Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Kevin from Blogging Tips lists 10 mistakes new bloggers make. Here are his, mine will follow.... · Repeating what other bloggers are saying - · No Opinion / Scared to rock the boat - · Link Trains - · Spamming other blogs with comments - · Spending more time commentating that writing posts - · Promoting their blog before its ready - · Blogging about too many subjects · Erratic posting frequency - · Trying to make money instead of just concentrating on running a good blog - · Expecting to have a successful blog within 3 months - Link: Top 10 mistakes new bloggers make . This is good advice, the link trains is a new one on me, but it screams that it wouldn't work in the long run. But some other mistakes new and old bloggers make: Getting into the mindset that a post should be a certain length and never exceeding or going below that length. Not spending adequate time proofing for errors and readability. Giving up the first month Not building a community by responding to comments Not writing every day (notice I didn't say posting) writing - this blogging stuff takes practice Writing in a dry tone, no personality You need to sell yourself baby! Making the blog's subject too broad Welcome to the Food blog Not seeking out similar blogs to market to Blogging negatively about the company they work ED for. Not thinking queen of the sky blog hrough what they want from their blog before they begin it. This is common goal setting , planning out what they want long term helps to avoid mistakes in the short.

Micro Persuasion: Surely, channels are where the action is at. However, it's important to remember they are just that - and they change. Circa 1998, perhaps when many of you were 10, The Globe.com, GeoCities and Tripod were all the rage. They faded from our horizon over time. The same thing will happen to many of today's hot sites. In fact, I advise marketers not to invest too much time in creating "a Facebook strategy" as much as they don't have "an NBC strategy" or "a New York Times strategy." Instead, I encourage them to people watch, learn and then plan based on their audience and the big picture. The most interesting action is in sociology. In other words, how does technology change our culture and how we interact with media, the web and each other - and to what end? free pop3 e mail his was a major realization for me a few months back and you have probably noticed it in my writing, which is less channel focused. These days, I am far more interested in what people do with technology rather than on what the latest new "shiny object" Very true. People tend to think the technology will do it for them ( see John Howard on You tube ) instead of realising that its about using the technology to do something different.

As noted in the Wizard of Odds , the Univ of Toledo football team now faces a revamp of it's structure. One of the issues was control and dispensing of medications. The Toledo Blade has this to say: Medication control The university president ordered that the “inventory, storage, and dispensing of medications” in the department be placed “immediately” under the direction of the university’s director of pharmacy. Dr. Jacobs also urged Mr. O’Brien to replace current team physician Dr. Roger Kruse with a “full-time university employee physician in an effort to improve the conformity to applicable laws concerning the control of medications.” Dr. Jacobs told The Blade yesterday that he didn’t think there were any medications distributed to the wrong persons, and there were no athletes harmed. He bulk email advertising aid because the UT investigation found that rules or laws were violated, he was considering whether to refer the matter to prosecutors. “One of the things that comes out of [UT’s merger with the Medical University of Ohio last year] is that we have a pharmacy that knows [medication control laws] and practices those practices,” Dr. Jacobs said. “This allows me to put our pharmacist in charge of those issues.”

Lawrence resident now state's poet laureate "As a child growing up in Emporia, Denise Low dreamed of becoming a painter, but admits she never had the opportunity — or the talent. Instead, she learned to create images with create pdf files ords. “I constantly think about writing. It’s always in the back of my mind,” the interim dean of humanities and art at Haskell Indian Nations University said. And Low uses what’s in front of her to create poetry with a regional flavor and a deep respect for nature. “Her use of language is extraordinary and vivid,” said Llewellyn Crain, executive director of the Kansas Arts Commission, the group that will work with Low as Kansas’ second official poet laureate. “She’s a Kansas native. She uses the land and history to convey very profound thoughts about what it means to be alive now” in 21st century Kansas, Crain said. On Sunday, Low began a two-year appointment as poet laureate. The title comes with a $5,000 annual honorarium to help cover travel costs and other expenses. “I think that people are hungry to understand and feel good about their place in the world,” she said. Low, of Lawrence, hopes to feed that hunger with large helpings of homemade poems. Well-versed on other poets from the Sunflower State — both living and deceased — Low plans to put the spotlight on them during her term. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius created the poet laureate’s position in 2004, charging that person with developing a greater appreciation for writing and poetry among all Kansans.

David Weinberger commented on my recent post on sentiment analysis. He adds: [H]ow about this example, drawn from a review of the Su Hong restaurant: "When we moved from the area, my wife's most frequent complaint was that no one made orange peel beef like Su Hong." As Matthew points out, it's a positive review in the form of a complaint. I love the idea of capturing the modality (complaint) of the sentiment (which is positive). In fact, this example is even more significant as there are multiple topics. It is negative about the implied new FASTWEB LOGIN ocale and positive about Su Hong. I suspect that this is in itself a form of comparative (X is better than Y). Comparatives tend to challenge current formulations of sentiment analysis as they indicate that opinions can be (perhaps should all be considered) relative, not absolute.

As noted in the Wizard of Odds , the Univ of Toledo football team now faces a revamp of it's structure. One of the issues was control and dispensing of medications. The Toledo Blade has this to say: Medication control The university president ordered that the “inventory, storage, and dispensing of medications” in the department be placed “immediately” under the direction of the university’s director of pharmacy. Dr. Jacobs also urged Mr. O’Brien to replace current team physician Dr. Roger Kruse with a “full-time university parental involvement mployee physician in an effort to improve the conformity to applicable laws concerning the control of medications.” Dr. Jacobs told The Blade yesterday that he didn’t think there were any medications distributed to the wrong persons, and there were no athletes harmed. He said because the UT investigation found that rules or laws were violated, he was considering whether to refer the matter to prosecutors. “One of the things that comes out of [UT’s merger with the Medical University of Ohio last year] is that we have a pharmacy that knows [medication control laws] and practices those practices,” Dr. Jacobs said. “This allows me to put our pharmacist in charge of those issues.”

Kevin from Blogging Tips lists 10 mistakes new bloggers make. Here are his, mine will follow.... · Repeating what other bloggers are saying - · No Opinion / Scared to rock the boat - · Link Trains - · Spamming other blogs with comments - · Spending more time commentating that writing posts - · Promoting their blog before its ready - · Blogging about too many subjects · Erratic posting frequency - · Trying to make money instead of just concentrating whole house surge protector n running a good blog - · Expecting to have a successful blog within 3 months - Link: Top 10 mistakes new bloggers make . This is good advice, the link trains is a new one on me, but it screams that it wouldn't work in the long run. But some other mistakes new and old bloggers make: Getting into the mindset that a post should be a certain length and never exceeding or going below that length. Not spending adequate time proofing for errors and readability. Giving up the first month Not building a community by responding to comments Not writing every day (notice I didn't say posting) writing - this blogging stuff takes practice Writing in a dry tone, no personality You need to sell yourself baby! Making the blog's subject too broad Welcome to the Food blog Not seeking out similar blogs to market to Blogging negatively about the company they work ED for. Not thinking through what they want from their blog before they begin it. This is common goal setting , planning out what they want long term helps to avoid mistakes in the short.

According to CNN, ex-President George Bush Sr. was treated for "dehydration" over the weekend. Yeah, right. I mean, really, come on, we're an educated, savvy, celebrity obsessed citizenry. Do publicists really believe that we haven't learned from the hijinks of Lindsay and queen size bed sheets ritney and Paris what a short stint in the hospital for dehydration REALLY means? I wouldn't have expected this type of behavior out of Bush Sr. He is, what, like 10 million years old? BUT, then again I didn't expect him to grab Terri Hatchers ass either. Seems to me, someone's having a mid an end of their life crisis.

Kevin from Blogging Tips lists 10 mistakes new bloggers make. Here are his, mine will follow.... · Repeating what other bloggers are saying - · No Opinion / Scared to rock the boat - · Link Trains - · Spamming other blogs with comments - · Spending more time commentating that writing posts - · Promoting their blog before its ready - · Blogging about too many subjects · Erratic posting frequency - · Trying to make money instead of just concentrating on running a good blog - · Expecting to have a successful blog within 3 months - Link: Top 10 mistakes new bloggers make . This is good advice, the link trains is a new one on me, but it screams that it wouldn't work in the long run. But some other mistakes new and old bloggers make: Getting into the mindset that a post should be a certain length and never exceeding or going below that length. Not spending adequate thank you note wording ime proofing for errors and readability. Giving up the first month Not building a community by responding to comments Not writing every day (notice I didn't say posting) writing - this blogging stuff takes practice Writing in a dry tone, no personality You need to sell yourself baby! Making the blog's subject too broad Welcome to the Food blog Not seeking out similar blogs to market to Blogging negatively about the company they work ED for. Not thinking through what they want from their blog before they begin it. This is common goal setting , planning out what they want long term helps to avoid mistakes in the short.

Click Here

Kevin from Blogging Tips lists 10 mistakes new bloggers make. Here are his, mine will follow.... · Repeating what other bloggers are saying - · No Opinion / Scared to rock the boat - · Link Trains - · Spamming other blogs with comments - · Spending more time commentating that writing posts - · Promoting their blog before its ready - · Blogging about too many subjects · Erratic posting frequency - · Trying to make money instead of just concentrating on running a good blog - · Expecting to have a successful blog within 3 months - Link: washington mutual mortgage rate op 10 mistakes new bloggers make . This is good advice, the link trains is a new one on me, but it screams that it wouldn't work in the long run. But some other mistakes new and old bloggers make: Getting into the mindset that a post should be a certain length and never exceeding or going below that length. Not spending adequate time proofing for errors and readability. Giving up the first month Not building a community by responding to comments Not writing every day (notice I didn't say posting) writing - this blogging stuff takes practice Writing in a dry tone, no personality You need to sell yourself baby! Making the blog's subject too broad Welcome to the Food blog Not seeking out similar blogs to market to Blogging negatively about the company they work ED for. Not thinking through what they want from their blog before they begin it. This is common goal setting , planning out what they want long term helps to avoid mistakes in the short.

Click Here

According to CNN, ex-President George Bush Sr. was treated for "dehydration" over the weekend. Yeah, right. I mean, really, come on, we're an educated, savvy, celebrity obsessed citizenry. Do publicists really believe that we haven't learned from the hijinks of Lindsay and Britney free pop3 email nd Paris what a short stint in the hospital for dehydration REALLY means? I wouldn't have expected this type of behavior out of Bush Sr. He is, what, like 10 million years old? BUT, then again I didn't expect him to grab Terri Hatchers ass either. Seems to me, someone's having a mid an end of their life crisis.

According to CNN, ex-President George Bush Sr. was treated for "dehydration" over bulk email advertising he weekend. Yeah, right. I mean, really, come on, we're an educated, savvy, celebrity obsessed citizenry. Do publicists really believe that we haven't learned from the hijinks of Lindsay and Britney and Paris what a short stint in the hospital for dehydration REALLY means? I wouldn't have expected this type of behavior out of Bush Sr. He is, what, like 10 million years old? BUT, then again I didn't expect him to grab Terri Hatchers ass either. Seems to me, someone's having a mid an end of their life crisis.

Micro Persuasion: Surely, channels are where the action is at. However, it's important to remember they are just that - and they change. Circa 1998, perhaps when many of you were 10, The Globe.com, GeoCities and Tripod were all the rage. They faded from our horizon over time. The same thing will happen to many of today's hot sites. In fact, I advise marketers not to invest too much time in creating "a Facebook create pdf files trategy" as much as they don't have "an NBC strategy" or "a New York Times strategy." Instead, I encourage them to people watch, learn and then plan based on their audience and the big picture. The most interesting action is in sociology. In other words, how does technology change our culture and how we interact with media, the web and each other - and to what end? This was a major realization for me a few months back and you have probably noticed it in my writing, which is less channel focused. These days, I am far more interested in what people do with technology rather than on what the latest new "shiny object" Very true. People tend to think the technology will do it for them ( see John Howard on You tube ) instead of realising that its about using the technology to do something different.

David Weinberger commented on my recent post on sentiment analysis. He adds: [H]ow about this example, drawn from a review of the Su Hong restaurant: "When parental involvement e moved from the area, my wife's most frequent complaint was that no one made orange peel beef like Su Hong." As Matthew points out, it's a positive review in the form of a complaint. I love the idea of capturing the modality (complaint) of the sentiment (which is positive). In fact, this example is even more significant as there are multiple topics. It is negative about the implied new locale and positive about Su Hong. I suspect that this is in itself a form of comparative (X is better than Y). Comparatives tend to challenge current formulations of sentiment analysis as they indicate that opinions can be (perhaps should all be considered) relative, not absolute.

Click Here

Lawrence resident now state's poet laureate "As a child growing up in Emporia, Denise Low dreamed of becoming a painter, but admits she never had the opportunity — or the talent. Instead, she learned to create images with words. “I constantly think about writing. It’s always in the back of my mind,” the interim dean of humanities and art at Haskell Indian Nations University said. And Low uses what’s in front of her to create poetry with a regional flavor and a deep respect for nature. “Her use of language is extraordinary and vivid,” said Llewellyn Crain, executive director of the Kansas queen size bed sheets rts Commission, the group that will work with Low as Kansas’ second official poet laureate. “She’s a Kansas native. She uses the land and history to convey very profound thoughts about what it means to be alive now” in 21st century Kansas, Crain said. On Sunday, Low began a two-year appointment as poet laureate. The title comes with a $5,000 annual honorarium to help cover travel costs and other expenses. “I think that people are hungry to understand and feel good about their place in the world,” she said. Low, of Lawrence, hopes to feed that hunger with large helpings of homemade poems. Well-versed on other poets from the Sunflower State — both living and deceased — Low plans to put the spotlight on them during her term. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius created the poet laureate’s position in 2004, charging that person with developing a greater appreciation for writing and poetry among all Kansans.

According to CNN, ex-President George Bush Sr. was treated for "dehydration" over the weekend. Yeah, right. I mean, really, come on, we're an educated, savvy, celebrity obsessed citizenry. Do publicists really believe that we haven't learned from the hijinks of Lindsay and Britney and Paris what a short thank you note wording tint in the hospital for dehydration REALLY means? I wouldn't have expected this type of behavior out of Bush Sr. He is, what, like 10 million years old? BUT, then again I didn't expect him to grab Terri Hatchers ass either. Seems to me, someone's having a mid an end of their life crisis.

Micro Persuasion: Surely, channels are where the action is at. However, it's important to remember they are just that - and they change. Circa 1998, perhaps when many of you were 10, The Globe.com, GeoCities and Tripod were all the rage. They faded from our horizon over time. The same thing will happen to many of today's hot sites. In fact, I advise marketers not to invest too much time in creating "a Facebook strategy" as much as they don't have "an NBC strategy" or "a New York Times strategy." Instead, I encourage them to people watch, learn and then plan based on their audience and the big picture. The most interesting action is in sociology. In other words, how does technology change our culture and how we interact with media, the web and each other - and to what end? This was a major realization for macwarez e a few months back and you have probably noticed it in my writing, which is less channel focused. These days, I am far more interested in what people do with technology rather than on what the latest new "shiny object" Very true. People tend to think the technology will do it for them ( see John Howard on You tube ) instead of realising that its about using the technology to do something different.

David Weinberger commented on my recent post on sentiment analysis. He adds: [H]ow about this example, drawn from a review of the Su Hong restaurant: "When we moved from the area, my wife's most frequent complaint was that no one made orange peel beef like Su Hong." As Matthew points out, it's a positive review in the form of a complaint. I love the idea of capturing the modality (complaint) of the sentiment (which is positive). In fact, this example is even more significant as there are multiple topics. It is negative about the implied new locale and positive washington mutual mortgage rate bout Su Hong. I suspect that this is in itself a form of comparative (X is better than Y). Comparatives tend to challenge current formulations of sentiment analysis as they indicate that opinions can be (perhaps should all be considered) relative, not absolute.

According to CNN, ex-President George Bush Sr. was treated for "dehydration" over the weekend. Yeah, right. I mean, really, come on, we're an educated, savvy, celebrity obsessed citizenry. Do publicists really believe that we haven't learned from the hijinks of Lindsay and Britney and Paris what a short stint in the hospital for dehydration REALLY means? I wouldn't have expected this type of behavior out of Bush Sr. He is, what, like 10 million sky blog ears old? BUT, then again I didn't expect him to grab Terri Hatchers ass either. Seems to me, someone's having a mid an end of their life crisis.

Lawrence resident now state's poet laureate "As a child growing up in Emporia, Denise Low dreamed of becoming a painter, but admits she never had the opportunity — or the talent. Instead, she learned to create images with words. “I constantly think about writing. It’s always in the back of my mind,” the interim dean of humanities free pop3 email nd art at Haskell Indian Nations University said. And Low uses what’s in front of her to create poetry with a regional flavor and a deep respect for nature. “Her use of language is extraordinary and vivid,” said Llewellyn Crain, executive director of the Kansas Arts Commission, the group that will work with Low as Kansas’ second official poet laureate. “She’s a Kansas native. She uses the land and history to convey very profound thoughts about what it means to be alive now” in 21st century Kansas, Crain said. On Sunday, Low began a two-year appointment as poet laureate. The title comes with a $5,000 annual honorarium to help cover travel costs and other expenses. “I think that people are hungry to understand and feel good about their place in the world,” she said. Low, of Lawrence, hopes to feed that hunger with large helpings of homemade poems. Well-versed on other poets from the Sunflower State — both living and deceased — Low plans to put the spotlight on them during her term. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius created the poet laureate’s position in 2004, charging that person with developing a greater appreciation for writing and poetry among all Kansans.

Micro Persuasion: Surely, channels are where the action is at. However, it's important to remember they are just that - and they change. Circa 1998, perhaps when many of you were 10, The Globe.com, GeoCities and Tripod were all the rage. They faded from our horizon over time. The same thing will happen to many of today's hot sites. In fact, I advise marketers not to invest too much time in creating "a Facebook strategy" as much as they don't have "an NBC strategy" or "a New York Times strategy." Instead, I encourage them to people watch, learn and then plan based on their audience and the big picture. The most interesting action is in sociology. In other words, how does technology change our culture and how we interact with media, the web and each other - and to what end? This was a major realization for me a few months back and you have probably noticed it in my writing, which is less channel focused. These days, I am far more interested in what people do with technology rather than on what the latest new "shiny direct marketing advertising bject" Very true. People tend to think the technology will do it for them ( see John Howard on You tube ) instead of realising that its about using the technology to do something different.

Micro Persuasion: Surely, channels are where the action is at. However, it's important to remember they are just that - and they change. Circa 1998, perhaps when many of you were 10, The Globe.com, GeoCities and Tripod were all the rage. They faded from our horizon over time. The same thing will happen to many of today's hot sites. In fact, I advise marketers not to invest too much time in creating "a Facebook strategy" as much as they don't have "an NBC strategy" or "a New York Times strategy." Instead, I encourage them to people watch, learn and then plan based on their audience and the big picture. The most interesting action is in sociology. In other words, how does technology change our culture and how we interact with media, the web and each other - and to what end? This was a major realization for me a few months back and you have probably noticed it in my writing, which is less channel focused. These days, I am far more interested in what people do with technology rather than how to create pdf files n what the latest new "shiny object" Very true. People tend to think the technology will do it for them ( see John Howard on You tube ) instead of realising that its about using the technology to do something different.

Kevin from Blogging Tips lists 10 mistakes new bloggers make. Here are his, mine will follow.... · Repeating what other bloggers are saying - · No Opinion / Scared to rock the boat - · Link Trains - · Spamming other blogs with comments - · Spending more time commentating that writing posts - · Promoting their blog before its ready - · Blogging about too many subjects · Erratic posting frequency - · Trying to make money instead of just concentrating on running a good blog - · Expecting to have a successful blog within 3 months - Link: Top 10 mistakes new bloggers make . This is good advice, the link trains is a new one on me, but it screams that it wouldn't work in the long run. But some other mistakes new and old bloggers make: Getting into the mindset that a post should be a certain length and never exceeding or going below that length. Not spending adequate time proofing for errors and readability. Giving up the first month Not building a community by responding to comments Not writing every day (notice I didn't say posting) writing - this blogging stuff takes practice Writing in a dry tone, no personality You need to sell yourself baby! Making the blog's subject too broad Welcome to the Food blog Not seeking out similar blogs to market to Blogging negatively about the company they work ED for. Not thinking e mail login hrough what they want from their blog before they begin it. This is common goal setting , planning out what they want long term helps to avoid mistakes in the short.

Micro Persuasion: Surely, channels are where the action is at. However, it's important to remember they are just that - and they change. Circa 1998, perhaps when many of you were 10, The Globe.com, GeoCities and Tripod were all the rage. They faded from our horizon over time. The same thing will happen to many of today's hot sites. In fact, I advise marketers not to invest too much time in creating "a Facebook strategy" as much as they don't have "an NBC strategy" or "a New York Times strategy." parental involvement nstead, I encourage them to people watch, learn and then plan based on their audience and the big picture. The most interesting action is in sociology. In other words, how does technology change our culture and how we interact with media, the web and each other - and to what end? This was a major realization for me a few months back and you have probably noticed it in my writing, which is less channel focused. These days, I am far more interested in what people do with technology rather than on what the latest new "shiny object" Very true. People tend to think the technology will do it for them ( see John Howard on You tube ) instead of realising that its about using the technology to do something different.

Kevin from Blogging Tips lists 10 mistakes new bloggers make. Here are his, mine will follow.... · Repeating what other bloggers are saying - · No Opinion / Scared to rock the boat - · Link Trains - · Spamming whole house surge protector ther blogs with comments - · Spending more time commentating that writing posts - · Promoting their blog before its ready - · Blogging about too many subjects · Erratic posting frequency - · Trying to make money instead of just concentrating on running a good blog - · Expecting to have a successful blog within 3 months - Link: Top 10 mistakes new bloggers make . This is good advice, the link trains is a new one on me, but it screams that it wouldn't work in the long run. But some other mistakes new and old bloggers make: Getting into the mindset that a post should be a certain length and never exceeding or going below that length. Not spending adequate time proofing for errors and readability. Giving up the first month Not building a community by responding to comments Not writing every day (notice I didn't say posting) writing - this blogging stuff takes practice Writing in a dry tone, no personality You need to sell yourself baby! Making the blog's subject too broad Welcome to the Food blog Not seeking out similar blogs to market to Blogging negatively about the company they work ED for. Not thinking through what they want from their blog before they begin it. This is common goal setting , planning out what they want long term helps to avoid mistakes in the short.

As noted in the Wizard of Odds , the Univ of Toledo football team now faces a revamp of it's structure. One of the issues was control and dispensing of medications. The Toledo Blade has this to say: Medication control The university president ordered that the “inventory, storage, and dispensing of medications” in the department be placed “immediately” under the direction of the university’s director of pharmacy. Dr. Jacobs also urged Mr. O’Brien to replace current team physician Dr. Roger Kruse with a “full-time university employee physician in an effort to improve the conformity to applicable laws concerning the control of medications.” Dr. Jacobs told The Blade yesterday that he didn’t think there were any medications distributed to the wrong persons, and there were no athletes queen size bed sheets armed. He said because the UT investigation found that rules or laws were violated, he was considering whether to refer the matter to prosecutors. “One of the things that comes out of [UT’s merger with the Medical University of Ohio last year] is that we have a pharmacy that knows [medication control laws] and practices those practices,” Dr. Jacobs said. “This allows me to put our pharmacist in charge of those issues.”

Lawrence resident now state's poet laureate "As a child growing up in Emporia, Denise Low dreamed of becoming a painter, but admits she never had the opportunity — or the talent. Instead, she learned to create images with words. “I constantly think about writing. It’s always in the back of my mind,” the interim dean of humanities and art at Haskell Indian Nations University said. And Low uses what’s in front of her to create poetry with a regional flavor and a deep respect for nature. “Her use of language is extraordinary thank you note wording nd vivid,” said Llewellyn Crain, executive director of the Kansas Arts Commission, the group that will work with Low as Kansas’ second official poet laureate. “She’s a Kansas native. She uses the land and history to convey very profound thoughts about what it means to be alive now” in 21st century Kansas, Crain said. On Sunday, Low began a two-year appointment as poet laureate. The title comes with a $5,000 annual honorarium to help cover travel costs and other expenses. “I think that people are hungry to understand and feel good about their place in the world,” she said. Low, of Lawrence, hopes to feed that hunger with large helpings of homemade poems. Well-versed on other poets from the Sunflower State — both living and deceased — Low plans to put the spotlight on them during her term. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius created the poet laureate’s position in 2004, charging that person with developing a greater appreciation for writing and poetry among all Kansans.

Micro Persuasion: Surely, channels are where the action is at. However, it's important to remember they are just that - and they change. Circa 1998, perhaps when many of you were mac warez 0, The Globe.com, GeoCities and Tripod were all the rage. They faded from our horizon over time. The same thing will happen to many of today's hot sites. In fact, I advise marketers not to invest too much time in creating "a Facebook strategy" as much as they don't have "an NBC strategy" or "a New York Times strategy." Instead, I encourage them to people watch, learn and then plan based on their audience and the big picture. The most interesting action is in sociology. In other words, how does technology change our culture and how we interact with media, the web and each other - and to what end? This was a major realization for me a few months back and you have probably noticed it in my writing, which is less channel focused. These days, I am far more interested in what people do with technology rather than on what the latest new "shiny object" Very true. People tend to think the technology will do it for them ( see John Howard on You tube ) instead of realising that its about using the technology to do something different.

Kevin from Blogging Tips lists 10 mistakes new bloggers make. Here are his, mine will follow.... · Repeating what other bloggers are saying - · No Opinion / Scared to rock the boat - · Link Trains - · Spamming other blogs with comments - · Spending more time commentating that writing posts - · Promoting their blog before its ready - · Blogging about too many subjects · Erratic posting frequency - · Trying to make money instead of just concentrating on running a good blog - · Expecting to have a successful blog within 3 months - Link: Top 10 mistakes new bloggers make . This is good advice, the link trains is a new one on me, but it screams that it wouldn't work in the long run. But some other mistakes new and old bloggers make: Getting into the mindset that a post should be a certain length and never exceeding or going below that length. Not spending adequate time proofing for errors and readability. Giving up the first month Not building a community mortgage home loans y responding to comments Not writing every day (notice I didn't say posting) writing - this blogging stuff takes practice Writing in a dry tone, no personality You need to sell yourself baby! Making the blog's subject too broad Welcome to the Food blog Not seeking out similar blogs to market to Blogging negatively about the company they work ED for. Not thinking through what they want from their blog before they begin it. This is common goal setting , planning out what they want long term helps to avoid mistakes in the short.

Kevin from Blogging Tips lists 10 mistakes new bloggers make. Here are his, mine will follow.... · Repeating what other bloggers are saying - · No Opinion / Scared to rock the boat - · Link Trains - · Spamming other blogs with comments - · Spending more time commentating that writing posts - · Promoting their blog before its ready - · Blogging about too many subjects · Erratic posting frequency - · Trying to make money instead of just concentrating on running a good blog - · Expecting to have a successful blog within 3 months - Link: Top 10 mistakes new bloggers make . This is good advice, the link trains is a new one on me, but it screams that it wouldn't work in the long run. But some other mistakes new and old bloggers make: Getting into the mindset that a post should be a certain sky blog ength and never exceeding or going below that length. Not spending adequate time proofing for errors and readability. Giving up the first month Not building a community by responding to comments Not writing every day (notice I didn't say posting) writing - this blogging stuff takes practice Writing in a dry tone, no personality You need to sell yourself baby! Making the blog's subject too broad Welcome to the Food blog Not seeking out similar blogs to market to Blogging negatively about the company they work ED for. Not thinking through what they want from their blog before they begin it. This is common goal setting , planning out what they want long term helps to avoid mistakes in the short.

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Kevin from Blogging Tips lists 10 mistakes new bloggers make. Here are his, mine will follow.... · Repeating what other bloggers are saying - · No Opinion / Scared to rock the boat - · Link Trains - · Spamming other blogs with comments - · Spending more time commentating that writing posts - · Promoting their blog before its ready - · Blogging about too many subjects · Erratic posting frequency - · Trying to make money instead of just concentrating on running a good blog - · Expecting to have a successful blog within 3 months - Link: Top 10 mistakes new bloggers make . This is good advice, the link trains is a new one on me, but it screams that it wouldn't work in the long run. But some other mistakes new and old bloggers make: Getting into the mindset that a post should be a certain length and never exceeding or going below that length. Not spending adequate time proofing for errors and readability. Giving up the first month Not building a community by responding to comments Not writing every day bulk email advertising notice I didn't say posting) writing - this blogging stuff takes practice Writing in a dry tone, no personality You need to sell yourself baby! Making the blog's subject too broad Welcome to the Food blog Not seeking out similar blogs to market to Blogging negatively about the company they work ED for. Not thinking through what they want from their blog before they begin it. This is common goal setting , planning out what they want long term helps to avoid mistakes in the short.

According to CNN, ex-President George Bush Sr. was treated for "dehydration" over the weekend. Yeah, right. I mean, really, come on, we're an educated, savvy, celebrity obsessed citizenry. Do publicists really believe that we haven't learned from the hijinks of creating pdf files indsay and Britney and Paris what a short stint in the hospital for dehydration REALLY means? I wouldn't have expected this type of behavior out of Bush Sr. He is, what, like 10 million years old? BUT, then again I didn't expect him to grab Terri Hatchers ass either. Seems to me, someone's having a mid an end of their life crisis.

Micro Persuasion: Surely, channels are where the action is at. However, it's important to remember they are just that - and they change. Circa 1998, perhaps when many of you were 10, The Globe.com, GeoCities and Tripod were all the rage. They faded from our horizon over time. The same thing will happen to many of today's hot sites. In fact, I advise marketers not to invest too much time in creating "a Facebook strategy" as much as they don't have "an NBC strategy" or "a New York Times strategy." Instead, I encourage them to people watch, learn and then plan based on their audience and the big picture. FASTWEB LOGIN he most interesting action is in sociology. In other words, how does technology change our culture and how we interact with media, the web and each other - and to what end? This was a major realization for me a few months back and you have probably noticed it in my writing, which is less channel focused. These days, I am far more interested in what people do with technology rather than on what the latest new "shiny object" Very true. People tend to think the technology will do it for them ( see John Howard on You tube ) instead of realising that its about using the technology to do something different.

Kevin from Blogging Tips lists 10 mistakes new bloggers make. Here are his, mine will follow.... · Repeating what other bloggers are saying - · No Opinion / Scared to rock the boat - · Link Trains - · Spamming other blogs with comments - · Spending more time commentating that writing posts - · Promoting their blog before its ready - · Blogging about too many subjects · Erratic posting parental involvement requency - · Trying to make money instead of just concentrating on running a good blog - · Expecting to have a successful blog within 3 months - Link: Top 10 mistakes new bloggers make . This is good advice, the link trains is a new one on me, but it screams that it wouldn't work in the long run. But some other mistakes new and old bloggers make: Getting into the mindset that a post should be a certain length and never exceeding or going below that length. Not spending adequate time proofing for errors and readability. Giving up the first month Not building a community by responding to comments Not writing every day (notice I didn't say posting) writing - this blogging stuff takes practice Writing in a dry tone, no personality You need to sell yourself baby! Making the blog's subject too broad Welcome to the Food blog Not seeking out similar blogs to market to Blogging negatively about the company they work ED for. Not thinking through what they want from their blog before they begin it. This is common goal setting , planning out what they want long term helps to avoid mistakes in the short.

Micro Persuasion: Surely, channels are where the action is at. However, it's important to remember they are power strip surge ust that - and they change. Circa 1998, perhaps when many of you were 10, The Globe.com, GeoCities and Tripod were all the rage. They faded from our horizon over time. The same thing will happen to many of today's hot sites. In fact, I advise marketers not to invest too much time in creating "a Facebook strategy" as much as they don't have "an NBC strategy" or "a New York Times strategy." Instead, I encourage them to people watch, learn and then plan based on their audience and the big picture. The most interesting action is in sociology. In other words, how does technology change our culture and how we interact with media, the web and each other - and to what end? This was a major realization for me a few months back and you have probably noticed it in my writing, which is less channel focused. These days, I am far more interested in what people do with technology rather than on what the latest new "shiny object" Very true. People tend to think the technology will do it for them ( see John Howard on You tube ) instead of realising that its about using the technology to do something different.

Kevin from Blogging Tips lists 10 mistakes new bloggers make. Here are his, mine will follow.... · Repeating what other queen size bed sheets loggers are saying - · No Opinion / Scared to rock the boat - · Link Trains - · Spamming other blogs with comments - · Spending more time commentating that writing posts - · Promoting their blog before its ready - · Blogging about too many subjects · Erratic posting frequency - · Trying to make money instead of just concentrating on running a good blog - · Expecting to have a successful blog within 3 months - Link: Top 10 mistakes new bloggers make . This is good advice, the link trains is a new one on me, but it screams that it wouldn't work in the long run. But some other mistakes new and old bloggers make: Getting into the mindset that a post should be a certain length and never exceeding or going below that length. Not spending adequate time proofing for errors and readability. Giving up the first month Not building a community by responding to comments Not writing every day (notice I didn't say posting) writing - this blogging stuff takes practice Writing in a dry tone, no personality You need to sell yourself baby! Making the blog's subject too broad Welcome to the Food blog Not seeking out similar blogs to market to Blogging negatively about the company they work ED for. Not thinking through what they want from their blog before they begin it. This is common goal setting , planning out what they want long term helps to avoid mistakes in the short.

David Weinberger commented thank you note wording n my recent post on sentiment analysis. He adds: [H]ow about this example, drawn from a review of the Su Hong restaurant: "When we moved from the area, my wife's most frequent complaint was that no one made orange peel beef like Su Hong." As Matthew points out, it's a positive review in the form of a complaint. I love the idea of capturing the modality (complaint) of the sentiment (which is positive). In fact, this example is even more significant as there are multiple topics. It is negative about the implied new locale and positive about Su Hong. I suspect that this is in itself a form of comparative (X is better than Y). Comparatives tend to challenge current formulations of sentiment analysis as they indicate that opinions can be (perhaps should all be considered) relative, not absolute.

Kevin from Blogging Tips lists 10 mistakes new bloggers make. Here are his, mine will follow.... · Repeating what other bloggers are saying - · No Opinion / Scared to rock the boat - · Link Trains - · Spamming other blogs with mac warez omments - · Spending more time commentating that writing posts - · Promoting their blog before its ready - · Blogging about too many subjects · Erratic posting frequency - · Trying to make money instead of just concentrating on running a good blog - · Expecting to have a successful blog within 3 months - Link: Top 10 mistakes new bloggers make . This is good advice, the link trains is a new one on me, but it screams that it wouldn't work in the long run. But some other mistakes new and old bloggers make: Getting into the mindset that a post should be a certain length and never exceeding or going below that length. Not spending adequate time proofing for errors and readability. Giving up the first month Not building a community by responding to comments Not writing every day (notice I didn't say posting) writing - this blogging stuff takes practice Writing in a dry tone, no personality You need to sell yourself baby! Making the blog's subject too broad Welcome to the Food blog Not seeking out similar blogs to market to Blogging negatively about the company they work ED for. Not thinking through what they want from their blog before they begin it. This is common goal setting , planning out what they want long term helps to avoid mistakes in the short.

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As noted in the Wizard of Odds , the Univ of Toledo football team now faces a revamp sky blog f it's structure. One of the issues was control and dispensing of medications. The Toledo Blade has this to say: Medication control The university president ordered that the “inventory, storage, and dispensing of medications” in the department be placed “immediately” under the direction of the university’s director of pharmacy. Dr. Jacobs also urged Mr. O’Brien to replace current team physician Dr. Roger Kruse with a “full-time university employee physician in an effort to improve the conformity to applicable laws concerning the control of medications.” Dr. Jacobs told The Blade yesterday that he didn’t think there were any medications distributed to the wrong persons, and there were no athletes harmed. He said because the UT investigation found that rules or laws were violated, he was considering whether to refer the matter to prosecutors. “One of the things that comes out of [UT’s merger with the Medical University of Ohio last year] is that we have a pharmacy that knows [medication control laws] and practices those practices,” Dr. Jacobs said. “This allows me to put our pharmacist in charge of those issues.”

Micro Persuasion: Surely, channels are where the action is at. However, it's important to remember they are just that - and they change. Circa 1998, perhaps when many of you were 10, The Globe.com, GeoCities and Tripod were all the rage. They faded from our horizon over time. The same thing will happen to many of today's hot sites. In fact, I advise marketers not to invest too much time in creating "a Facebook strategy" as much as they don't have "an NBC strategy" or "a New York Times strategy." Instead, I encourage them to people watch, learn and then plan based on their audience and the big picture. The most interesting action is in sociology. In other words, how does technology change our culture and how we interact with media, the web and each other - and to what end? This was a major realization for me a few months back and you have probably noticed it in my writing, which is less channel focused. These days, I am far more interested in what people do with technology rather than on what the latest new "shiny object" Very true. People tend to think the technology will free pop3 email o it for them ( see John Howard on You tube ) instead of realising that its about using the technology to do something different.

David Weinberger commented on my recent post on sentiment analysis. He adds: [H]ow about this example, drawn from a review of the Su Hong restaurant: "When we moved from the area, my wife's most frequent complaint was that no one made orange peel beef like Su Hong." As Matthew points out, it's a positive review in the form of a complaint. I love the idea of capturing the modality (complaint) of the sentiment (which is positive). In fact, this example is even more significant as there are multiple topics. It is negative about the implied new locale and positive about bulk email advertising u Hong. I suspect that this is in itself a form of comparative (X is better than Y). Comparatives tend to challenge current formulations of sentiment analysis as they indicate that opinions can be (perhaps should all be considered) relative, not absolute.

As noted in the Wizard of Odds , the Univ of Toledo football team now faces a revamp of it's structure. One of the issues was control and dispensing of medications. The Toledo Blade has this to say: Medication control The university president ordered that the “inventory, storage, and dispensing of medications” in the department be placed “immediately” under the direction of the university’s director of pharmacy. Dr. Jacobs also urged Mr. O’Brien to replace current team physician Dr. Roger Kruse with a “full-time university employee physician in an effort to improve the conformity to applicable laws concerning the control of medications.” Dr. Jacobs told The Blade yesterday that he didn’t think there were any medications distributed to the wrong persons, and there were no athletes harmed. He said because the UT investigation found that rules or laws were violated, he was considering whether to refer the matter to prosecutors. “One of the things that comes out of [UT’s merger with the Medical University of Ohio last year] is that we create pdf files ave a pharmacy that knows [medication control laws] and practices those practices,” Dr. Jacobs said. “This allows me to put our pharmacist in charge of those issues.”

As noted in the Wizard of Odds , the Univ of Toledo football team now faces a revamp of it's structure. One of the issues was control and dispensing of medications. The Toledo Blade has this to say: Medication control The university president ordered that the “inventory, storage, and dispensing of medications” in the department be placed “immediately” FASTWEB LOGIN nder the direction of the university’s director of pharmacy. Dr. Jacobs also urged Mr. O’Brien to replace current team physician Dr. Roger Kruse with a “full-time university employee physician in an effort to improve the conformity to applicable laws concerning the control of medications.” Dr. Jacobs told The Blade yesterday that he didn’t think there were any medications distributed to the wrong persons, and there were no athletes harmed. He said because the UT investigation found that rules or laws were violated, he was considering whether to refer the matter to prosecutors. “One of the things that comes out of [UT’s merger with the Medical University of Ohio last year] is that we have a pharmacy that knows [medication control laws] and practices those practices,” Dr. Jacobs said. “This allows me to put our pharmacist in charge of those issues.”

Kevin from Blogging Tips lists 10 mistakes new bloggers make. Here are his, mine will follow.... · Repeating what other bloggers are saying - · No Opinion / Scared to rock the boat - · Link Trains - · Spamming other blogs with comments - · Spending more time commentating that writing posts - · Promoting their blog before its ready - · Blogging about too many subjects · Erratic parental involvement osting frequency - · Trying to make money instead of just concentrating on running a good blog - · Expecting to have a successful blog within 3 months - Link: Top 10 mistakes new bloggers make . This is good advice, the link trains is a new one on me, but it screams that it wouldn't work in the long run. But some other mistakes new and old bloggers make: Getting into the mindset that a post should be a certain length and never exceeding or going below that length. Not spending adequate time proofing for errors and readability. Giving up the first month Not building a community by responding to comments Not writing every day (notice I didn't say posting) writing - this blogging stuff takes practice Writing in a dry tone, no personality You need to sell yourself baby! Making the blog's subject too broad Welcome to the Food blog Not seeking out similar blogs to market to Blogging negatively about the company they work ED for. Not thinking through what they want from their blog before they begin it. This is common goal setting , planning out what they want long term helps to avoid mistakes in the short.

According to CNN, ex-President George Bush Sr. was treated for "dehydration" over the weekend. Yeah, right. I mean, really, come on, we're an educated, savvy, celebrity obsessed citizenry. Do publicists really believe that we haven't learned from the hijinks of Lindsay and Britney and Paris what a short stint in the hospital for dehydration REALLY means? whole house surge protector wouldn't have expected this type of behavior out of Bush Sr. He is, what, like 10 million years old? BUT, then again I didn't expect him to grab Terri Hatchers ass either. Seems to me, someone's having a mid an end of their life crisis.

According to CNN, ex-President George Bush Sr. was treated for "dehydration" over the weekend. Yeah, right. I mean, really, come on, we're an educated, savvy, celebrity obsessed citizenry. Do publicists really believe that we haven't learned from the hijinks of Lindsay and Britney and Paris what a short stint in the hospital for dehydration REALLY means? I wouldn't have expected this type of behavior out of Bush Sr. He is, what, like 10 million years old? BUT, then again I didn't expect him to grab Terri Hatchers ass either. Seems to me, someone's having a mid an end of their queen size bed sheet ife crisis.

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Lawrence resident now state's poet laureate "As a child growing up in Emporia, Denise Low dreamed of becoming a painter, but admits she never had the opportunity — or the talent. Instead, she learned to create images with words. “I constantly think about writing. It’s always in the back of my mind,” the interim dean of humanities and art at Haskell Indian Nations University said. washington mutual mortgage rate nd Low uses what’s in front of her to create poetry with a regional flavor and a deep respect for nature. “Her use of language is extraordinary and vivid,” said Llewellyn Crain, executive director of the Kansas Arts Commission, the group that will work with Low as Kansas’ second official poet laureate. “She’s a Kansas native. She uses the land and history to convey very profound thoughts about what it means to be alive now” in 21st century Kansas, Crain said. On Sunday, Low began a two-year appointment as poet laureate. The title comes with a $5,000 annual honorarium to help cover travel costs and other expenses. “I think that people are hungry to understand and feel good about their place in the world,” she said. Low, of Lawrence, hopes to feed that hunger with large helpings of homemade poems. Well-versed on other poets from the Sunflower State — both living and deceased — Low plans to put the spotlight on them during her term. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius created the poet laureate’s position in 2004, charging that person with developing a greater appreciation for writing and poetry among all Kansans.

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[From David Ross (Fife, Scotland)] I have used TCPMP on my Treo and Zire to watch Sky at Night episodes for sometime. The programmes come on cd and it is easy to copy the mpeg file and convert with Kinoma Producer. I then put them on the card and can view them later. deep air ow having a 5 year old the novelty of TV progs on the Palms wore thin a while ago as the content was boring. Hence my weekends effort. Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is now residing happily on TREO 600's 1 gig card. I still have to show her it but she will be impressed, as I certainly was. The file outputed using FairUse Wizard gave me cause for concern at 600meg. A bit big I thought. I thought about sticking it through Kinoma but it didn't recognise some formats. So in the end I just stuck it on the card and on opening it with TCPMP it played, so job done. I will play around with bit rates and output file size the next time I do this to reduce the output to even 250meg to get at least 2 films on my Treo. I played the file on both Treo and my Zire71 and was amazed at the picture quality on Zire. I always thought doing things like this was well beyond my IT capabilities but FairUse is easy enough to use and Googling for info in relation to it and Palms brought up a wealth of info for my next project with DVDs to Palm.

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[From David Ross (Fife, Scotland)] I have used TCPMP on my Treo and Zire to watch Sky at Night episodes for sometime. The programmes come on cd and it is easy to copy the mpeg file and convert with Kinoma Producer. I then put them on the card and can view them later. Now having a 5 year old the novelty of TV progs on the Palms wore thin a while ago as the content was boring. Hence florida mall hotel y weekends effort. Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is now residing happily on TREO 600's 1 gig card. I still have to show her it but she will be impressed, as I certainly was. The file outputed using FairUse Wizard gave me cause for concern at 600meg. A bit big I thought. I thought about sticking it through Kinoma but it didn't recognise some formats. So in the end I just stuck it on the card and on opening it with TCPMP it played, so job done. I will play around with bit rates and output file size the next time I do this to reduce the output to even 250meg to get at least 2 films on my Treo. I played the file on both Treo and my Zire71 and was amazed at the picture quality on Zire. I always thought doing things like this was well beyond my IT capabilities but FairUse is easy enough to use and Googling for info in relation to it and Palms brought up a wealth of info for my next project with DVDs to Palm.

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I was reading Joseph Tardo's (Nevis Networks) fatboy slim lyrics ew Illuminations blog and found the topic of his latest post ""Built-in, Overlay or Something More Radical?" regarding the possible future of network security quite interesting. Joseph (may I call you Joseph?) recaps the topic of a research draft from Stanford funded by the "S tanford Clean Slate Design for the Internet " project that discusses an approach to network security called SANE . The notion of SANE (AKA Ethane) is a policy-driven security services layer that utilizes intelligent centrally-located services to replace many of the underlying functions provided by routers, switches and security products today: Ethane is a new architecture for enterprise networks which provides a powerful yet simple management model and strong security guarantees. Ethane allows network managers to define a single, network-wide, fine-grain policy, and then enforces it at every switch. Ethane policy is defined over human-friendly names (such as "bob, "payroll-server", or "http-proxy) and dictates who can talk to who and in which manner. For example, a policy rule may specify that all guest users who have not authenticated can only use HTTP and that all of their traffic must traverse a local web proxy. Ethane has a number of salient properties difficult to achieve with network technologies today. First, the global security policy is enforced at each switch in a manner that is resistant to poofing.

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[From David Ross (Fife, Scotland)] I have used TCPMP on my Treo and Zire to watch Sky at Night episodes for sometime. The programmes come on cd and it is easy to copy the mpeg file and convert with Kinoma Producer. I then put them on the card and can view them later. Now having a 5 year old the novelty of warez credit card generator V progs on the Palms wore thin a while ago as the content was boring. Hence my weekends effort. Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is now residing happily on TREO 600's 1 gig card. I still have to show her it but she will be impressed, as I certainly was. The file outputed using FairUse Wizard gave me cause for concern at 600meg. A bit big I thought. I thought about sticking it through Kinoma but it didn't recognise some formats. So in the end I just stuck it on the card and on opening it with TCPMP it played, so job done. I will play around with bit rates and output file size the next time I do this to reduce the output to even 250meg to get at least 2 films on my Treo. I played the file on both Treo and my Zire71 and was amazed at the picture quality on Zire. I always thought doing things like this was well beyond my IT capabilities but FairUse is easy enough to use and Googling for info in relation to it and Palms brought up a wealth of info for my next project with DVDs to Palm.

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I was reading Joseph Tardo's (Nevis Networks) new Illuminations blog and found the topic of his latest post ""Built-in, Overlay or Something More Radical?" regarding the possible future of network security quite interesting. Joseph (may I call you Joseph?) recaps the topic of a research draft from Stanford funded by the "S tanford Clean Slate Design for the Internet " project that discusses an approach to network security called SANE . The notion of SANE (AKA Ethane) is a policy-driven security services layer that utilizes intelligent centrally-located services to replace many of the underlying functions provided by routers, deep air witches and security products today: Ethane is a new architecture for enterprise networks which provides a powerful yet simple management model and strong security guarantees. Ethane allows network managers to define a single, network-wide, fine-grain policy, and then enforces it at every switch. Ethane policy is defined over human-friendly names (such as "bob, "payroll-server", or "http-proxy) and dictates who can talk to who and in which manner. For example, a policy rule may specify that all guest users who have not authenticated can only use HTTP and that all of their traffic must traverse a local web proxy. Ethane has a number of salient properties difficult to achieve with network technologies today. First, the global security policy is enforced at each switch in a manner that is resistant to poofing.

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I was reading Joseph Tardo's (Nevis Networks) new Illuminations blog and found the topic of his latest post ""Built-in, Overlay or Something More Radical?" regarding the possible future of network security quite interesting. Joseph (may I call you Joseph?) recaps the topic of a research draft from Stanford funded by the "S tanford Clean Slate Design for the Internet " project that discusses an approach to network security called mortgage lead ANE . The notion of SANE (AKA Ethane) is a policy-driven security services layer that utilizes intelligent centrally-located services to replace many of the underlying functions provided by routers, switches and security products today: Ethane is a new architecture for enterprise networks which provides a powerful yet simple management model and strong security guarantees. Ethane allows network managers to define a single, network-wide, fine-grain policy, and then enforces it at every switch. Ethane policy is defined over human-friendly names (such as "bob, "payroll-server", or "http-proxy) and dictates who can talk to who and in which manner. For example, a policy rule may specify that all guest users who have not authenticated can only use HTTP and that all of their traffic must traverse a local web proxy. Ethane has a number of salient properties difficult to achieve with network technologies today. First, the global security policy is enforced at each switch in a manner that is resistant to poofing.

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I was reading Joseph Tardo's (Nevis Networks) new Illuminations blog and found the topic of his latest post ""Built-in, Overlay or Something More Radical?" regarding the possible future of network security quite interesting. Joseph (may I call you Joseph?) recaps the topic of a research draft from Stanford funded by the "S tanford Clean Slate Design for the Internet " project that discusses an approach to network security called SANE . The notion of SANE (AKA Ethane) is a policy-driven security services layer that utilizes intelligent centrally-located services to replace many of the underlying functions provided by routers, switches and security products today: Ethane is a new architecture for enterprise networks which provides a powerful yet simple management model and strong security guarantees. Ethane allows network managers to define a single, network-wide, fine-grain policy, and then enforces it at every switch. Ethane policy is defined over human-friendly names (such as "bob, "payroll-server", or "http-proxy) and dictates who can deep air alk to who and in which manner. For example, a policy rule may specify that all guest users who have not authenticated can only use HTTP and that all of their traffic must traverse a local web proxy. Ethane has a number of salient properties difficult to achieve with network technologies today. First, the global security policy is enforced at each switch in a manner that is resistant to poofing.

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[From David Ross (Fife, Scotland)] I have used TCPMP on my Treo and Zire to watch Sky at Night episodes for sometime. The programmes come on cd and it is easy to copy the mpeg file and convert with Kinoma Producer. I then put them on the card and can view them later. Now having a 5 year old the novelty of TV progs on the Palms wore thin a while ago as the content was boring. Hence my weekends effort. Chitty Chitty Bang Bang is now residing happily on TREO 600's 1 gig card. I still have to show her it but she will be impressed, as free thank you ecard certainly was. The file outputed using FairUse Wizard gave me cause for concern at 600meg. A bit big I thought. I thought about sticking it through Kinoma but it didn't recognise some formats. So in the end I just stuck it on the card and on opening it with TCPMP it played, so job done. I will play around with bit rates and output file size the next time I do this to reduce the output to even 250meg to get at least 2 films on my Treo. I played the file on both Treo and my Zire71 and was amazed at the picture quality on Zire. I always thought doing things like this was well beyond my IT capabilities but FairUse is easy enough to use and Googling for info in relation to it and Palms brought up a wealth of info for my next project with DVDs to Palm.

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