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The Cloud, WebApps, and Desktop Apps
Libellés : browsers, cloud, history, internet, web2.0, webapps
Comparing Social Bookmarking Services
- search del.icio.us for procmail - 300 PQS bookmarkers
- search diigo.com for procmail - 5 PQS bookmarkers
- search faves.com for procmail - 0 PQS bookmarkers
- search furl.net for procmail - 1 PQS bookmarker
- search ma.gnolia.com for procmail - 17 PQS bookmarkers
- search simpy.com for procmail - 19 PQS bookmarkers
- search stumbleupon.com for procmail - 9 PQS bookmarkers
What do you think? What social bookmarking service(s) do you use and why?
Libellés : bookmarking, comparisons, del.icio.us, delicious, geeks, nerds, popularity, procmail, simpy, socialnetworking, socialsoftware, web2.0, webservices
IUseThis: Social Networking for Nerds
To learn about social networking, see:
- Social network service at Wikipedia.org
- Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship by danah m. boyd and Nicole B. Ellison
- Social Network Transitions by Fred Stutzman
Libellés : apps, iusethis, osx, socialsoftware, software, terminology, web2.0, webservices
Trying Flock, the Social Web Browser
Update: According to the Flock (web browser) page at Wikipedia.org, the Flock browser can be licensed under either the GPL license or the MPL/GPL/LGPL tri-license, so it seems that it is FLOSS.
To learn more about Flock, the company, see Flock at AboutUs.org and at CrunchBase.com.
Libellés : blogger, browsers, floss, web2.0
The Dying Thunderbird
We have concluded that we should find a new, separate organizational setting for Thunderbird; one that allows the Thunderbird community to determine its own destiny.In the 131+ comments to Mitchell's post and in lots and lots of other places, people are speculating about why MoCo decided to do this. My first thought was that this was about money because MoCo is a for-profit entity and Thunderbird does not bring in much, if any, revenue, especially compared to the millions of dollars that Firefox brings in. But, after thinking about it more and reading Mitchell's 5+ followup posts in her blog, I think that the main reason is that Thunderbird and traditional email clients in general are dying. I even posted about this myself in comp.mail.imap on July 24 and 25, before I knew anything about this letting-Thunderbird-fly plan. Here is an excerpt of my July 24 post:
. . . my guess is that [Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft] will not [support IMAP]. My prediction is that they will support annotating messages and that will be another step towards the death ofAnd here is an excerpt of my July 25 post:IMAP . . .
> What would replace [IMAP] ?My subconscious has known that traditional email was dying for awhile, as you can see in these 2006 blog posts and this 2005 blog post (where I said that the Web 2.0 messaging "world doesn't really care about IMAP or SMTP"), but it was only during the last few days that I realized that the old SMTP+POP+IMAP way of doing email is truly dead. And that explains why there exists no good SMTP+POP+IMAP client and why no one is working on producing one [*].
Maybe something proprietary but with an "open API", or maybe APP (Atom Publishing Protocol),or . . .
Libellés : alpine, app, email, imap, messaging, money, moz, prediction, thunderbird, web2.0
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