Woke up. Made coffee. Made breakfast for the kids. Touched base with the blogshere. Brainstormed a new product idea with Donna. Signed up for Last.fm. Signed up for medium, whatever that is. Signed up for some voice-to-blog thig Guy twittered about. Created a new amp/pedel cobo in Garage Band. Learned some new minor chord voicings for a song I’m working on. Jammed a bit. Worked with the girls on piano. Vacuumed a 5 bedroom house. Did some laundry. Made the girls lunch. Fixed the comments section of my blog Installed a spam deterent thingy, since I decided to remove registration to comment. Took the kids to a park.
Fairly productive day.
All that’s left is to: Go grocery shopping. Get the kids to bed. Re-record part of a podcast. Take out the trash. Take out the recycling. Run some backups. Maybe relax and work on this song that’s manopolizing my frontal lobe. Go to bed.
From Joe’s phone
Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
What did I do today?
Sunday, October 28th, 2007Movable Type to Support FOAF
Wednesday, April 23rd, 2003from Ben on RDFWeb list
In an upcoming spin off on Movable Type, the folks at Six Apart are including support and networking of Friend of a Friend files from their upcoming product TypePad. It will be exciting to see where they go with this service. If they just link between their hosted page it will be little better than other closed systems such as Ryze and the like. the power of FOAF is to reach far and wide and find tangential relationships among would be relations. How they implement the network and how preemptive they are in it’s inter and intra communications will be key to it’s success.
And besides feeling that it’s probably time to find another Blogging software (again), it is cool to see the FOAF format being implemented into a larger product.
New Breed Librarian: Interview with Eric Miller
Tuesday, April 8th, 2003Eric Miller is the World Wide Web Consortium’s Activity Lead on the Semantic Web Initiative. He was previously a Senior Research Scientist for OCLC, as well as co-founder and Associate Director of the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative.
…”The Semantic Web is all about data integration, and much richer ways of organizing things based on contextual relationships.”…
NPR: Tim Berners-Lee on the past and the future
Tuesday, April 8th, 2003My rekindled interest in the Semantic Web has inspired me to fish out resources to put together a map of where things are going, and this is one important way point.
Tim talks of many things in this interview, and in hearing his voice one can’t help but to be inspired by his intellect, his drive and his passion. I find the forward looking trends in this hour long interview.
The Atlantic: As We May Think by Vannevar Bush
Monday, April 7th, 2003This has not been a scientist’s war; it has been a war in which all have had a part. The scientists, burying their old professional competition in the demand of a common cause, have shared greatly and learned much. It has been exhilarating to work in effective partnership. Now, for many, this appears to be approaching an end. What are the scientists to do next?
Postcard design, printing and mailing service
Thursday, April 3rd, 2003I was recently referred to these folks by a photographer friend, Jules Greenberg, who says they do nice work. I just thought they might be a good resource for my next promo piece. Maybe you would too…
Postcards, Mailing Services and Lists. Modern Postcard, printing solution for direct mail marketing.
Third Open Source Content Management Conference
Wednesday, April 2nd, 2003OSCOM is an international, not-for-profit organization dedicated to Open Source Content Management.
The goal is to bring together as many great brains as possible to build a network and grow the community of open source content management.
We want to show the world that there are already great and easy-to-use open source content management solutions out there.
Sounds good to me [Joe]
OSCOM – Open Source Content Management
Who Loves Ya, Baby? (at: discover.com)
Monday, March 31st, 2003A nice intro to In-Flow and email based Social Network Analysis. scratches the history and potential usage of this emerging discipline.
CMS Sandbox
Monday, March 17th, 2003My God. A place with tons of OpenSource CMS’ installed ready for you to check-out. Dandy if you are trying to compare OpenSource solutions for your Content Management needs.
Pretty nifty, in that htey rebuild the various (41 at todays count) packages efery hour on the hour, so you always see a fresh-ish build.