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asiabetguru

Worst and best Fantasy Football punishments - 0 views

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    In every aspect, Fantasy Football leagues are extremely unique. The scoring system, league type, draft style, and nearly any other aspect of the game can all differ from one league to the next. In addition, Fantasy Football punishments for the last-place finisher are something that adds fun to the league. Furthermore, it gives the last-place teams something to compete for.
Hitech CADD Services

How Paper to CAD Modeling in SolidWorks helps Furniture Manufacturers - 0 views

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    Move beyond conventional paper and sketch drafting. Go for 2D to 3D CAD modeling and experience greater operational efficiency, clearer design intents, and better data management. Read this blog to know how furniture manufacturers across the industry are leveraging SolidWorks 3D modeling services to avail the same.
anonymous

Tuesday. - 0 views

Morning, the diigo did not work at the office. So did not begin a diary entry there. Afternoon, tried again. It did not work. So diary at 9pm at my home computer. Diary draft. If I want to edit thi...

diary Tuesday diigoo

started by anonymous on 10 Dec 13 no follow-up yet
betsy stone

Gold beneficiation plant price in South Africa - 1 views

My improvement consists in first subjecting the material to artificial heat to dry the same, then disintegrating the dirt and cleaning the gravel without crushing or, grinding it, and then separati...

brainstorm inconsistency

started by betsy stone on 19 Jun 14 no follow-up yet
SocialStream !

preview topic/message before submission - 62 views

oooo so fast official reply ( i didnt expect that ) thnx for fast reply :)

preview forum topic GUI TTW suggestion gpd4

Graham Perrin

only 100 highlights/annotations showing up on page containing over 200 - 72 views

Afterthought: the public meta view of a page is designed to not reveal private notes. It may be easier for you to gauge completeness from the annotated link that you previously gained and shared: ...

annotations highlight bug 958359 959095 959848 959920 960067 960888 priority

andybendyman

digital digs: the positive confluence of academia and the web - 5 views

  • Clearly one of the challenges academia faces is to figure out a productive use of networks in terms of research practices. Usually I write more about the teaching aspects of the university and clearly there are many ways universities will employ networks. But I want to think specifically about the use of the web for research with a few goals in mind: to enhance collaboration between academics to publish and share research to share knowledge with a broader audience (students, governments, industries, non-profits, the general public, and so on) One might say that these have been answered, but the real challenge is that as the web continues to evolve and now converge with other networks, the practices we have established need to change as well. That is, from the inception of the web, one could find the appearance of academic journals: genuine, rigorously reviewed, academic scholarship available freely online. There were (and are) listservs that might facilitate collaboration. Similarly individual faculty and faculty organizations built websites where they offered information, policy statements, and so on (NCTE or MLA for example in English Studies). But how are we moving forward?
  • Conventional academic discourse lies with journals and conferences. For all the advantages of these modes, neither offers an ongoing, dynamic interchange. Listservs offer that, but, in my experience anyway, they don't really create a productive, collaborative space. Sometimes there are debates on listservs; sometimes there is sharing of information (e.g. does anyone know a good article about x"?). But there isn't a sustained building of knowledge there. I suppose there could be, but there isn't, probably b/c we all go off to write our individually authored articles and conference presentations. In any case, the listserv is too large a community for collaborative work. Yes, tens of thousands contribute to Wikipedia, but they don't all work on the same article, right? So I don't know what the magic number is, but let's say I was looking for a dozen scholars in who were interested in the same things I'm interested in: mobile networks virtual worlds audio/video production public, collaborative learning It's unlikely that we would all work on the same research project at once, but there would be a handful of project undertaken by individuals or small groups. There would be a public face to the group and a private project management site, like Basecamp. The public face would offer a steady stream of information as we shared what we were doing, what was going on in our teaching, what we were reading and writing. We'd be assembling streams of information from our blogs, twitters, flickr, YouTube, and so on--wherever we were post information. The result is a collection of information that is hopefully useful groundwork for more formal investigation and also a mechanism for fruitful collaboration between our classes.
  • Meanwhile, in a more private space we might be orchestrating collaborative classroom projects and sharing research, drafts, and other media: constructing our scholarly work. When it's complete, we publish it in traditional venues and republish it on our public site as well.
Graham Perrin

'auto blog post' to an other category than public or draft - 27 views

I rarely use https://secure.diigo.com/blog_this/daily_blog but AFAIK what you suggest is not a feature of Diigo. Tag: suggestion

auto blog post internal private protected help suggestion

Maggie Tsai

Family Matters » » Diigo Blogging Tools - 2 views

  • If you’re one of the expanding list of genealogy bloggers, chances are good you frequently find things online you’d like to write about. In addition to copying the quote, you also need to grab the site’s name, article/page title and link. Diigo, my favorite online research tool, can help make this process a whole lot easier. Diigo’s “Blog This” function builds on its highlighting and annotation features to make it easy to capture information and incorporate it into a blog post. The feature works with WordPress, Blogger, LiveJournal, Typepad, Moveable Type, Windows Live Spaces and Drupal blog platforms. Here’s how it works . . . Setup The first step is to set up your blog so Diigo can access it. Log into Diigo then click on My Tools. Now click on Blog This in the left column. When that page appears, click on the +Add a new blog link. Enter the address of your blog in the URL field, then click Next. Now enter the username and password you use to to access your blog and click Add New Blog. Your blog should now appear on your Blog This page. You’re ready to start blogging. Blog This As you browse the web, you come across a tidbit you’d like to write about. Highlight the text you’d like to include in your post, right-click and choose Diigo > Blog This from the popup menu.
  • In the example shown here (configured for a WordPress blog), you can see in the left column that this post is going to my Family Matters blog as a draft in the News category. What you actually see will depend on what blog platform you are using. I may post a “quick and dirty” item directly from the Diigo editor, but generally I will send the highlighted text to my blog as a post and finish it off there. Either way, Diigo has made it easy for me to include web content in my posts - saving both time and effort.
Ole C  Brudvik

Museum 2.0: Hierarchy of Social Participation - 0 views

  • Level 4: Individual, Networked, Social Interaction with Content (Me to We with Museum) This is the level where web 2.0 sits. Individuals still do their interacting with the content singly, but their interactions are available for comment and connection by other users. And the architecture promotes these connections automatically. For example, on Netflix, when you rate a movie highly, you don’t just see how others have rated it; Netflix recommends other movies to you based on what like-minded viewers also rated highly. By networking the ratings, tags, or comments individuals place on content, individuals are linked to each other and form relationships around the content. A successful level 4 experience uses social interaction to enhance the individual experience; it gets better the more people use it. The social component is a natural extension of the individual actions. Which means, perhaps, users are ready for…
  • As always, comments are encouraged—and in this case, strongly desired as I work on refining this content for the article.
  • using web 2.0 to promote civic discourse in museums, I’m developing an argument about the “hierarchy of social participation.” I believe that, as with basic human needs, experience design in museums (and for other content platforms) can occur on many levels, and that it is hard to achieve the highest level without satisfying, or at least understanding, those that come before it. One of the impediments to discourse in museums is that fact that designers want to jump straight from individuals interacting with content to interacting with each other. It’s a tall order to get strangers to talk to each other, let alone have a meaningful discussion. And so, I offer the following hierarchy of social participation.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Level 5: Collective Social Interaction with Content (We in Museum) This is the holy grail of social discourse, where people interact directly with each other around content. Personal discussions, healthy web bulletin boards and list-servs fall in this category. Healthy level 5 experiences promote respect among users, encourage community development, and support interaction beyond the scope of the content.
  • So how do we level up? The good news is that moving up the levels does not require new content. At all levels, the interaction and participation can occur around pre-existing content. A lot of museums top out at level 2 or 3, imagining that offering people heightened opportunities to interact with content, or to create their own content, is enough. Granted, I’m not sure if social engagement is the goal for interactive designers. But with side benefits like deeper connection with the content, greater appreciation for the museum as a social venue, and heightened awareness of other visitors, it deserves a place at the drafting table.
Graham Perrin

How to add group-shared highlights to a page that is already shared with the group? - 179 views

Joel and co, many thanks! From the perspective of the sticker (me), testing at the moment in Firefox 3.0.4, behaviour appears to be good. If it's working as expected then Diigo members o...

bookmarks private public shared highlights suggestion resolved

Graham Perrin

Why not add "Calendar" function to diigo? - 47 views

Subject: calendars arithwsun arithwsun wrote: > I wished that contains almost all functions of "google calendars", Keyword, VTODO: when I last checked, Google Calendar and the Google Calendar Da...

calendar timeline to-do reminder alarm RSS e-mail suggestion

Graham Perrin

slides.diigo.com domain in contexts such as list edition and personal profile - 27 views

Bug http://slides.diigo.com/list/grahamperrin/webarchive presents my personal profile. Steps to reproduce 1. visit the WebSlides URL 2. at the beginning or end of the show, click By Graham Perrin

bug slides.diigo.com WebSlides list inconsistency link profile gpd4

anonymous

[Sharing] Please share your "Creative Uses for Diigo" - 125 views

Just tried something and it worked so I thought I would share. I was drafting an e-mail message, for a blog post, and wanted to include the link I had just bookmarked. I thought I would try just ...

usecase spam (electronic)

bloggerent

US will deploy a medium range missile in Europe and Russia will respond. - 0 views

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    December 30th Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov said on the 30th that if the United States deploys medium range missiles in Europe, Russia will take countermeasures. According to a statement issued by the Russian Foreign Ministry on the 30th, Lavrov told the Russian media when talking about Russia-US
Hitech CADD Services

Scan to CAD Conversion: Scanned Images to CAD Drawings & 3D models - 0 views

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    CAD Conversion can reduce manufacturing costs, eases design to manufacturing transition and gives you better resource management. In this article you will find various types of CAD conversion and what opportunities CAD conversion provides to manufacturers to expand their businesses and innovate.
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