Terms of Use
Grok Headline matches for Terms of Use
Dvd Terms To Know
Dvd Terms To Know
12/04/2003 09:38 AMSiliconValley.com Dec 4 2003 8:44AM ET
"terms of service"
"terms of service"
03/14/2005 05:53 PMAIM Terms of Service
AIM Terms of Service
03/14/2005 04:47 PM
AIM Terms of Service:
"Although you or the owner of the Content retain ownership of all
right, title and interest in Content that you post to any AIM Product,
AOL owns all right, title and interest in any compilation, collective
work or other derivative work created by AOL using or incorporating
this Content. In addition, by posting Content on an AIM Product,
you grant AOL, its parent, affiliates, subsidiaries, assigns, agents
and licensees the irrevocable, perpetual, worldwide right to
reproduce, display, perform, distribute, adapt and promote this
Content in any medium. You waive any right to privacy. You waive
any right to inspect or approve uses of the Content or to be
compensated for any such uses.
"
So, basically, don't say anything on AIM that you would not like to
see displayed on the
jumbotron or
(perhaps, someday) re-enacted on Time Warner's new AIM-dialog based
reality TV show.
DeWitt comes to terms with Cobalt's end
DeWitt comes to terms with Cobalt's end
01/28/2004 08:43 PMInterview Some things better left unsaid
AOL weasels about its Terms of Service
AOL weasels about its Terms of Service
03/14/2005 05:29 PMCory Doctorow:
Last night, I
blogged about AOL's terms-of-service for its services, in which
you waive your privacy right. AOL has done some interviews objecting
to this, saying that the terms are only intended to reach to
message-board postings.
I don't buy it for a second. If AOL meant "you waive privacy in your
message board postings and not your AIM messages" they could say so.
And if they won't say so, why should we believe them?
Link
Update: J sez, "Apple's .Mac service lets you
use the AIM network without clicking through AOL's TOS at all (you get
to use your username@mac.com as your AIM name), and the .Mac TOS says
nothing at all about AIM or AOL, and neither does Apple's privacy statement,
which you agree to when agreeing to the .Mac TOS."

Health terms not often Googled
Health terms not often Googled
11/05/2003 08:21 PMInstead, Google and other software gofers spend the bulk of their time
hunting for pornography, deals on computer gear, and the latest dirt
on favourite ...
Blogging terms going mainstream
Blogging terms going mainstream
01/04/2005 07:49 PM
BBC
warns regarding dangers of being "dooced" Not long after making
the
Wired
Jargon Watch, I finally got to see the term
"
;dooced", in action as the BBC posts an article regarding the
growing conflict between employers and employees when it comes to
blogging.
Gmail's terms of service
Gmail's terms of service
04/09/2004 04:00 PMPrivacy advocates are getting all riled up over Gmail "terms of
service". I kinda of had to laugh as if...
Do webl0gs need Terms and Conditions?
Do webl0gs need Terms and Conditions?
03/06/2004 01:55 AMSo here's a thought - albeit a short and unconvincing one that
hasn't really got much of my heart behind it - about the problem of
weblog comment spammers. For those of you who are unaware of the
phenomenon, basically it's pretty simple: if your site is linked to by
a well linked-to site, then Google ranks you higher in search results.
Therefore if you're someone with a desperate need to exploit the
unhappy, unconfident or socially awkward by selling them Viagra or
weight-loss drugs or 'the banned CD', the apparent best way to claw
that little bit further up the greasy pole is to start posting
specious comments on people's weblogs filled with links to your
commercial sites.
Or at least that's the theory of the soulless evil self-interested
wankers who undertake such activities. God knows if it works or not -
certainly Google's algorithms aren't public. Moreover, there was a
suggestion a while back that only links in which the link-text
reflected something on the linked-to page would count for their
weighting. So it might not work at all. Nonetheless, it continues and
as it does so, each and every time, another weblog owner starts to
feel more and more disillusioned with the web in which they operate
and about the unscrupulousness of their fellow man. The perpetrators
of this kind of spamming aren't committing crimes against humanity,
but they're still basically scum. They're people who would spit in
your face if you couldn't stop them and they could make a few cents
out it.
There are a variety of 'solutions' to this kind of problem of
course, with some being instituted in Typepad as we speak while others
(like MT-Blacklist
) have been developed by third-party developers.
One possibility that occurs to me that's less technical in scope is
a "Terms and Conditions"-style tick-box that you have to click when
you post a comment. In the Terms and Conditions could be a statement
that posting a comment constitutes an agreement that you will not link
to any commercial sites whatsoever and that anyone who does so has
basically entered into a tacit agreement to pay for whatever the
length of time that link remains on the site at the rate of $100 a day
(rounded up to the nearest day). You could then bill the sites
concerned via their addresses in whois and take them to the small
claims court if they didn't pay-up. I'm fairly sure this wouldn't work
on the whole but it might put the wind up a few people and make them
think twice about it. Has anyone got any other suggestions?
Read the comments
Origin of the terms "BCE/CE" for dates?
Origin of the terms "BCE/CE" for dates?
07/12/2004 02:42 AMA friend who blames Jews for all of the ills that he perceives in
American society asked me if it was a Jew who started using "BCE"
("Before the Common Era" rather than BC or "Before Christ") for dates
of events that occurred more than 2004 years ago. Being a
scientist and engineer he had only recently come across this coinage
and was convinced that it part of a contemporary Jewish plot to
deestablish Christianity as America's default religion.
My response was that I believed BCE/CE instead of BC/AD was a bit
of 19th century academic pedantry. I remember seeing the term on
yellowed labels next to objects in museums that had been gathering
dust for 50+ years. Given that Jews had only recently escaped
from their ghettos in the 19th century and that most classics or
Bible scholars would have come from wealthier families, I thought it
highly unlikely that a Jew coined the term. Most likely I
thought it was Christian scholars who wished to employ a bit of jargon
to make their professional work appear more scientific. The only
etymological reference that I could find was this Word IQ
article, that talks about the appearance of the term "Common Era"
in a 1908 encyclopedia published by the Roman Catholic Church.
Anyone have a better source for settling this question? The
Oxford English Dictionary and first Supplement don't contain "BCE" or
"Common Era".
Spyware: Define Your Terms!
Spyware: Define Your Terms!
12/22/2004 01:52 AMThe French philosopher Voltaire said, “If you wish to talk to
me, first define your terms.” That admonition is more relevant
than ever, considering how computer literati are embroiled in
controversy over the exact definition of “spyware.”
Slangspeak catch-all terms like “junkware” and
“crapware” keep the broth on high simmer, while companies
like ComScore Networks, who want to legitimize their particular brand
of data gathering, spice things up by coining new terminology:
ComScore calls their…
Direct and Related Links for 'Spyware: Define
Your Terms!'
DUP deal terms 'unacceptable'
DUP deal terms 'unacceptable'
06/30/2004 08:14 AMThe DUP's terms for a deal to restore devolution in NI are
unacceptable, Sinn Fein's Gerry Adams warns.
2K3 embeds some new terms in our
vocabularies
2K3 embeds some new terms in our
vocabularies
01/03/2004 07:30 PMRunners-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 engine ...
New AdSense Terms & Features
New AdSense Terms & Features
03/17/2005 02:35 AM"...new payment options, new ad types (Ad Links), and lots of changes
in the terms of service.
AOL fixes its terms of service
AOL fixes its terms of service
03/17/2005 03:56 AMCory Doctorow:
When AOL got called out on its Terms of Service giving it ownership of
your private instant messages and requiring you to waive your privacy
rights, it went into spin mode. It gave press interviews saying that
it didn't intend to use the agreement that it exacted from its users
to abuse their privacy, and said that besides, Microsoft's terms of
service were just as bad or worse (hardly a ringing endorsement!).
Now, though, AOL has done the right and substantive thing in response:
it has rewritten its terms of service so that they clearly distinguish
between the messages you post to public areas and the private messages
you send to your friends. This is absolutely the way that AOL should
be handling this, and they deserve to be congratulated for it.
Link
(Thanks, Andrew!)

AOL Clarifies Terms of Service for AIM
AOL Clarifies Terms of Service for AIM
03/17/2005 04:22 AMAmerica Online has clarified the terms of service for AOL Instant
Messenger (AIM) in response to a firestorm of criticism that was
sparked when bloggers objected to language concerning users' privacy.
AOL has modified the "Content You Post" section to reiterate that
user-to-user communications will remain private.
Trademarking search terms
Trademarking search terms
11/04/2003 03:38 PMMany companies use the Google Trademark Complaint Procedure to stop
competitors bidding on a company name or product. As this...
Google sets its own terms in IPO
Google sets its own terms in IPO
05/01/2004 03:19 AMBusiness Day South Africa May 1 2004 7:25AM GMT
Barghouti given five life terms
Barghouti given five life terms
06/06/2004 06:51 AMAn Israeli court gives five life sentences to one of the leaders of
the Palestinian uprising, Marwan Barghouti.
Most Expensive Terms on Overture
Most Expensive Terms on Overture
03/19/2003 10:43 PMIn the supporters forum: 50 bucks a click for Mesothelioma sounds a
bit rich for you? It's all about conversion and ROI.
The Real Terms of the Google Deal
The Real Terms of the Google Deal
05/01/2004 05:19 PMGoogle's equity class structure (10 votes per share for "us", 1 vote
per share for "you") is designed to keep insiders in control,
pocketing investors' dollars while letting them sit in the back seat
for the ride. In this, they're following the lead of media companies
like the New York...
Almost 10% of Prisoners Are Serving Life
Terms
Almost 10% of Prisoners Are Serving Life
Terms
05/12/2004 02:22 PMThat figure marks an increase of 83 percent from 1992, according to a
report released by the Sentencing Project.
Pearl Jam: Making Videos On Their Own
Terms
Pearl Jam: Making Videos On Their Own
Terms
04/17/2004 02:11 AM"Final Cut Pro was an essential piece of the puzzle. We never could
have created anything without it." By Bija Gutoff, Apple (via
MyAppleMenu)
Clarke offers help in school terms row
Clarke offers help in school terms row
04/14/2004 07:48 AMThe Education Secretary, Charles Clarke, has offered to help solve a
row over a proposed six-term year.
FindWhat and Espotting agree on terms
FindWhat and Espotting agree on terms
02/10/2004 08:10 PMAnalysts said the merger should help the two to better compete against
rivals Google and Yahoo-owned Overture, which dominate the sector. ...
Jail terms for £55m cocaine ring
Jail terms for £55m cocaine ring
06/07/2004 09:04 AMThree men receive long jail sentences for smuggling 651kg of cocaine
into the UK hidden in a digger.
Gilmore on Gmail's terms-of-service
Gilmore on Gmail's terms-of-service
04/09/2004 04:05 PMJohn Gilmore has given me permission ot publish his very sharp
analysis of Google's Gmail
draft
terms-of-service. As it stands, the ToS have some really
objectionable elements. Google has a notation to the effect that this
is a draft document and they are soliciting feedback on it to
gmail-feedback@google.com.
If these terms bother you, you could send polite feedback to Google
about the parts that you find worrisome.
If they allege a "technical issue", including spam filtering, then
they can access, read, preserve, and disclose anything in your
mailbox. Since they probably do spam filtering for everybody (both for
incoming and outgoing mail), then they have the right to read and
disclose the contents of your email at any time.
Many spam-filtering services send copies of alleged spams to some
central location. If they get N copies of similar messages, they
declare it spam and publish the offending messages on the web.
Google's right to send your spam to such services gives them the right
to send ANY of your email to ANYONE -- for publication.
Link
(
Thanks, John!)
Steelers Reach Terms With Roethlisberger
(AP)
Steelers Reach Terms With Roethlisberger
(AP)
08/03/2004 02:38 PMAP - First-round draft pick Ben Roethlisberger reached terms Tuesday
on a six-year contract worth as much as $40 million with the
Pittsburgh Steelers.
They will always be second cousins in
terms of getting access to the Internet
They will always be second cousins in
terms of getting access to the Internet
07/12/2004 07:21 PMITBusiness.ca Jul 12 2004 11:16PM GMT
Most popular search terms for online tax
help
Most popular search terms for online tax
help
04/10/2005 05:42 AMZDNet Apr 10 2005 10:33AM GMT
Getting a Grip on Access Control Terms
Getting a Grip on Access Control Terms
09/03/2004 06:20 PM
This is a Google Cashe since the original is gone/moved from its last
location
I had sayed befo...
VoIP terms of service suck
VoIP terms of service suck
08/10/2004 08:59 AMSalshdot takes note of the terrible Terms of Service from many of the
major voice-over-IP providers, including Vonage. I nearly bought a
Vonage subscription three times last year, but each time, their ToS
changed my mind. Who wants to do business with a company that makes
you agree to something really unreasonable before they'll take your
money?
he prime example is Vonage, which states among other things that 'If
Vonage, in its sole discretion believes that you have violated the
above restrictions, Vonage may forward the objectionable material, as
well as your communications with Vonage and your personally
identifiable information to the appropriate authorities for
investigation and prosecution and you hereby consent to such
forwarding.'"
"Don't forget the obligatory 'we can change these terms of service
whenever we like and they become effective immediately when posted to
our website.' Read for yourself here(1), here(2), and here(3). I won't
put up with this kind of thing in my software and I certainly won't
put up with it from my phone company!"
I'm surprised that more VoIP companies don't tout their ToS as
competitive advantages over Vonage -- "Sure they've got a great rate
plan, but if they think you're doing something naughty, they'll rat
you out to the Feds."
LinkDanger relaxes SDK terms, still getting
it wrong
Danger relaxes SDK terms, still getting
it wrong
03/21/2003 10:17 AMDanger has relaxed its terms-of-service for downloaders of the Hiptop
SDK, but they're still layering on restrictions that, IMO, endanger
the long-term health of the device, since it's only by creating a
space for innovation without permission that Danger can hope to have
real, killer apps emerge.
People have said that the restrictions are necessary to keep apps from
sucking too much bandwidth or to prevent malware from being installed
on users' devices -- but these are the same risks borne by ISPs that
allow anyone to connect any PC, with any software, to their network.
What's more, it discounts the possibility that apps could be developed
that reduce the bandwidth sucked by a device (for example, a
mailer that allows me to specify that mail with a high enough
SpamAssasin score in the header shouldn't be downloaded, or a browser
that uses the Google API to fetch sections of pages that are relevant
to my search-terms, rather than the whole page). Likewise, it
discounts the possibility that users can distinguish between good and
malicious software, say, by installing software released or
recommended by people they trust.
It forecloses on the possibility of someone building a Danger
PIM-syncher (right now, you can put your calendar, contact, memo and
to-do info into your SideKick, but you can't ever get it out
of it, and if you stop being a T-Mobile customer, they'll remove all
the data from your device, so your calendar only exists so long as
you're a T-Mobile customer) (this is why I'm not using my SideKick as
a calendar -- and carrying an extra PIM device).
In the end, Danger needs to decide if they're shipping an Internet
device, one that's end-to-end and allows users to define their own
services; or a telephone device that can only run the services
approved by the phone-company -- and if they choose the latter, it's
only a matter of time before they're displaced by someone building the
former.
Meanwhile, this
thread on the Danger Developer Forum clarifies it still more
fully: right now, the only apps that can be installed on a SideKick
are the apps that Danger signs off on.
Wake up Danger and T-Mobile: this is my device: I paid $250
for it. It's contemptuous of your customers to restrict how we can
use our lawfully acquired property.
Link
Discuss
(Thanks, Katrus!, and via
Hack the Planet)
Apple, Tiger Leaker Come to Terms
Apple, Tiger Leaker Come to Terms
03/24/2005 08:22 PMTop ten Yahoo search terms revealed
Top ten Yahoo search terms revealed
12/30/2003 06:14 AMNet 4 Nowt Dec 30 2003 4:52AM ET
VoIP Terms of Service May Surprise You
VoIP Terms of Service May Surprise You
08/10/2004 08:31 AMOn Terms of Her Choosing, a Woman Ends
Her Life
On Terms of Her Choosing, a Woman Ends
Her Life
05/31/2004 05:31 PMEUGENE, Ore. - "If you drink this, you will die," George Eighmey told
Karen Janoch, showing her a Pyrex measuring cup that held 90 capsules
of Seconal dissolved in water.
Myanmar Peacock Eaters Get Prison Terms
(AP)
Myanmar Peacock Eaters Get Prison Terms
(AP)
08/04/2004 03:06 PMAP - A fashionable repast for kings in medieval times, peacock is off
the menu now as two poachers here learned when they were recently
imprisoned for eating two of the showy fowl.
Shopping.com Sets Terms for Planned IPO
(Reuters)
Shopping.com Sets Terms for Planned IPO
(Reuters)
05/26/2004 09:05 AMReuters - Shopping.com Ltd., an online
comparison shopping service, said on Wednesday it planned to
sell 5 million common shares in its initial public offering,
for between $14 and $16 per share.
Grok Description matches for Terms of Use
GrokA matches for Terms of Use
Group revives effort to define spyware
Group revives effort to define spyware
06/05/2005 11:35 PMZDNet Jun 3 2005 11:08AM GMT
Define Spyware Or Just Enforce Existing
Laws?
Define Spyware Or Just Enforce Existing
Laws?
09/13/2004 09:56 PMThe question over exactly how
spyware
should be defined isn't exactly new. However, Mark Rasch's latest
column at SecurityFocus picks apart common spyware definitions to
make you wonder if
it's useful at all to define what spyware is. Instead, he
suggests (as have others
before<
/a>) that the real issue isn't in defining and outlawing spyware, but
simply enforcing existing laws that already make most of the worst
offenders illegal by way of laws against fraud. Of course, that won't
happen, because politicians want to make sure they're seen as doing
something to make their constituents' lives better -- and a law
against spyware (just like the mostly useless law against spam before
it) is good for publicity, even if it does little to solve any real
problems.
Ecto for Windows launches, BoingBoing
now a 100% Ecto bl0g!
Ecto for Windows launches, BoingBoing
now a 100% Ecto bl0g!
04/14/2004 12:49 AMThe popular blogging-aid software Ecto -- once only offered for Mac --
is now available for Windows users. With today's launch of Ecto for
Windows, BoingBoing officially becomes an all-ecto blog! My BoingBoing
co-editors all use it to make blogging with Movable Type more friendly
and efficient. I'm the only PC-afflicted blogger in the bunch.
TypePad, MovableType, Nucleus, and Blogger users: rejoice. Ecto
co-creator Adriaan Tijsseling
says:
Joi and me are very happy to
announce the release of a beta of a Windows port of ecto, thanks to a
unique collaboration with Alex Hung. It is our hope that with this
collaboration the ease of use and features of ecto will now be
available to the Windows users.
The beta trial will last one month, during which we hope to find bugs
and improve on the product with the help of user feedback. Any
information about this beta will be on the ecto for Windows webpage as
Alex will be the main responsible person for this Windows version.
LinkCan You Trust Your Spyware Protection?
Can You Trust Your Spyware Protection?
06/05/2005 11:32 PMKing's College Hospital NHS Trust puts
in IP network solution
King's College Hospital NHS Trust puts
in IP network solution
08/23/2004 02:48 AMPublicTechnology.net Aug 23 2004 7:22AM GMT
Network Associates to fight Spyware
Network Associates to fight Spyware
01/23/2004 03:54 AMHopefully the makers of Mcafee can find spyware better then their
software finds virus's as they have launched a spyware...
Network Associates fights spyware
Network Associates fights spyware
01/22/2004 06:18 PMThe maker of McAfee antivirus software is joining the fight against
spyware, offering an antispyware tool that takes a proactive approach.
Network Security Spyware Removal -
Sponsored Link
Network Security Spyware Removal -
Sponsored Link
03/28/2005 01:32 PMAd - http://www.pctools.com Mar 28 2005 2:59PM GMT
Max Secure Spyware Detector - Secure
your Corporate Network from Spies
Max Secure Spyware Detector - Secure
your Corporate Network from Spies
04/18/2005 03:55 AMMax Secure Software, developer and global leader in information
security products varying from a broad range of security software
solutions, and services designed to help individuals, small and
mid-sized businesses, and large enterprises security announces release
of new product, Spyware Detector Enterprise Edition. [PRWEB Apr 18,
2005]
Shark Tank: Hey, if we can't trust them,
who CAN we trust?
Shark Tank: Hey, if we can't trust them,
who CAN we trust?
03/06/2004 01:53 AMSpurred on by new laws and regulations, this company is overhauling
its IT security -- and the security department wants to strip support
programmers of their access to the production system.
Shark Tank: Hey, if you can't trust IT,
who CAN you trust?
Shark Tank: Hey, if you can't trust IT,
who CAN you trust?
03/14/2005 05:10 PMCEO decides that his company is getting too much spam, so word comes
down to this pilot fish in IT: Find a better spam filter and get it
working pronto.
Is ecto available for the PC?
Is ecto available for the PC?
08/27/2004 01:47 PMGreat news - but I believe it's irrelevant for me and 98% of the
world:
Roland Tanglao congratulates Adriaan Tijsseling (I do
too!)
Go Adriaan go! In 2004, I don't know why this is so difficult,
I mean how old is Dreamweaver? Anyways, I am glad ecto is raising the
bar finally in blog writing software.
From ecto blog: Can you
spell 'WYSIWYAG'?:
QUOTE
This is a draft in Rich Text
editing mode. One can switch from Rich to HTML and back indefinitely.
In the Rich Text mode, a series of buttons will appear to easily allow
setting the various font and paragraph peculiarities (alignment,
indentation, cursive, bold, underline, strike-through, font-color,
background color, font face). The buttons are modelled after Panther's
neat Font panel, which obviously also has effect here. Don't mind the
gray background color, that's fully customizable. By default
background is white and foreground is black.
Note the highlighted square in the corner of the attached image.
It's the resize knob to give users basic control over the size of the
image. To control more options, double-clicking the attachment will
reveal the attachment settings sheet.
There's not really much to it, I guess, but it should make writing
blog entries a bit more easier, especially for those who don't care or
know much about HTML.
UNQUOTE
[Roland Tanglao blog]
Ecto
Ecto
02/10/2004 02:53 AMSo, I finally bit the bullet and paid for Ecto, the most excellent
upgrade to Adriaan Tijsseling's Kung Log. No longer donationware
(which I expect most people donated--I admit, alas, that I didn't) but
payware with a two-week trial period. And I have to say... this is
darned sweet. Being able to manage multiple blogs at once (with the
odd blip here and there--drafts don't store which account they were
associated with so far as I can see) is really nice, especially now
that we're looking at using Movable Type as an in-house project
support tool. Using MT certainly beats...
ecto 1.1.8
ecto 1.1.8
08/10/2004 11:18 PMA next generation blogging desktop client.
ecto 2
ecto 2
08/17/2004 04:46 PMCongrats
Adriaan!
Giving Ecto a try
Giving Ecto a try
02/10/2004 02:44 AMJust downloaded Ado's update to Kung-Log, called Ecto. Seems to have a nice
and easy set up, and the posting interface appears pretty clean.
Automatic spell-checking is there as well, which is a nice feature
too. If only it wasn't only available for this lousy Mac hardware. I've said it before and I'll say it again: If
IBM and Apple teamed up and released OSX on a Thinkpad T40, I'd buy one in
a heartbeat.
Anyway, that's not Ecto's fault. Kudos to Adriaan on a job well
done.
ecto 1.0 released
ecto 1.0 released
02/10/2004 02:51 AMecto 1.0 has been released.
Congratulations to Adriaan!
"ecto - dev bl0g"
"ecto - dev bl0g"
04/15/2004 02:33 AMEcto 2.2 with Tag support!
Ecto 2.2 with Tag support!
02/01/2005 08:50 PM Adriaan has released Ecto 2.2, and it has built-in support for
Technorati tags! Cool. All of you Mac OSX bloggers, you definitely
should go and give Ecto a try. Very nice. Tags: ecto, technoratitags,
technorati, cooltools...
Ecto beta is out
Ecto beta is out
01/09/2004 10:12 PMEcto, the OS X blogging client by Adriaan (disclosure: Adriaan
works for me) is out for beta testing. Check it
out.
ecto 1.1.5 and Synergy
ecto 1.1.5 and Synergy
05/23/2004 03:05 PMecto 1.1.5 has been released to the wild and contains two great
additions. The bigger of the two is that it has interoperability with
the...
Ecto 2 beta
Ecto 2 beta
09/09/2004 08:59 AM
Cory Doctorow:
All four Boing Boing editors use Ecto, a blogging sool, to post and
manage our material here. Today, a public beta of Ecto 2 launches, a
major update that I'm excited as hell to get my hands on.
The basic idea behind ecto's WYSIAWYG is to offer users the ability to
compose entries without having to bother with HTML tags. Since most
blog entries are not complete web sites, composition of entries only
allows font and paragraph changes, indentation (read "blockquote"),
and obviously images (video and audio should follow shortly).
Regarding image authoring I had two ways of implementing support for
it. I tried the extreme version involving containers and layouts but
that produced quite a bit of headache and would slow down typesetting
too much. Considering that Tiger's WebKit will allow editing, I chose
the easier route. Images can still be positioned and resized in place,
but text flow is not what you will see. That's one reason for the 'A'
in WYSIAWYG... 'almost' (If your entry fails to post, read "Got"
instead of "Get"...).
Link
(
via Ben
Hammersley)
ecto for Windows
ecto for Windows
04/15/2004 05:09 AMAlex Hung has joined
forces with us to make a Windows version of Adriaan's OS X blogging client ecto
based on his original client, TypeWriter. Check out
the ecto for Windows page
for details on the beta test.
Update: Ecto 1.1.5
Update: Ecto 1.1.5
05/24/2004 10:52 AMThe desktop weblogging client adds basic AppleScript support,
interaction with the upcoming NetNewsWire 2.0, live filtering in the
entries and drafts list, and other changes.
ecto goes wysiawyg
ecto goes wysiawyg
08/27/2004 01:34 PM
ecto, the blogging client
developed by Adriaan at my
company Kula has just released the beta of the next version which has
"What You See Is Almost What You Get" (wysiawyg). This means that you
can now do things like drag, drop, resize images into posts. You can
also create links, change font information and lots of other stuff
without looking at or dealing with html. (More info on the
ecto blog.) ecto 2.0 has a bunch of other cool features. Adriaan
says it should be ready for general release of the OS X version in
about two weeks. Until then... gloat.. gloat...
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Beta: Ecto 0.2.1
Beta: Ecto 0.2.1
01/19/2004 12:52 PMThe weblog software adds basic, intermediate, and advanced modes for
different types of users, support for more weblog systems, and other
changes.
ecto - dev bl0g
ecto - dev bl0g
04/16/2004 06:11 AMecto - Windows Version released .. the ecto for Windows page ..
Ecto
ecto.mineblogging.com
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test from ecto
test from ecto
02/01/2005 08:41 PMthis is a test from ecto, the latest beta version.
define-1.01
define-1.01
09/04/2004 01:07 AM Terms of Use