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Graham Perrin

Darwine builds for OS X - 0 views

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    Builds of Darwine for Mac OS X.
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    For programs that traditionally require Microsoft Widows: users of Mac OS X may consider Darwine as a free, open source, lighter and more maintainable alternative to the entire Microsoft operating system. Builds of Darwine are available here and elsewhere.
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    The 1.1.5 build from kronenberg.org includes the very worthy TRiX, which can help to fulfil font requirements of collaborative applications such as AbiWord.
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Graham Perrin

Microsoft, Google Shake Hands Over OpenID - 0 views

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Graham Perrin

Random Tidbits of Information » Darwine - 0 views

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    A build of Darwine for Mac OS X.
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    For programs that traditionally require Microsoft Widows: users of Mac OS X may consider Darwine as a free, open source, lighter and more maintainable alternative to the entire Microsoft operating system. Builds of Darwine are available here and elsewhere.
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Mark -

Corporate Wikis reviewed: Confluence, JotSpot, WetPaint, Socialtext - 0 views

  • Corporate Wikis reviewed: Confluence, JotSpot, WetPaint, Socialtext by Troy Angrignon on Mon 10 Jul 2006 06:30 AM PDT  |  Permanent Link  |  Cosmos Wikis are on the rise in corporations. And it's about time. One of the principles of Web 2.0 is that your user community can generate content that is better, faster, and probably easier to read than you can as a vendor. One way to enable them to contribute would be to build a wiki and let them flesh it out. Some good examples are coming up in this article: "Corporate wikis breaking out all over: MSDN Wiki" by Dion Hinchcliffe. (He has another great post as well called "Exploiting the Power of Enterprise Wikis") Quote of the day: "Not leveraging the contributions of a company's most impassioned and enthusiastic customers is starting to be seen as a significand oversight in many business circles." It appears in the article that eBay is using Wikis to better communicate between their users, partners, and suppliers. Now MSDN (Microsoft Developer Network) is using their pages to improve the quality of their developer documentation with the MSDN Wiki. THAT is a great usage. Your users often know your product better than your engineers and product managers because they have to live with it day to day. And guess what? If they tell the truth about some part of your product being broken - that's a GOOD thing.
  • Atlassian's Confluence is the best of them so far. Pros: the overall design is clean, it has advanced management tools, good security, and simple attachments.Its email function has to pick mail up from a POP box which makes it a little bit less ad-hoc but still functional. And most importantly, it also has great tools for moving pages around. Cons: Text editing, like with most apps these days is a bit dodgy, and pasting in blocks of text from Word is likely to cause problems. The pricing model is reasonable but for some reason (possibly because they're from Australia), they still don't have a directly hosted option so you have to use somebody like Contegix or deploy it on your own box. This seems to be a big and obvious oversight on their part these days. Also, their pricing model doesn't encourage small deployments right off the bat. I think this is the one that we'll use more of internally at the company where I work. Summary: The best of the enterprise wikis today, and one of the best options for scalability.
  • WetPaint is a newcomer that is doing some interesting stuff and that might be a better bet than JotSpot. Pros: The design is beautiful, the tool is very easy to use, the text editor is one of the best I have seen. Cons: I'm not clear on their entierprise suitability and it's not really their target market. It didn't appear that they had much in the way of administration tools, granular security, or any way to integrate into a back-end authentication system. Summary: I met one of the WetPaint guys at Gnomedex but he didn't seem to know the product very well. Hopefully next time, they'll put somebody more knowledgeable at their booth who knows the product in more detail. I think they're worth watching to see what they do in the next few months.
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Graham Perrin

CodeWeavers - Your Home for Windows Compatibility on Mac and Linux - 0 views

shared by Graham Perrin on 27 Sep 08 - Cached
  • Compatibility for Mac and Linux
  • Windows Mac and Linux Crossover solution
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    For programs that traditionally require Microsoft Widows: users of Mac OS X and Linux may consider CodeWeavers products as lighter and more maintainable alternatives to the entire Microsoft operating system. CodeWeavers base their CrossOver products on Wine.
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Evince Development

ASP.Net Web Application Development by Evince Development Pvt.ltd - 0 views

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    Asp.Net is a web application framework for building websites and apps. It is developed by Microsoft and allows a person to use programming languages to build web applications very easily.
zeeyakhem

Windows Live mail Customer Service and Support Phone Number Helpline Technical Support - 1 views

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    Contact to us for find the perfect help service to relate any kind of windows live mail issues, We have more Intelligence and Expert Technician are provide to a best and 100% Perfect solution of your Windows live mail issue. Our Technician are 24x7 hours on-line, you can call to us any time, any day.
Graham Perrin

Sharepoint and Enterprise 2.0: The good, the bad, and the ugly | Enterprise Web 2.0 | ZDNet.com - 1 views

  • the Enterprise 2.0 story is primarily aimed at knowledge workers engaged in complex, collaborative projects which have had few effective software tools until recently, in other words strategic business activities. Industries like finance, government, civil engineering, transportation, and many others are trend to be top heavy with this kind of worker and are likely the last major bastions of productivity gains in modern economies, if the right solutions can be brought to bear. In other words, Enterprise 2.0 can help some of our most important and most valuable workers do better work while providing more value to the organization as a whole.
  • innovation in social and collaborative systems is almost exclusively coming from the consumer Web
  • SharePoint was designed before we had learned many of the modern social computing lessons
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  • excessively complex
  • weak support for the most common Enterprise 2.0 application types
  • multi-level security, governance, and policy controls
  • more difficult than with other platforms which were designed to function in highly diverse environments
  • Users should be able to create sites
  • customize them over time to meet the local requirements
  • evolve and improve through shared contributions
  • complexity and high cost
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    i wouldn't mind training people in how to use this...
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Kim Hogg

cyn.in low cost alternative to Sharepoint - 0 views

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    The one time cost is approximately 91 times that of cyn.in!
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Vahid Masrour

DocVerse: Building A Better "Office Live" (Beta Invites) - 0 views

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