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Alison Raab Labonte

ODP - Open Directory Project - 0 views

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    The Open Directory Project is the largest, most comprehensive human-edited directory of the Web. It is constructed and maintained by a vast, global community of volunteer editors. The Republic of the Web The web continues to grow at staggering rates. Automated search engines are increasingly unable to turn up useful results to search queries. The small paid editorial staffs at commercial directory sites can't keep up with submissions, and the quality and comprehensiveness of their directories has suffered. Link rot is setting in and they can't keep pace with the growth of the Internet. Instead of fighting the explosive growth of the Internet, the Open Directory provides the means for the Internet to organize itself. As the Internet grows, so do the number of net-citizens. These citizens can each organize a small portion of the web and present it back to the rest of the population, culling out the bad and useless and keeping only the best content. The Definitive Catalog of the Web The Open Directory follows in the footsteps of some of the most important editor/contributor projects of the 20th century. Just as the Oxford English Dictionary became the definitive word on words through the efforts of volunteers, the Open Directory follows in its footsteps to become the definitive catalog of the Web. The Open Directory was founded in the spirit of the Open Source movement, and is the only major directory that is 100% free. There is not, nor will there ever be, a cost to submit a site to the directory, and/or to use the directory's data. The Open Directory data is made available for free to anyone who agrees to comply with our free use license. The Internet Brain The Open Directory is the most widely distributed data base of Web content classified by humans. Its editorial standards body of net-citizens provide the collective brain behind resource discovery on the Web. The Open Directory powers the core directory services for the Web's largest and most popular search
Amitai Givertz

Simple Spark - Web App Catalog - 0 views

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    Discover, share and enjoy web apps for your life online.
Janos Haits

http://www.score.ly/ - 9 views

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    Score.ly is the only free way to showcase online milestones and legitimate real world achievements. We make it fun, acceptable and simple for 13-83 year olds to catalog and boast about their proudest accomplishments. Connect to your social media services to share your accomplishments with the rest of your community. Then discover what your friends and the community are achieving.
Janos Haits

Keepio: manage personal belongings, share with friends - 7 views

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    The safe and easy way to catalog what you own privately or publicly, and sell or share it with your friends.
Janos Haits

La Distribution - Your own web apps. On your own space. - 17 views

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    Imagine if you were able to use your personal web server like you use your personal smartphone. Any need? Simply install an application. Productivity, Publishing, Social Networks, the catalog is growing. No config files. No FTP. No SSH. In the future we're building, every internet user will deserve a personal web server. Eventually powered by La Distribution...
Janos Haits

Favo | Smart bookmark management and collaboration - 21 views

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    Combine the power of a desktop tool like Microsoft Outlook or Google's Picasa with an online service and social network. We wanted to catalog and manage our bookmarks with a rich user experience, discover content based on our unique tastes from others who share the same discriminating taste, synchronize our favorites online with our different desktops and laptops, and share selective topics with friends, family and peers.
Janos Haits

Regator - Curated Blog Search and Discovery - 2 views

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    RWW: "Regator is a very well designed RSS reader and blog directory. Every blog listed on Regator has been categorized and approved by the editors, which has allowed them to create a very extensive catalog of high quality blogs and news sites. As we pointed out in our initial review, Regator does an especially good job at handling posts with embedded media files. The layout of the site is very distinct from other RSS readers like Google Reader, Bloglines, or Newsgator. In some ways, with the focus on categories and comments, Regator almost looks more like a blog than an RSS reader."
Amitai Givertz

Simple Spark - 0 views

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    Search web apps
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