Category: Nanopublishing

  • The Fireball that dare speak its name

    Any time I end up back at a site I enjoy or admire but don’t subscribe to (as when searching for info on running perl from the OS X command line I found myself again at Daring Fireball) these days I try to decide on the spot whether to subscribe. I am adding John Gruber’s…

  • One year in Blogistan

    Today is Radio Free Blogistan’s first birthday, or one-year anniversary, or whatever you call a blogday. I started RFB on July 25, 2002. Cheers! I’ve just added Brad Choate’s MTOnThisDay plugin and cranked it up to 11, to list all posts from the previous year on the current day (if any). I’d like to bubble…

  • J.Ro working up a new gig

    John Robb mentions that he’s no longer with UserLand. No real explanation and we may never see one. John’s got great ideas and he leads that K-logs discussion on his Yahoo list, so I’m sure he’ll land on his feet. In fact, I think I’ve come up with a topic I could anchor in his…

  • Going down to the x road

    (Ramblings from last week on xianlandia.com): Never get there on time. So I’m falling behind on testing Textpattern and while I like the spigots idea is it still too complicated for me to wrap a less dynamic not-really-a-blog page idea around? Or do I need to push it up a notch. Does the output side…

  • Corante's social software blog

    It’s a group blog, naturally. Corante seems to be going after their particular nanopublishing niche quite aggressively. The social software blog has been very thought-provoking these last few weeks (I read it in my aggregator, though, and often don’t know right away who’s speaking). This post (Jabber and Decentralization) prompted me to save this blog…

  • New arts journal: Princeton Independent

    Princeton University hosts an alumni network service called TigerNet, featuring mailing lists among other services. One such list is called Princeton-Writing and serves as a kind of coffeepot for writers. Eric Lubell, a writer from the Princeton class of ’76, felt that alumni are not especially well served by … [artsflow]