* The Death of the Computeral Craftsman *
Websites for over a decade have been transitioning to the Model-View-Controller paradigm, separating data from formatting and user interaction in their code bases.
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* The Death of the Computeral Craftsman *
ALLABOUTJAZZ.COM: Blogger? Republish Your Posts at All About Jazz
Dear Fellow Blogger, All About Jazz has developed a technology to read your blog’s RSS feed and post individual entries as news items to the All About Jazz News Center (see http://news.allaboutjazz.com). We currently work with leading blogs like Rifftides, JazzWax, Independent Ear, Ken Franckling’s Jazz Notes, Spinner and St.
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ALLABOUTJAZZ.COM: Blogger? Republish Your Posts at All About Jazz
Grab Your Beta Invites To Wasabi, Netvibe’s Powerful New Stream Reader (TechCrunch)
We recently reviewed Wasabi, Netvibes’ powerful new stream reader which consolidates news feeds, blogs, Twitter and Facebook streams, email, and more in an extremely manageable interface. The site entered private beta recently and we have 200 invites for TechCrunch readers. To get an invite, visit Wasabi and enter the code “WASABITC.” As we wrote earlier, Netvibes CEO Freddy Mini demonstrated …
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Grab Your Beta Invites To Wasabi, Netvibe’s Powerful New Stream Reader (TechCrunch)
10 Twitter List Widgets You Can Grab & Embed Right Now (ReadWriteWeb)
The good folks at Twitter recently rolled out list-making capabilities for all users, finally catching up to functions that many desktop and web apps have featured for a while. In addition to allowing users to create their own curations, Twitter has also added a basic widget-maker for adding tweets from any user’s list to any given website.
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10 Twitter List Widgets You Can Grab & Embed Right Now (ReadWriteWeb)
First look: inside Mozilla’s Raindrop messaging platform (Ars Technica)
Mozilla Messaging, the organization behind the Thunderbird e-mail program, has introduced a new open source messaging aggregation platform: Raindrop. The project is at an extremely early stage of development but the code has been made available through Mozilla Labs with the hope of encouraging third-party developers to participate in the effort.
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First look: inside Mozilla’s Raindrop messaging platform (Ars Technica)