These are pages that are connected with this group, my profile and other pages on Diigo, it and they collectively functioning as components of a single site - at least when all goes well.
If you would like to be notified by e-mail when I have a new bookmark to see on my Diigo profile or there is new material to read in my Diigo journal or easy blog, you can do so using the links on this page.
You can subscribe using Feedburner, if you'd like to be told when I post new material to my Diigo Journal, have something to see on my easyblog or add to my list of bookmarks (also known as "favorite links"), and maybe be notified by e-mail, if that should happen.
You leave off your e-mail address in a form that will open up in a new window, which will close when you're done. I'm more than happy to pledge to keep your address a secret, within reason. "Within reason?", you ask. "What's that supposed to mean?" If somebody has a gun to my head, and demands that I give him your address, I'm going to give him your address, because I'm not insane. Or, if I've just been presented with a court order that has mysteriously found its way to my obscure front door, instead of being presented to Google for reasons that don't need to exist in hypothetical nightmares like this one, I won't be the guy who goes "shackle me to the wall, if you will, but I'll not reveal my source and subject him to spam", because dude, you can always get a new e-mail account. But I'm not going to sell that data or volunteer it freely, ever, and if the first two scenarios are ones you really need to worry about, you must be living a far more interesting life than I am - and using your computer to do so. If so, please stop that. I've seen how those B movies turn out, and it usually isn't well for the minor characters you see in the first 20 minutes of the film, which I guess would be me, in this case.
You're welcome to subscribe to these pages, and doing so is free, but I should tell you that at the time of this writing, I have no plans to ever add to them. I have serious misgivings about the way I've seen this company run, having witnessed some truly outrageous acts of censorship on the part of the management, and while I'll probably be willing to leave the content I already have up in place as long as I'm allowed to do so, I don't really picture myself investing much more time or effort into Diigo, out of concern that it would prove to be time and effort wasted.
Options for a visitor to one of my pages on Diigo, who'd like to know when there is new content to be seen on them. Link has been bookmarked, not for the sake of self promotion, but because Diigo won't let us have any other way of inserting links on our pages, other than bookmarking the pages to which we would link.
Links to pages associated with my Diigo profile and homegroup, inserted so that Webring will stay off my back, and visitors will be able to find their way around my pages.
Yet another navigational link saved to help my visitors find their way around the sites associated with my Diigo profile (and to keep Webring from going on the attack), which I have to save as a bookmark because Diigo doesn't let us insert links into group descriptions.
Time to return to your ring? You have two options. Maybe.
You should see the title of your ring, below. If not, what that probably means is that Webring has, once again, merged a ring and you'll have to go to the copy of the ring return page for my blog and its homepage at Goodluckwith.us, Webring Webspace or 8m.com, any of which will get you back to your ring, and at least one of which is probably up and running at the moment. That's option one. Option two is that you click on the name of your ring and go to the appropriate navbar, looking kind of stripped down, but all of the links are there, and this may get you on your way more quickly if either one of the hosts for the blog homepage or Webring itself is running slowly today. No javascript is involved, and you're still here, so I'm guessing that Diigo has been doing as well as can be expected.
If you entered my sites from somewhere other than my blog or the introductory page for this blog over on the services mentioned above, you'll need to go to the global ring return page for my sites, where you will find a menu that should help you find your way back to where you were.
Above: Thumbnail of screenshot from one member site on the ring, a page devoted to the work of the artist, Jeffrey Spalding, to be reviewed here. Should that site ever go down, it might be preserved in this location in the Internet Archive.
Above: Thumbnail of picture from the GrailQuest story on PrivyPages, a site run by an antique glass collector who digs for his treasures, who, recalling a past excavation, decides to share ...
Navigational link, inserted so that Webring doesn't think I'm trying to create a one way site. Visitors can use this to return to one of the rings to which my pages on Diigo (and the pages connected with them elsewhere) belong.