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Download of the Day: HighlightAll (Firefox)

March 23rd, 2007 by hashbrown

highlightall.png

Windows/Mac/Unix (Firefox): The HighlightAll Firefox extension highlights any text on a web page matching the text you’ve selected with your mouse.

Like most good Firefox extensions, Highlight all does one simple thing well. This performs the same function as the “Highlight all” button when you’re searching a page with Ctrl/Cmd-F, without the need for typing or watching your screen jump around to matches as you search. After all, you’ve already found the text you want highlighted, so just select it and you can see all other instances. You can toggle HighlightAll with a configurable keyboard shortcut (F8 by default), so matches to your highlighted text doesn’t always need to show up in yellow. This seems like a great research tool for quickly digesting web pages by keyword.

Nice tool.


Originally
from Public on NewsGator Online



reBlogged

by Hashbrown

to Firefox

on Mar 22, 2007, 10:30PM

Originally from Public on NewsGator Online on March 22, 2007, 6:30pm

Posted in My Newsgator Blogroll, firefox | No Comments »

Adobe Apollo Launched, So Go Build Something

March 23rd, 2007 by hashbrown

Adobe just announced that it’s much anticipated Apollo platform is now available for developers. The software developers kit can be downloaded at adobe.com/go/apollo.

Although this is the official release of the SDK, many developers have been working with Apollo for quite some time. Ryan Stewart recently covered the some of the better Apollo demos from an event they put on last month. See more on the launch from his ZDNet blog.

Readers have noticed our recent infatuation with the Apollo platform. I honestly believe that entirely new classes of companies can be built on this platform, which takes Flash, HTML and javascript completely outside of the browser and interacts with the file system on a PC. Photos, music, email and many other everyday tasks make a lot of sense in a single environment that is both local and in the cloud simultaneously. There is going to be a lot of creativity coming off of this platform over the near term.

Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0

If you already know flash or javascript, you need to learn this. And then teach me.


Originally
from Public on NewsGator Online

by Michael Arrington


reBlogged

by Hashbrown

to web development web2.0

on Mar 19, 2007, 5:01AM

Originally by Michael Arrington from Public on NewsGator Online on March 19, 2007, 1:01am

Posted in web development, web2.0 | No Comments »

Yahoo! Pipes: Some Tips

March 23rd, 2007 by hashbrown

By Brady Forrest

Yahoo! has released a new RSS remixer named Pipes. Right now it’s got some performance issues, but once those are worked out you should go play with the service.
These are some facts and tips about Pipes that I learned while talking with the developers, playing with the app as they were making changes and from reading the documentation.

  • To change the name of a Pipe, open it in edit mode and click on the tab. It will become a text field that you can modify and save.
  • Pipes will output GeoRSS. They plan to release a map viewer soon. In the meantime you can consume GeoRSS over at Mapufacture.
  • You can use Dapper and OpenKapow to scrape sites. They both output RSS feeds that can be consumed by Pipes.
  • They have a slick debugger that allows you to step through your modules one at a time and view the data at each step.
  • The following browsers are suported: Firefox, Webkit, and IE6. Known Problems: Pipes is known not to work in Opera. Safari has minor issues. IE6 currently displays problems with the For Each module. IE7 has not been extensively tested.
  • In addition to RSS, Pipes also output in JSON.
  • The Pipes crawler respects the Robot Exclusion Standard. It has the User-agent: Pipes-Crawler Yahoo Pipes.

This is post is the fourth in a series on the Pipes product. Here are the other posts on Radar:


Update -
Daniel Raffel of the Yahoo! TechDev Team, the creators of Pipes, wrote to me:

I just saw your latest post on radar about pipes and wanted to point out
that the correct user agent to block is “Yahoo Pipes” NOT “Pipes-Crawler”.

Even more details on that are listed here:
http://pipes.yahoo.com/docs/troubleshooting

Another cool feature I thought I’d mention is that you can search for feeds
in the feed finder in the top right corner, I’ve attached a pic. You can
drag the results to the canvas.

pipes_feed.finder.jpg

Finally, we have some “easter eggs” for folks to discover but they are
hidden as usual, and, well, we can’t spoil the fun.


Originally
from Public on NewsGator Online

by Brady Forrest


reBlogged

by Hashbrown

on Feb 9, 2007, 3:10PM

Originally by Brady Forrest from Public on NewsGator Online on February 9, 2007, 10:10am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

The “evite” killer?

March 23rd, 2007 by hashbrown

I hate evites. Here’s why.

Tonight Maryam and I are going to the Tango Diva book launch party. Everything is hunky dory. Right?

Wrong. The evite email that I have doesn’t have any information on it. It doesn’t tell me where the party is. It doesn’t tell me when it starts. It forces me to click over to the Web site to look at all that info. I really, really hate that (because I drag emails from people to my calendar to keep the date and I hate clicking away from my calendar just to learn pertinent information because the service an inviter used is trying to collect page views by forcing me to visit the site).

So, when I saw MyPunchbowl.com today — founder Matt Douglas was here to show it to Maryam and me — that was one of my first concerns.

It passed the test. The emails that come from MyPunchBowl have all the pertinent information in them.

But that’s not all. It far exceeds evite by including integration with Google Maps for location, Flickr for photos before and after the event, an event-store lookup, and other cool features. Maryam liked the ability to customize emails per invitee (evite doesn’t do that either).

Anyway, it’s going to be hard for MyPunchbowl to compete with evite, because evite is such a strong brand name and has so many users, but I’m cheering it on because it’s superior to evite. Please, if you’re going to invite me to your next party, use MyPunchbowl. My calendar will love you for it.


Originally
from Public on NewsGator Online

by Robert Scoble


reBlogged

by Hashbrown

on Feb 14, 2007, 1:09AM

Originally by Robert Scoble from Public on NewsGator Online on February 13, 2007, 8:09pm

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Krugle: search engine for developers

March 23rd, 2007 by hashbrown

Here’s Ken Krugler, showing off the search engine for developers named “Krugle.” It’s like Google, but much better for developers. They just announced a partnership with Yahoo too.

Demo. Interview.

Here’s a previous post I made where I talked about my impressions of Krugle after doing this interview.


Originally
from Public on NewsGator Online

by Robert Scoble


reBlogged

by Hashbrown

on Feb 14, 2007, 5:15PM

Originally by Robert Scoble from Public on NewsGator Online on February 14, 2007, 12:15pm

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Doug Kaye: voice behind Gigavox

March 23rd, 2007 by hashbrown

Have you ever listened to ITConversations? I love that podcast series. The voice you hear is Doug Kaye’s. But, now he’s started a new company to help podcasters out. If you’re a podcaster you’ll want to watch these.

Interview. Demo.


Originally
from Public on NewsGator Online

by Robert Scoble


reBlogged

by Hashbrown

on Feb 15, 2007, 9:32PM

Originally by Robert Scoble from Public on NewsGator Online on February 15, 2007, 4:32pm

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

The Google WiFi Saga / Creative Commons Spectrum

March 23rd, 2007 by hashbrown

By Surj Patel

You remember the whole Google wi-fi ruckus and saga right? They were going to start in Mountain View and try it out, then they bid to do it in San Francisco and then the world was up in arms that they would take over the world with their black fiber powered wi-fi networks and we would all be tracked by our mac addresses and never ever ever to sleep safe in our beds because google will finally know everything and everyone and have adverts coming out of our collective web kazoo’s.

Relax. They learned the same as the others who tried muni wi-fi. Its hard. Much harder than you would think. Technologically, fiscally and operationally. Back here in Portland, OR the metro roll out of free wi-fi has been massively underwhelming. It is easier for me to surf on my 33.8k GPRS connection than it is trying to use the wi-fi in Portland metro land. Really i haven’t been able to connect once. Coffee shops - no problems, way better.

But like the good scientists Google collectively are, they aren’t giving up. Chris Sacca the brains behind the operation and a good friend of OReilly is coming to Etel 07 to talk about their experiences. In fact he even appears to be encouraging partisan participation in the effort.

Unlicensed Spectrum Tales From The Lamppost:

The story of why Google opted to cover Mountain View with free WiFi, what were the obstacles they needed to overcome, what the result has been, and how you too could become an ISP.

This will be great sharing of knowledge and findings that shouldn’t be missed.

His use of the words “unlicensed spectrum” has made me think. The NTIA has a great diagram of the spectrum allocation in the US. From what we can see and discover via federal websites most of it is licensed and reserved. More accurately the usable and useful bands are licensed and reserved.

If there was a useful spectrum band that could be made available on a Creative Commons or MIT license, would this be useful to the public? Or more contentiously is it better that it is regulated so that the band remains useable and useful to someone at least? Physics makes some frequencies and power ratings hazadrous for humans. We already have some useful bands allocated, 900mhz and 2.4 gig have been great steps forward, but what next?. Control and free reign will both have their merits and detraction’s. There is undoubtedly an elastic coupling here between the need for control (and safety) and the freedom that innovation requires to flourish. I’d love to hear people’s thoughts and musings on this.

Chris Sacca will be speaking at Etel 07 this year.


Originally
from Public on NewsGator Online

by Surj Patel


reBlogged

by Hashbrown

on Feb 16, 2007, 1:05AM

Originally by Surj Patel from Public on NewsGator Online on February 15, 2007, 8:05pm

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Adobe to launch online video editing with Photobucket

March 23rd, 2007 by hashbrown

By Tim O’Reilly

Back in October, in the context of Larry Lessig’s tongue-lashing of YouTube as a “fake sharing” site because it didn’t allow remixing, I pointed out:

We don’t have the same free tools for managing and editing video that we have for photos. If Adobe had a lightweight Flash authoring environment that could be deployed as easily as YouTube’s Flash sharing tool, that could bring video on the web to a whole new level…

As a result of that comment, I just got a preview of an as-yet-unnamed new product from Adobe that allows video sharing sites to provide editing tools to their users. I’ve learned that PhotoBucket (which, despite their name, is also the #3 video sharing site after YouTube and MySpace, with 35-40,000 videos uploaded per day) will be rolling out this functionality to their pro users early next week, and to all users by early March. Editing functionality is basic: you can choose selections from various clips, splice them together, add photos, captions, and a simple soundtrack. Here’s a screenshot:

Screenshot of Adobe/Photobucket editing tool

I love that in addition to “slide shows,” “order prints”, and “share album,” photobucket now will add “Remix video.” Remixability is a huge part of Web 2.0, and the ability to modify video as well as just to consume it is a huge part of bringing video into the mainstream of Web 2.0.

The functionality is pretty basic. Both Photobucket and Adobe are reaching out to the millions of users for whom even Premiere Elements or iMovie are too much. And they may well be right (though I hope to see more of the amazing features of Flash video, like layers and more complex soundtracks, added in future.) In our conversation, Alex Welch, the CEO of Photobucket, talked about the hunger that their users have for online editing tools.

In terms of business model — for Adobe, it’s licensing to folks like Photobucket, though they may also introduce their own hosted service, and they hinted at revenue sharing rather than straight licensing being the key to their business model. For Photobucket, revenue will come from advertising during the creation process. There will be no advertising introduced into the created video stream. He pointed out that users are far more engaged when creating and managing content than when just viewing it (as anyone who reads Kathy Sierra knows!) “Advertisers are looking for more than just standard IAB units,” he says. Here there will obviously be a huge opportunity for advertisers to offer branded video libraries as components for remixing. The host site sets the policies about how the video is branded and monetized.

Look for availability from Photobucket next week. And Adobe said that deals with other providers are in the works, but didn’t offer any names. If I were you, I’d get in line. Hats off to Geoff Baum and Lalit Balchandani, the creators of the product.

This is a huge step forward in the democratization of media on the web.


Originally
from Public on NewsGator Online

by Tim O'Reilly


reBlogged

by Hashbrown

on Feb 17, 2007, 6:58PM

Originally by Tim O’Reilly from Public on NewsGator Online on February 17, 2007, 1:58pm

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Interview of guy who created “that Web 2.0 video”

March 23rd, 2007 by hashbrown

When I say “that Web 2.0 video” do you immediately know what I’m talking about? I asked a few friends that recently and they all knew. This video has gotten spread around the world — YouTube shows it’s been watched more than a million times. John Battelle found it so interesting that he interviewed the guy who created it. I’m glad he did, cause I found it interesting too.


Originally
from Public on NewsGator Online

by Robert Scoble


reBlogged

by Hashbrown

on Feb 19, 2007, 7:56AM

Originally by Robert Scoble from Public on NewsGator Online on February 19, 2007, 2:56am

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

What’s Special About This Number?

March 23rd, 2007 by hashbrown

By Tim O’Reilly

Paul Saffo just sent to Farber’s IP List a pointer to “A delightful site, with great links (useful in figuring out some of the references in the text)”: What’s Special About This Number?

0 is the additive identity.
1 is the multiplicative identity.
2 is the only even prime.
3 s the number of spatial dimensions we live in.
4 is the smallest number of colors sufficient to color al planar maps.
5 is the number of Platonic solids.
6 is the smallest perfect number.
7 is the smallest number of faces of a regular polygon that is not constructible by straightedge and compass.
8 is the largest cube in the Fibonacci sequence.
9 is the maximum number of cubes that are needed to sum to any positive integer.

9984 is the maximum number of regions space can be divided into by 32 spheres.
9985 is the number of hyperbolic knots with 13 crossings.
9988 is the number of prime knots with 13 crossings.
9992 is the number of 2×2×2 Rubik cube positions that require exactly 5 moves to solve.
9995 has a square formed by inserting a block of digits inside itself.
9996 has a square formed by inserting a block of digits inside itself.
9998 is the smallest number n for which the concatenation of n, (n+1), … (n+21) is prime.
9999 is a Kaprekar number.

The author, Erich Friedman asks on the site for any other interesting facts about numbers. I thought immediately of the Hardy-Ramanujan number, 1729, which Wikipedia describes as follows:

1729 is known as the Hardy-Ramanujan number, after a famous anecdote of the British mathematician G. H. Hardy regarding a hospital visit to the Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan. In Hardy’s words:

“I remember once going to see him when he was ill at Putney. I had ridden in taxi cab number 1729 and remarked that the number seemed to me rather a dull one, and that I hoped it was not an unfavorable omen. “No,” he replied, “it is a very interesting number; it is the smallest number expressible as the sum of two cubes in two different ways.”

But of course, Erich already has that one :-) A really fun site for number geeks!


Originally
from Public on NewsGator Online

by Tim O'Reilly


reBlogged

by Hashbrown

on Feb 21, 2007, 7:57PM

Originally by Tim O’Reilly from Public on NewsGator Online on February 21, 2007, 2:57pm

Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »

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