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Janos Haits

Spy your friends and detect their real status! Find out who is Invisible! - 8 views

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    Spy your friends and detect their real status! Find out who is Invisible! Spy Detect is a tool that helps you to detect who is Invisible. The status indicate might be: offline , online or Invisible. You can also see the profile of each buddy checked. Spy Detect is very easy to use: you just type the ID and after that, in 1 second, our Spy Detector will show the status. Spy Detect is a free service, with 99,99% accuracy and 99,99% uptime.
Peter Shanks

BlueGriffon, The next-generation Web Editor based on the rendering engine of Firefox - 8 views

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    WYSIWYG content editor for the World Wide Web. Powered by Gecko, the rendering engine of Firefox 4, it is the next generation from Kompozer. It's free to download (current stable version is 1.4) and is available on Windows, Mac OS X and Linux, funded via 'buy in' modules for extra functionality.
Stephen G. Barr

Video Promos, Video Promotions, Promotional Videos Every occassion. www.video-promos.com - 5 views

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    The Future of Business Communication: Smart, Easy and Super Affordable! Get started using these 3 simple steps: Copyright. All rights reserved. 100xstudios.com / 100XTV.com - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1. You supply the THEME or MESSAGE you wish to convey... 2. We combine your ELEMENTS* for customization with our vast media library... *Elements can be: logos, graphics, pics, keywords, catch phrases, etc. see Submission Guidelines 3. We can provide a studio quality HD video in as little as 72 hours
Janos Haits

Plum Amazing :: iWatermark - Watermark, Resize, Rename your Photos for Mac, Win, Androi... - 8 views

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    iWatermark is the worlds No. 1 digital watermarking application for Mac, Windows, iPhone, iPad and Android. Stylishly Copyright all your images in just minutes.
LUCIAN DUMA

http://lucianecurator.sharedby.co/share/aqw4vx - 6 views

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    Although I teach SEN students they like to use new online technologies . If you have 1 minute Please click vote if you like our projects . We use social media and many edtools and also we use GlogsterEDU to present our work because we develop and coordinate many educational projects . Thank you in addvance . 
anonymous

Getting Started with Firefox extension - Diigo help - 0 views

  •  Feature Highlight: Highlights Diigo saves the day with "highlights". Highlights let you select the important snippets on a page and store them in your library with the page's bookmark. Let's try it. Just open a page, maybe one of your old-school bookmarks or one of your new cat bookmarks, and find the information on that page you actually care about. Select that important text. Got it? Okay, now put your hemet on, 'cause this might blow your mind! Click the highlight icon on the Diigo toolbar. It's the one with the "T" on a page with a yellow highlighter. You will notice that the selected text gets a yellow background. This means that the text has been saved in your library, and as long as you have the Diigo add-on the text will be highlighted on the page! How's that for easy?   Now you've highlighted the text. It will appear in your library within the bookmark for the page it is on. Go to your library and you can see how it works. If you're not sure how to get to your library, just click the second icon on the toolbar (Diigo icon to the left of the search bar) and then select "My Library »".
  • Sticky Notes on the Web What? I can put a sticky note on a web page? How? Oh, that's right! Diigo. Just right-click anywhere on the page and choose to "add a floating sticky note". Type up your note and choose "Post", then move the note anywhere on the page. You have to type a note first, before you move it where you want, otherwise there's nothing to move!
anonymous

BAZAAR SMS | IVR Service Provider in Patna | Virtual Receptionist Service in Patna | Ba... - 0 views

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    How our IVR Service actually works ? Anyone who calls on your Business Number will first listen a personalized Welcome Message (Eg : Welcome to ABC Company, We are leading IT Solution Provider) and post welcome message it will play list of your extension options (Eg - Dial 1 : For Sales Department , Dial 2 : For Accounts Department , Dial 3 : For Marketing Department ....... Dial 9 : For Other Services and Dial 0 : To Leave a Voice Message). And based upon extension option selected by caller your incoming call will be automatically routed instantly to mobile or land-line phone mapped to that extension. And post call completed acknowledgment SMS will also be send to caller phone. (Eg: Thank You for contacting .
John Onwuegbu

Review: EaseUS One Click Go Back to Windows 8.1 from Windows 10 | Questechie - 2 views

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    EaseUS free system go back software is a program that you can rely on to backup and restore your Windows system with only one click.
John Onwuegbu

Enter Cortana: The Mobile Virtual Assistant Wars about to get Fierce? | Questechie - 1 views

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    It is an intelligent personal assistant developed by Microsoft for Windows Phone 8.1, Windows 10, Microsoft Band, and purported to be coming to iOS and Android.
awqi zar

Social media - the latest recruitment tool - 12 views

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    SOCIAL media - Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn. Who would have thought that these social media sites would become one of the latest recruitment tools? With a staggering number of 346 million people who read blogs globally, 700 million photos added to Facebook monthly, and 273.1 minutes on average spent watching online videos each month, they provide companies with a readily available pool of talent.
John Onwuegbu

Opera Mobile Adds Geolocation - 0 views

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    Opera Software release for Android running devices, Opera Mobile 10.1 beta is reported to feature in-built geolocation support...
Alison Raab Labonte

iLibrarian » Top 100 Tools for Learning - 0 views

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    The Spring 2008 edition of the Top 100 Tools for Learning has been published by Centre for Learning & Performance Technologies (C4LPT). Earlier this year, they gathered the top 10 tools used by 155 learning professionals to compile this massive list. Their analysis and individual lists are also linked within the document." The top 10: 1. del.icio.us 2. Firefox 3. Google Reader 4. Skype 5. Google Search 6. Wordpress 7. PowerPoint 8. GMail 9. Audacity 10. Blogger
anonymous

SocialWebTools.info - Cool web 2.0 tools & apps. - 1 views

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    Your #1 source for web 2.0 social media tools & applications such as Twitter Tools, Firefox Addons & Greasemonkey scripts.
Eloise Pasteur

HighTouch: Rule 1 for Community Engagement: Responsiveness - 0 views

  • How they sold a million phones I'm not exactly sure. By the time I got to the front of the line at around 10:30p Eastern I would say that 80% of the customers were walking away empty handed. The transactions were failing at the point where Apple connected to the AT&T database. Apple was doing their best to provide service to their customers at 10:30 on a Friday night. Their partner, the entity that could have sent most of the customers home fat and happy was not. AT&T customer support was closed. They were still working industrial era "office hours". Not only were they closed on Friday night, they were closed for the entire weekend. A dramatic example of two partners with very different DNA.
  • I've been thinking about this a lot. Somewhere I heard, and I wish I could remember where, that the average time for a person to get their first response via Yahoo Answers in Korea is 45 seconds. That's a remarkable response time when you realize that the answer is most likely being typed on a mobile phone. Now, that answer is most probably crap, but the point remains-- in this new world people have an expectation of an almost instantaneous response. If you aren't prepared to offer instantaneous service then you shouldn't attempt to offer the service at all as you are most likely going to disappoint.
  • The first rule of community engagement: You have to respond. A real person has to respond, and you need to do it lightning fast. Anything less and you've disappointed. It's okay if you respond and say, "We hear you, and we're working on it." But it's not okay to answer with dead silence, or to say "Well get back to you first thing Monday morning. Have a nice weekend."
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    Thoughts on the iPhone 3G roll out. In particular on the differences between Apple and AT&T and their customer service models. Interesting thoughts for the way forward
Daisy Zhao

FileURLs.com - Get a shareable URL for your file - 0 views

shared by Daisy Zhao on 31 Oct 08 - Cached
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    250MB per file limit 1-7 days expire passward protect option
Helen Baxter

Get Started | Blurb - 0 views

  • Go ahead and install Blurb BookSmart™.Learn More. Download Booksmart Choose the book you’d like to make. Play around. Add photos, blogs, stories, the works. Your book is done, and yours to share and sell. System Requirements For Windows Blurb BookSmart™ Version: 1.9.1 released October 19, 2007 Operating System: Microsoft Windows 2000, XP, or Vista
chelfyn Baxter

Management and Virtual Decentralised Networks: The Linux Project - 0 views

  • A mechanistic management system is appropriate to stable conditions. It is characterised by:The Organismic form is appropriate to changing conditions. It is characterised by: Hierarchic structure of control, authority and communicationNetwork structure of control A reinforcement of the hierarchic structure by the location of knowledge of actualities exclusively at the top of the hierarchyOmniscience no longer imputed to the head of the concern; knowledge may be located anywhere in the network; the location becoming the centre of authority Vertical interaction between the members of the concern, ie. between superior and subordinateLateral rather than vertical direction of communication through the organisation  A content of communication which consists of information and advice rather than instructions and decisions
    • chelfyn Baxter
       
      This is very similar to many Web 1.0/2.0 analogies
  • Structurehierarchicalnetworked Scopeinternal/closedexternal/open Resource focuscapitalhuman, information Statestabledynamic, changing Directionmanagement commandsself-management Basis of actioncontrolempowerment to act Basis for compensationposition in hierarchycompetency level
  • However, "the Linux movement did not and still does not have a formal hierarchy whereby important tasks can be handled out ... a kind of self-selection takes place instead: anyone who cares enough about a particular program is welcomed to try" [54]. But if his work is not good enough, another hacker will immediately fill the gap. In this way, this 'self-selection' ensures that the work done is of superb quality. Moreover this "decentralisation leads to more efficient allocation of resources (programmers' time and work) because each developer is free to work on any particular program of his choice as his skills, experience and interest best dictate" (Kuwabara, 2000). In contrast, "under centralised mode of software development, people are assigned to tasks out of economic considerations and might end up spending time on a feature that the marketing department has decided is vital to their ad campaign, but that no actual users care about" [55].
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • Industrial AgeInformation Age Focus on measurable outcomesFocus on strategic issues using participation and empowerment Individual accountabilityTeam accountability Clearly differentiated-segmented organisational roles, positions and responsibilitiesMatrix arrangement - flexible positions and responsibilities Hierarchical, linear information flowsMultiple interface, 'boundaryless' information networking Initiatives for improvement emanate from a management eliteInitiatives for improvement emanate from all directions
  • There is only one layer between the community of Linux developers and Linus: the "trusted lieutenants". They are a dozen hackers that have done considerably extended work on a particular part of the kernel to gain Linus' trust. The "trusted lieutenants" are responsible to maintain a part of the Linux Kernel and lots of developers sent their patches (their code) directly to them, instead of Linus. Of course, apart from Linus that has encouraged this to happen, this informal mechanism represents a natural selection by the community since the "trusted lieutenants" are recognised [by the community] as being not owners but simple experts in particular areas [57] and thus, their 'authority' can always be openly challenged. This does not mean that Linus has more influence than they have. Recently, "Alan Cox (one of the "trusted" ones) disagreed with Linus over some obscure technical issue and it looks like the community really does get to judge by backing Alan and making Linus to acknowledge that he made a bad choice" [58].
  • In 1991, Linus Torvalds made a free Unix-like kernel (a core part of the operating system) available on the Internet and invited all hackers interested to participate. Within the next two months, the first version 1.0 of Linux was released. From that point, tens of thousands of developers, dispersed globally and communicating via the Internet, contributed code, so that early in 1993, Linux had grown to be a stable, reliable and very powerful operating system. The Linux kernel is 'copylefted' software, patented under the GNU GPL, and thus, nobody actually owns it. But more significantly, Linux is sheltered by the Open Source (hacker) community. From its very birth, Linux as a project has mobilised an incredible number of developers offering enhancements, modifications/improvements and bug fixes without any financial incentive. Despite the fact that an operating system is supposed to be developed only by a closely-knit team to avoid rising complexity and communication costs of coordination (Brook's Law), Linux is being developed in a massive decentralised mode under no central planning, an amazing feat given that it has not evolved into chaos. Innovation release early and often: Linus put into practice an innovative and paradox model of developing software. Frequent releases and updates (several times in a week) are typical throughout the entire development period of Linux. In this way, Linus kept the community constantly stimulated by the rapid growth of the project and provided an extraordinary effective mechanism of psychologically rewarding his co-developers for their contributions that were implemented in the last version. On top of this, in every released version, there is a file attached which lists all those who have contributed (code). Credit attribution if neglected, is a cardinal sin that will breed bitterness within the community and discourage developers from further contributing to the project. According to conventional software-building wisdom, early versions are by definition buggy and you do not want to wear out the patience of your users. But as far as the Linux development stage is concerned, developers are the users themselves and this is where most innovation is created (Figure 8). "The greatest innovation of Linux is that treating your users as co-developers is your least-hassle route to rapid code improvement and effective debugging" (Raymond, 1998a).
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    It's a great article
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