, Peter Scott's List of Library Weblogs, LIS Blogsource, or the ODP List of Library Weblogs. If you're looking for the fun, non-library feeds (cats, knitting, recipes, etc.), try typing in a subject at Syndic8 or NewsIsFree. You can also try this at Technorati and Feedster, but they don't specifically highlight RSS feeds so you'll probably have to go to the blog itself to get that once you find a blog you like.
     
  4. Once you've found a couple of blogs you'd like to read regularly, find the link to the RSS feed on their home page and subscribe to them in BlogLines.
     
  5. Track a handful of sites in BlogLines to get a sense of how RSS and aggregators work. If you get to a point where you need a more powerful aggregator with more features, then you can start looking at some of the other ones we highlighted during the presentation

And I would second Liz Lawley's method of reading magazines in a news aggregator (like BlogLines). Keep up with Salon, Wired News, etc. this way instead of going to their web sites every day looking for new content. And as always, if you have questions about any of this, please don't hesitate to contact Steven or me.


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Cut the cord on your next presentation 12/18/2003 10:37 AM
There I was, standing in the middle of my audience with the laptop and projector, giving a talk about bringing Linux into a business. I had to constantly spin around to talk to everyone, and it was distracting to tap on the laptop to go to the next slide. I wished I could be up at the front of the room, but I wasn't going to run a thick VGA cable across the floor between my laptop on the lectern and the projector. I couldn't help thinking there must be a better way -- and there is.

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Forrester presentation on RSS


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Forrester Research just announced a presentation titled An Introduction To RSS: Why Companies Should Pay Attention Now. I talked with presenter Charlene Li recently, and can vouch that she's done her homework on RSS.


PCBug Presentation


PCBug Presentation 03/19/2003 10:41 PM
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Students in third through fifth grade at Eno Valley are using a variety of PowerPoint presentations and computerized movies to present reports. (News & Observer via MyAppleMenu)

here’s the presentation


here’s the presentation 12/13/2003 08:11 AM
37 Signals: Blogs in Business .. 37signals on biz blogging

37signals.com/blogprez
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download the complete presentation as a
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download the complete presentation as a
PDF
11/06/2003 03:01 AM
PDF

media.corporate-ir.net/media_files/webcast/2003/nov03/1104sony/m rkutaragi.pdf
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No one at BlogOn presentation is using
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No one at BlogOn presentation is using
Explorer
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At the BlogOn conference, a Microsoft presenter asked his audience how many of them used Internet Explorer:
Probably 99 times out of 100 when he asks that question all the hands go up, right? Well first there was a pause and then a giggle and then a whoop of laughter as the audience looked around and realized that NO ONE had raised a hand. The presenter was thrown off his mark, but he recovered and said, "Wow! Okay how many of you wish we'd fix IE so you could use it?"

Still no hands....

Informal survey afterwards said the Windows users in the crowd were all using the latest Firefox. Wouldn't it be amazing if Mozilla ended up winning in the end?

Link (via Waxy)

To Be Added to the Blogging
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To Be Added to the Blogging
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Technorati: Charting Blogdom's Rise

"Sifry mentioned that Technorati started out on Thanksgiving weekend 2002 as an effort to find out "who was talking about me" in the blogosphere. Since then, it has begun charting an increasing number of blogs -- an average of:

- 3,000 a day in January 2003
- 4,000 a day by that March
- 6,000 a day by June 2003
- 8,000-9,000 new blogs a day by September 2003
- 10,000 at the end of 2003
- 11,000 to 12,000 new blogs a day today.

That's pretty incredible, and it adds up to 2.4 million total blogs that Technorati is monitoring. Not all are active. Of that number, about 45 percent have not been updated in the past three months. And he points out that 2.4 million blogs does not equate to 2.4 million bloggers, because many bloggers have multiple blogs." [JD's New Media Musings]

It would be interesting to know how many of those are by librarians and how many are for libraries.


Dynamically Typed: PHP CLI Presentation


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Harry Fuecks has a quick new note on Dynamically Testing today about a new offering from the PHP London Conference.

Ross' Presentation today


Ross' Presentation today 07/23/2004 11:43 AM

So none of you have to be here today. 'Cause here's Ross' presentation. Why the term has suddenly shifted to social media - I'm not sure - but if there weren't terms and semantics to discuss - then what WOULD we talk about?

Oh yah - I know: "what is a conversation?"

Or even better: "what makes someone a Blogger?"

Here's Ross' post.....

Discussing Social Media

This post is in lieu of Powerpoint to introduce the Defining Social Media panel at BlogOn tomorrow with Dan Gillmor, James Currier, Reid Hoffman, Michael Sikillian and Jim Spohrer.

How We Got Here

The Internet has always facilitated conversations and augmented relationships. When a critical mass of participation is gained, cooperation ensues and simple tools have complex results. The earliest innovators in this adoption lifecycle were geeks and hackers. Put enough of them together and you get a new mode of production to disrupt the software industry and enable a new phase of growth — open source.

What we are witnessing is segments of early providers and early adopters form previously unrepresented networks and apply participatory technologies to disrupt industries. Earlier adoption segments include software, media, advertising, entertainment, politics, dating, recruiting, consumer electronics, sales, management, the list goes on. All these segments are information intensive and rely on relationships. And as Doc says, its a revolution in demand-based supply:

Social media are another example of the demand side supplying itself. We’re seeing this with open source software, with new standards like RSS, and with the new media we call blogs. We’re even seeing it in movies such as Outfoxed, and with Internet radio (in spite of destructive fear-based regulation). None of these things came from the Big Boys. They came from you and me and the rest of us here.

Landscape

There is little point in defining Social Software, Media, Search, Computing or Networking, except that new language parallels innovation. Here’s my way of mapping the space, feel free to mo dify and make your own.

Social Software, a term coined by Clay Shirky, is the design of systems that supports groups with an underlying value proposition of building social capital…


Social Software is not that new, but its currently a gr owing and evolving sector marked by a high level of cross-polinization. The level of innovation defys easy categorization.


Properties include people-centricity, low communication costs, low transaction costs that encourage adoption, easy group forming, triads rather than pairs, treating groups as first class objects in the system and adapting to the social network (heterarchy) rather than requiring it to adapt it it (heirarchy). Second order effects include emergence, reputation, different values at different scales, transparency, decentralization and fun parties.

Other dimensions to view this space include enterprise vs. consumer, how connections are formed, different values at different scales, what markets are cannibalized, what cultures (not markets, but don’t reach for your gun) are served and open vs. closed.

These dimension easily blur. Take for example the distinction of enterprise vs. consumer. Social Software adoption is being driven in the enterprise from the bottom up. Initially, it users as developers bringing in their own tools like personal publishing and wikis plus (shameless plug here) enlightened companies serving both users and enterprises at different scales.



Drivers


  • Sales of camera phones with outpace cameras and phones within five years. The fastest growing consumer electronic device hasn’t yet been matched with robust sharing services, save Photologs and Moblogging. These are the fastest growing segments of social media and Incumbents are catching on.
  • People spend time with other people. 2 Hours Per Visit on Friendster (pdf) make it ripe for ad revenue.
  • We have an innate human need to mess with media and make artifacts their own (call this a plausable generalization). What you share makes us care.
  • Co untries and cultures like the US and UK have a latent demand for social capital
  • Pull models of attention management and social networks as filters are solutions for attention scarcity and information abundance
  • Relatively low costs for personal publishing, group forming and network management are expanding markets from the supply side
  • Above all, ease of use. Simple tools yield complex results.
Talk of Bubblet

After initial events like the Blogger acquisition by Google, Six Apart funding, Socialtext seeding and the Social Networking bubbl et — there is a recent spate of significant fundings in this area like Technorati, Newsgator, and Feedburner that bring it renewed attention.



The Consumer Internet is a ripe investment thesis where a small up front investment can yield potentially large returns and many of these companies represent a reinvention of the way the web works and viral growth.

Opportunities still remain within the enterprise. The vast majority of employees are not involved in process that software can automate, they manage exceptions to process. Today all they have is email (90% of collaboration and 75% of knowledge assets is trapped there). Enterprise Social Software seeks to serve the unmet needs of knowledge work and business practice, beginning with a proposition of making group communication efficient and effective.

Expect a byproduct of the BlogOn conference to be coverage that suggests an investment bubblet. Reason being that the early entrants who paid their dues and have success stories to tell are reaching a level of investor interest that’s attracting copycat competition. But skepticism is more than warranted.



Risk Factors


  • Privacy — relationship data is extremely sensitive and conflicts between enterprise and individual incentives abound
  • Growth — many models require scale for return and not all achieve viral levels
  • Low Barriers to Entry — there isn’t much in the way of technology risk, the network is accessible and the LAMP stack drives down startup costs. Network effects are the natural and equitable barrier.
  • DIY — if you fail to serve the network, the network will serve itself
  • Intellectual Property — regimes prevent sharing and development of the commons

Value Proposition



The underlying value proposition across social software is enhancing social capital. But a couple of unique factors are worth consideration.

  • Influence — when you increase the level of participation, so too increases the value of reputation. In advertising, at a time where ad space is starting to become scarice, new metrics and formats could build upon influence. Within enterprises, the trend towards decentralization requires revealing the power law and augmenting the heterarchy.
  • Economies — used to be that competitive advantage was driven by economies of scale and speed. A more networked economy shifts the focus to economies of scope and span.
  • Embracing Change — when vendors hand over control to users as developers (as is the case with wikis enabling users to create information architecture for their own situations, it shares risk and reward.
  • Pooling Risk — Social Software vendors have cooperated early with standards like RSS, Atom, FOAF and Kwiki. This pools risks for vendors, enables new combinations and reduces lock-in for customers and users.

So I’ve tried to frame ways of viewing the space. Now its time for questions and conversation. Here’s another way of thinking from Mr. Conversation himself, Doc again:

< font>
Computing is growing up. When computing was personal, it cared mostly about itself: me and my programs, my printer, my stored information. Now computing is social. A PC off the Net is like a disconnected telephone. The Network is a social place. What we’re doing now is building out that place — that commons, using a variety of tools and building materials.

[Many-to-Many]


Mapper: WEB/GUI Presentation Framework


Mapper: WEB/GUI Presentation Framework 05/16/2004 04:22 PM
New version 1.9.7 available (Production)

HTML Tidy Presentation


HTML Tidy Presentation 05/12/2004 07:08 AM

Tidying up your HTML with PHP: This appears to be a PowerPoint converted to HTML, so the presentation is a little horrid, but the content is amazing. We've talked about HTML Tidy integration with PHP5 befo re, but this details here are fantastic.

Yes, you know Tidy can make your HTML pretty. But did you know that Tidy can take your legacy HTML — FONT tags and all — and convert it to CSS on the fly? Or XHTML ? Did you know it has a first-rat e HTML parser with a dirt-simple PHP API?

Great stuff here. Can't wait for PHP5. Via the always great PHP|Architect.

Click here to comment on this entry


FOAFnet presentation at Galway


FOAFnet presentation at Galway 09/01/2004 09:36 AM

Julian Bond (of Ecademy) is up on stage right now - explaining the FOAFnet.

I have some screen shots to show - of the upcoming new release of Tribe.net - which will have FOAFnet features in it.

From the Tribe marketing team:

[[[KEY MESSAGES - GUIDE FOR TALKING ABOUT TRIBE'S BUSINESS]]]

Message #1 - Consumer Benefit
Tribe is an online resource for enabling consumers to make local connections in their respective cities and leverage community opinion/feedback to get things done. Our leading marketplace can link members with local opportunities around apartments, jobs, events and services by connecting who they know (friends and those with common interests) with what they are looking for (sublet for the summer, coffee table, dentist recommendation).

Message #2 - Business Opportunity
The online classifieds market is exploding as more consumers move online
- However, research shows half of person-to-person buy/sell transactions occur outside of traditional classifieds channels (KRD research) - i.e. local word of mouth

Estimated size of this private party market = $7B-9B by 2008 (Kannon
Consulting)
- No local media exists today to capture these dollars - virtually untapped.

Tribe fills this gap with its local focus, community networking tools and Web-based, self-service listings.
- Tribe is well poised to capitalize on this opportunity with $6.3M in funding from Mayfield, Knight Ridder Digital and Washington Post Company. These big media companies view our offering as a way to capture dollars around private party transactions.

Message #3 - Revenue Model
Tribe is pursuing a proven, traditional classifieds revenue model - we will eventually charge for commercial listings in a handful of high-value categories, like jobs or apartments, but the bulk of our listings will be free. Unlike sites like Friendster, we have stated from the beginning that we have no plans to charge our members subscription fees to connect on our site.

Message #4 - Competitive Landscape
Companies like Friendster and Craigslist leverage certain elements of our offering, but no single Web site merges online community tools like individual profiles, online discussion groups and networking technology, then applies this combination to a local classifieds marketplace.

We are not a pure social network like Friendster or LinkedIn. Tribe's social network has always had a specific purpose - it gives consumers visibility into important connections so they can make better-informed decisions and reap unexpected benefits.

Message #5 - Differentiators
Craigslist: We think the opportunity around the local Internet is staggering. Craigslist demonstrates that there is a wide open field around localized online media - and we aim to take it to the next level. Tribe wants to be the ultimate tool enabling your community to act as your filter
-- surfacing shared local opinions/information so it can help guide your life.

Friendster: Both Tribe and Friendster leverage social networking technology, but that's where the similarity ends. Friendster is competing with Match.com in online dating and is pursuing a pay-to-connect model. Tribe is building a local classifieds marketplace. These are entirely different businesses.

[[[SPECIFIC Q&A AROUND LAUNCH PLANS]]]

Q: What are Tribe's plans with Knight Ridder and the Post? What can we expect to see next?

A: Tribe's primary goal is offer consumers new ways to connect with their respective cities and leverage collective feedback to make better decisions. In collaboration with its investors, Tribe is crystallizing its strategy for delivering its marketplace and expects to start testing some new functionality in certain markets in the next month or so.

Q: Is Tribe targeting Philadelphia specifically?

A: Yes. Tribe is actually active in several markets, including San Francisco, Boston, New York and Los Angeles.

Q: Does Tribe have plans to integrate with Knight Ridder properties?

A: No.

So you can see Tribe in heavily into FOAF. Others are too.


Google Behind The Scenes Presentation


Google Behind The Scenes Presentation 03/23/2005 03:25 PM
A presentation at the U of Washington by Googles Jeff Dean is without question the most indepth knowledge available about Google on the web today.

OLC Presentation Finally Online


OLC Presentation Finally Online 04/07/2005 07:22 AM

Apologies to the folks that attended my information shifting presentation for the Ohio Library Council a few weeks ago. I didn’t realize the PDF version was not online, but you should now be able to access it at ht tp://www.sls.lib.il.us/infotech/presentations/2005/OLC.pdf.


CMS Administation vs. Presentation
Languages


CMS Administation vs. Presentation
Languages
07/18/2004 08:55 AM

Joe's ColdFusion post got me thinking about a little fling I had with ColdFusion a few years back. I liked it for its simplicity and declarative syntax, but I didn't think it had enough depth.

However, wouldn't it be great as a templating language for an existing CMS? It's lightweight, simple, plays well with HTML, etc. In a larger sense, who says that your content needs to be presented by the same language that your CMS is written in? Separation is good.

Think of content management as having two sides — (1) managing and adminstering content, and (2) displaying content. (I would actually argue — and I have — that content management has nothing to do with displaying content, but stick with me here.)

Now, lets put the 50-yard line of this game at the database. So the creation, management, approval, and general administration of content all leads up to one moment — when a certain content record in a database table is declared "active." Everything is working up to that point. The "active" records in the database table are free to be used on the public side of the site.

Why not just create a view of the database that only includes those records, then give your designers and presentation specialists a read-only user and a copy of ColdFusion? Who says that the language the CMS is programmed in has to be the language the content is presented in?

I've talked before about the fact that the management of content is the hard part, The presentation of content is usually pretty easy, while actually getting content to the 50-yard line of our situation — through creation, adding of metadata, approvals, various workflows, etc. — is the real value-add of content management.

I say use whatever language you need to program your CMS, but don't feel compelled to use that same langauge for presenting the content. ColdFusion would be perfect in this capacity (and ColdFu sion Express is — or was — free). Client-tools work work well here as well — Dreamweaver has gre at database integration, and FrontPage would even work in a pinch. And who could forget about Escapade ?

I working on a CMS right now, and I'm tempted to bag the entire built-in templating system I have and just leverage an existing language for it. I'm suddenly enamoured with the idea of drawing a defined "content line" and having a complete separation of systems on either side of, with the only common element the database itself.

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Conference Presentation Judo


Conference Presentation Judo 02/10/2004 02:46 AM
The biggest mistake you can make...


Ten Fun Ways to Liven up Any
Presentation


Ten Fun Ways to Liven up Any
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07/05/2004 02:39 PM
WebDevInfo Jul 5 2004 6:32PM GMT

Barry University Presentation


Barry University Presentation 09/14/2004 05:35 AM

Bots Blogs and News Aggregators Presentation

Speech: Current Happenings on the Internet: Bots, Blogs and News Aggregators by Marcus P. Zillman, M.S., A.M.H.A.

Barry University
http://www.barry.edu/

Presentation Sources:

Bots, Blogs and News Aggregators by Marcus P. Zillman, M.S., A.M.H.A.
http://www.BotsBlogs.com

Searching the Internet - Online Streaming Video Tutorial
http://www.SearchingTheInt ernet.info

Student Research Subject Tracer™ Information Blog
http://www.StudentResearch.inf o/


Marcus P. Zillman, M.S., A.M.H.A., Executive Director of the Virtual Private Library™, Internet expert, author, speaker, consultant and creator/founder of BotSpot.com will be speaking on the latest happenings on the Internet with emphasis on the growing areas of bots and intelligent agents, blogs (weblogs), and news aggregators. Mr. Zillman will be showing these new resources live on the Internet and how they will relate to helping you search and find the information you require for both personal and academic research. His presentations are designed both for the “newbie” to Internet searching as well as the seasoned “Internaut”. The Internet continues to change at a record pace, and discovering the latest tools to make your Internet search both easy and competent is the goal of this presentation. Will eMail soon be replaced by RSS and news aggregators? Are blogs, currently the fastest growing area of the Internet, a fad or will they change the entire Internet landscape? These and other questions will be discussed during this presentation by one of the Internet’s pioneers and bot and artificial intelligence experts, Marcus P. Zillman. His latest links and resources are available by clicking here.

Time: 9:30am

Date: Tuesday, September 14, 2004

Location: Garner Hall, Room 162, 11300 N.E. Second Avenue, Miami Shores, Florida 33161

The much-delayed presentation notes


The much-delayed presentation notes 08/05/2004 12:13 PM
Back in June I gave a presentation to the Boston ACM. The talk went much longer than I'd planned, and I only managed to get through one of the two sets of slides I had. I promised everyone I'd get an annotated version of the mystery presentation up as soon as I could. Of course, this was in the middle of my machine's "thrashing about and dying" phase, so it's taken a little longer than I'd originally planned. Finally got it done, though, so if you're interested feel free to snag the annotated PDF of my Parrot Implementations talk. It...

Schlossnagle.org: php|works Presentation
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Schlossnagle.org: php|works Presentation
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In doing his part for those that couldn't make it to php|works this year, George Schlossnagle has posted his slides from the conference.

Fwd: Theo's presentation on exploit
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Bas Alberts (Sep 15 2004)

Creative Commons presentation in
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Creative Commons presentation in
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Lawrence Lessig will be giving a public Creative Commons presentation in Helsinki. It will be at Korjaamo organized by Aula. It will from 5:30PM on May 24. It's open to the public and will be in English. Details are on the Aula web page. I'm leaving for Helsinki tomorrow and will be there.


SMS Installer and ISU Presentation and
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Spotlight on Good
Web Design

PHP Class
'SortMultiArray'
released

Dream while being
Awake

Danger Guidelines
PHP Congress 2002:
APIs, Design
Patterns and Useful
Objects

Alexa Toolbar
Ratings Graphs

Mobs, Weblogs,
Multimedia

Learn to read and
write XML with .NET

SortMultiArray
Rockin New Years
Eve!

Re-Fi'd Zaurus
application/xhtml+xm
l dilemma

Oops
Need to Send Mail
from PHP?

Circular Graphics
and Dealing With The
Enevitable Jaggies

Preloading Images
Like a Deer in the
Headlights

Two Great Events!
MySQL User's
Conference and Open
Source Content
Management (OSCOM)

PHP Based Contacts
Tool: phpGroupware

Moving Movable Type
to Drupal

Walmarts $199 PC
Sells Briskly

Bad Boy Bot of the
Week

Inktomi Says Traffic
to Partners Up 40%

Fast Ranked #3 for
Tech Companies

Cutting Bandwidth
Needs

Buying Cheap Mass
Banner Impressions
Through Auctions

what is grok?