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Like i say – every one a winner… “There is more chance of Inzamam-ul-Haq running a cheeky second than there is of German telly covering the cricket, so I’m looking for a way to hear some audio coverage, via the Internet.”
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more Wii browser hacks for the onboard Opera browser
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Jeff Jaffe is doing a great job ignoring black helicopters and getting on with explaining exactly what Novell and Microsoft are doing together. This is in marked contrast to, say, the Sun Microsoft deal- where i still dont know any details
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in Pakistan right now lawyers are literally rioting about state interference. In the US not so much. I am not recommending riots but i am a lot more disturbed by this story than some, it appears. loyalty as a test of a good prosecutor? really?
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Why are reporters and editors still buying this passive tense approach- mistakes were made? That is just bad writing. MADE MISTAKES… use the active tense people, it would make reporting and accountability so much better.
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“The uncoupling of American evangelism from the administration of George Bush gathered pace yesterday when one of the largest national umbrella groups of socially conservative Christians issued a statement critical of US policy towards detainees”
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See how much more powerful the New York Times headline is – positioned as a personal admission. Removing the “were” is goodness. Making is Gonzales says is proper headline writing
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No idea if Tim could be persuaded, but do know he’s enjoying Sun. He is steering, making a difference. He works at home often and spends time with his lovely family. If Google actually wants him a personal call from Adam Bosworth would have been better
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Ideal Government picks up today’s news that YellowPark is running a Live Meeting session from the houses of parliament tonight with Conservative MP Adam Holloway.
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Perhaps IBM is not the only spoke in the wheel of quick standardisation under ISO for Microsoft technologies. I know Rob Weir is extremely partisan, and a skilled rhetorician. But he is also good at dealing with facts. This history on C++/CLI is notable
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One of SAP’s newest employees is still blogging. The CEO of Pilot Software, that is. The future of performance management in SAP environments?
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SAP anti Oracle BI attack blogger. attack dogs and attack blogs.
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Nice deep write up with screen shots and so on making some of the same points I did about why Pilot is a potentially transformative acquisition for SAP, in that Pilot takes a social first approach to corporate performance management. conversational pm?
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Ryan makes a “why can’t we all just get along” cri de coeur. Anne2.1 often rides the Open Pure Loose Coupled Web high horse herself, though. It took coaxing by Adobe to get her to even consider the company a player in what comes next…
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I really like what Alex is doing over at Entiva Group. I also really like the fact he aknowledges RedMonk as leading a trend. Thanks Alex! Go RedMonk!
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Seems like everyone is getting offered new jobs. I know Stephen is too dumb to move, but we better make sure we keep Cote happy. that guy is awesome. He provides the drumbeat at RedMonk, something me and Stephen REALLY need. We love you Cote!
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Patrick offers some free advice to Adobe about Flex adoption, then starts to hack an IDE for Flex without using Flex Builder. heh. Oh yeah- there is some contextual info in my possession re his post that will make him laugh a lot when he hears it.
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Patrick the contrarian on why Flex and AJAX both have a future. You know Apollo has an HTML browser embedded, right? Nice to see the mention of REXX – I call that out from time to time.
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How not to talk to your significant other if they are a civilian. “I need your input when you have the bandwidth.”
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I would like to set up a franchise of cool wine bars with free wifi – to take some of the starbucks bedioun lifestyle traffic. any crazy investors reading this please let me know. i still think Stormhoek should do this but hey-ho.
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a standard for attention metadata exchange. APML. i missed this. thanks for the heads up Vecosys.
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Fantastic post on how the UK startup scene is on the verge of exploding. all we need now is some less dumb VCs and we’ll see gravy as well as great ideas. Sam Sethi and Vecosys are going to clean up here. Arrington seemingly blew it. bad timing is killer
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*loving* bill’s look and feel. this is seriously clean…. adopting Cote’s supersize me text is working a treat.
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you have to love mySociety. These people are changing the nature of the conversation between government and citizens. no exaggeration. Report and centralise local issues.
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on izimi. privacy should have been built in from day one.
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The Reg really nailed this scoop. The Last.fm is going video. I can foresee many embarrassing porno scroblling moments – oh crap i forgot to turn the scrobbler off, now everyone knows i am into columbian yak milk fluid exchange
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Sun’s chief privacy officer doesn’t believe that lack of privacy is “the new rock and roll”. Interesting read, with bonus Red Shift mention. Hey Michelle- how is your intern’s “what is privacy” project coming along? and have you given a suggestion yet?
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oh man Bill just gets better and better. You can be cynical and say he didn’t write this but who cares. Congratulations to Carrie and David. The white hair CEO blogger announces family additions on blog. right on.
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don’t tell me you already knew.
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holy holy moly. oh dearie me – a new on demand model for analyst inquries? how cool could this be? the charges need to be far higher for consulting. but why not do analyst inquiries by the minute, paid for by paypal?
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I really like article from Jerry Bowles. Why? Because it makes it very clear that the people infrastructure you need is all there, waiting for the right tools to unleash some productivity and innovation
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I got pinged today to tell me about this open repository of RFPs- another approach to online RFPs. now imagine if we linked this site with the ability for end points to create microformat online RFPs? tagged and gardened.
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Enterprise IT bashing pisses me off too. the fundamentals of computer science and methods don’t change when you add angle brackets. Not that enterprises don’t often suck, but so do lots of web services. this is my theme at QCON on Friday
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open source healthcare schema mapping tool. would be good to see this hooked up with Eclipse Open Healthcare Platform
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Why Novell Microsoft interop efforts are good but patent indemnifcation protection is really not something customers want or even need. thoughts from HSBC…
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explaining the benefits to one of the world’s biggest banks of Novell Microsoft interoperability efforts. Note how pragmatic the customer is compared to the religious crap we hear from vendors.
James Governor's Monkchips
links for 2007-03-14
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John Wood says:
March 27, 2007 at 11:56 am
Hey, it’s cool that you’ve included the article about izimi in your blog. OK sorry – the privacy option’s coming out in the new version – very soon. John Wood, http://www.izimi.com