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All The News



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Below you see news headlines that are imported from other sites that I visit regularly. It uses the <Syndicate> macro to retrieve these headlines. Slashdot and Freshmeat are RSS v0.9 feeds, Salon and Wired are RSS v0.91 feeds, W3C and Kuro5hin are RSS v1.0 feeds and Microsoft has RSS v2.0 feeds.

Keep your mouse lingering over a link and you might see a longer description about the link (depending on the RSS feed).

For more information about the syntax of the <Syndicate> macro see Help On Macros.

You can also view an aggregation of these feeds at All The News/Aggregation.

News for nerds, stuff that matters
First GNOME Census Results
Alternatives To Paypal's Virtual Credit Card Service?
Reading Terrorists' Minds About Imminent Attack
China Pushes Real Name System For Online Games
'I've Fallen and I Can't Get Up!' v2.0
Microsoft Tech Can Deblur Images Automatically
Antarctic Experiment Finds Puzzling Distribution of Cosmic Rays
Broadway Musicians Replaced With Synthesizers
Budapest Panorama, at 70GP, Now the World's Largest Digital Photo
Mars Rover Spirit May Never Wake From Deep Sleep
Silent, Easily Made Android Rootkit Released At DefCon
Average Cellphone Data Usage Is 145.8 MB Per Month
TI Calculator DRM Defeated
Who Is Downloading the Torrented Facebook Files?
Fossil Fuel Subsidies Dwarf Support For Renewables
Search Slashdot:

last update: August 1, 2010 12:02
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freshmeat.net announcements (Global)

last update: March 14, 2009 16:04
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Wired Top Stories
Biometric and Other Locks Fail to Foil Hackers at DefCon
Do Not Call List Tops 200 Million, Some Still Ignore It
Analysis: Google Stumbles, Again, With China Outage Report
American iPad Users Pay Among the Highest for Data Worldwide
Physicists Dream Up the Antilaser
Cheaper, Better Satellites Made From Cellphones and Toys
DIY Wearable Computer Turns You Into a Cyborg
WikiLeaks Posts Mysterious 'Insurance' File
Sharp Shooting Sony Cam Guides You, Even When Lost
Former NSA Director: Hold Nations Responsible for Cyberattacks, Period
Porn Industry Aroused by FaceTime Possibilities
iPad Popular With Aviation Crowd
Spotify Denies Reported Setbacks to U.S. Launch
Anonymous Sources Delay Speculated Facebook IPO Again, To 2012
What You Want: Flickr Creator Spins Addictive New Web Service
Pakistanis Ask: Drones? What Drones?
July 30, 1935: Penguins Invade Britain, Readers Rejoice
Found: The Future of In-Flight Entertainment
Found Contest: Imagine the Future of Taco Trucks
Clive Thompson on the Death of the Phone Call
Alt Text: Library of Congress Rulings That Could Have Been
WikiLeaks Suspect's YouTube Videos Raised 'Red Flag' in 2008
Gallery: How to Build an Earthquake-Resistant Bridge
Top U.S. Officer: WikiLeaks Has 'Blood on Its Hands'
Android App's Data Collection Raises Mobile-Security Questions
Controlling Soot Might Quickly Reverse a Century of Global Warming
Genome Surprise: Guinea Pigs Have Ebola!
Nexus One Phone Rides a Rocket Up 28,000 Feet
Twitter Convert Kanye West Changes His Rap
Brammo Builds Another Sweet Electric Race Bike

last update: August 1, 2010 09:57
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World Wide Web Consortium - Web Standards

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  W3C Technical Plenary Week Participants to Address HTML 5 and Other Hot Topics  
   2009-10-06: The W3C community convenes next month in Santa Clara, California for Technical Plenary Week (TPAC) 2009, this year's edition of an annual week-long opportunity for W3C group participants to share news of progress and to address hot-button technical issues face-to-face, including the future of HTML 5, privacy challenges in an era of powerful Web Applications, and how governments are using the Web to increase transparency and accountability. This year, the Internet Society (ISOC), as part of its mission to support the development of open standards, will sponsor TPAC 2009 and actively participate in the event. In addition to ISOC representatives, participants from other standards development organizations will join in discussion about the health of the "Internet Ecosystem" during the Plenary Day. As previously announced, W3C invites the public to a Developer Gathering on 5 November. In addition, the press are invited to attend a Media Breakfast on 3 November from 7:30-8:30am (Pacific Time) for presentations on some of the key topics W3C will cover during the week. Read the press release and learn more about TPAC 2009. (Permalink)
  W3C Patent Advisory Group Recommends Continuing Work on "Widgets 1.0: Update"  
   2009-10-08: A Patent Advisory Group (PAG) for the Web Applications Working Group published its report, which suggests that W3C should continue the work on the Widgets 1.0: Updates Specification. W3C launched the PAG when Apple Computer, Inc excluded patent claims from the W3C Royalty-Free licensing commitment. The Group concluded that the US Patent Number 5,764,992 is considered not essential according to Section 8 of the W3C Patent Policy, and provided a set of Recommendations to the Web Applications Working Group. (Permalink)
  Last Call: Widgets 1.0: Widget URIs  
   2009-10-08: The Web Applications Working Group has published a Last Call Working Draft of Widgets 1.0: Widget URIs. Resources inside a widget package are identified and located using a method that is specific to widgets technology. Widget URIs reflect this by providing these specific locators with their own syntax so that resources in widget packages can be readily identified. Comments are welcome through 10 November. Learn more about the Rich Web Client Activity. (Permalink)
  Incubator Group Report: Product Modelling using Semantic Web Technologies  
   2009-10-08: The Product Modelling Incubator Group has published their final report. The mission of the Incubator Group was to enable the use of the (Semantic) Web for Product Modelling (PM): the definition, storage, exchange and sharing of product data. Product data is information about the structure and behaviour of things that are realized in industrial processes. So principally product data is about things that are manmade, but it can also be about things in the natural world that interact with those industrial processes and/or its resulting products. The report describes the role and scope of product data, and initial work in two technical areas (1) quantities, units, and scales; and (2) product structure - the decomposition of wholes in parts and the interconnection relationships between these parts. This publication is part of the Incubator Activity, a forum where W3C Members can innovate and experiment. This work is not on the W3C standards track. (Permalink)
 
  Learn Mobile Web Design With W3C MWI Experts (Course Begins 12 October)  
   2009-10-06: The third and possibly final run of the successful online training course An Introduction to W3C Mobile Web Best Practices is due to start on Monday, 12 October. Participants work at their own pace at times to suit them throughout the 9-week course. The program is well-suited to developers with experience of desktop design and production who wish to apply their HTML and CSS skills to the mobile environment. A mixture of lectures and assignments provide hands-on practical experience in using W3C's Mobile Web Best Practices. Participants will work with both W3C instructors and peers who can share experiences about the real-world challenges of mobile Web design.
  Widgets 1.0: View Modes Media Feature First Draft Published  
   2009-10-06: The Web Applications Working Group has published the First Public Working Draft of Widgets 1.0: View Modes Media Feature. This specification is part of the Widgets 1.0 family of specifications. It introduces a feature that allows designers to specify different presentations according to "view modes" (e.g., when a widget is running like any other application, when it is running without "chrome," or when occupying all of the screen). Learn more about the Rich Web Client Activity. (Permalink)
  Last Call: Mobile Web Application Best Practices; Guidelines for Web Content Transformation Proxies 1.0  
   2009-10-06: The Mobile Web Best Practices Working Group has published two Last Call Working Drafts: Mobile Web Application Best Practices and Guidelines for Web Content Transformation Proxies 1.0. The former describes Best Practices for the development and delivery of Web applications on mobile devices. The recommendations expand upon statements made in the Mobile Web Best Practices, especially those that relate to the exploitation of device capabilities and awareness of the delivery context. The latter document provides guidance to implementers of Content Transformation proxies as to whether and how to transform Web content. Content Transformation proxies alter requests sent by user agents to servers and responses returned by servers so that the appearance, structure or control flow of Web applications are modified. Content Transformation proxies are mostly used to convert Web sites designed for desktop computers to a form suitable for mobile devices. Comments on both documents welcome through 6 November. Learn more about the Mobile Web Initiative. (Permalink)
  Last Call: A MathML for CSS profile  
   2009-10-06: The Math Working Group has published a Last Call Working Draft of A MathML for CSS profile. This document describes a profile of MathML 3.0 that could be used to capture structure of mathematical formulae in the way suitable for further CSS formatting. This profile is expected to facilitate adoption of MathML in web browsers and CSS formatters, allowing them to reuse existing CSS visual formatting model, enhanced with a few mathematics-oriented extensions, for rendering of the layout schemata of presentational MathML. Learn more about the W3C Math Activity. (Permalink)
  Government, Business And Academia Experts To Discuss Financial Data On The Web at W3C-XBRL Workshop  
   2009-10-05: W3C and XBRL International, Inc. are co-sponsoring a Workshop on Improving Access to Financial Data on the Web today and tomorrow, hosted at the offices of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) in Arlington, Virginia (USA). The main goal of the Workshop is to identify opportunities and challenges for improving access to financial data on the Web. Participants will discuss how Extensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) and related XML data standards can best be utilized, and how using XBRL to provide financial data via the Web relates to broader opportunities for Semantic Web technologies. More than 15 speakers and 100 participants will discuss topics such as interoperability and harmonization of standard data formats and the impact of the increased transparency on the economy and society as a whole. For more information, see the Program Agenda and Media Advisory. Learn more about the Semantic Web Activity. (Permalink)
 
  W3C Invites Implementation of Six Rule Interchange Format (RIF) Candidate Recommendations  
   2009-10-01: The Rule Interchange Format (RIF) Working Group has published six Candidate Recommendations. Together, they allow systems using a variety of rule languages and rule-based technologies to interoperate with each other and with Semantic Web technologies.
  SVG Color 1.2 Language, Primer First Drafts Published  
   2009-10-01: The SVG Working Group has published First Public Working Drafts of SVG Color 1.2, Part 2: Language and SVG Color 1.2, Part 1: Primer. The former defines features of the Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) Language that are specifically for color-managed environments, including document interchange, publishing, and high-quality display. SVG Color extends the control of color, relative to SVG Tiny 1.2, in three ways. Firstly by adding an additional color space for interpolation and compositing; this means that colors are no longer constrained to the sRGB gamut. Secondly by extending the syntax for Paint, thus allowing colors to be specified as calibrated (ICC and named) and uncalibrated ('device') color. Thirdly, it mandates the color management of embedded images. The Primer explains the technical background and gives guidelines on how to use the SVG Color specification with SVG 1.2 Tiny and SVG 1.2 Full modules. Learn more about the Graphics Activity. (Permalink)
  W3C Talks in October  
   2009-10-01: Browse W3C presentations and events also available as an RSS channel. (Permalink)
  XSL-FO 2.0 First Draft Published  
   2009-09-29: The XSL-FO subgroup of the XSL Working Group has published a First Public Working Draft of Design Notes for Extensible Stylesheet Language (XSL) 2.0, which contains initial and early work on XSL-FO 2.0. XSL-FO defines an XML vocabulary for formatting and layout of XML documents; use XSLT to transform documents into XSL-FO for on-screen or paper formatting, for example into PDF. Public comments are requested, both from users and implementors of XSL 1.x and from people who have been waiting for new features before using XSL-FO. Lean more about XML. (Permalink)
  WebSimpleDB API First Draft Published  
   2009-09-29: The Web Applications Working Group has published the First Public Working Draft of WebSimpleDB API. User agents need to store large numbers of objects locally in order to satisfy off-line data requirements of Web applications. Whereas the Web Storage specification is useful for storing pairs of keys and their corresponding values, it does not provide in-order retrieval of keys, efficient searching over values, or storage of duplicate values for a key. The new WebSimpleDB API specification provides a concrete API to perform advanced key-value data management that is at the heart of most sophisticated query processors. It does so by using transactional databases to store keys and their corresponding values. Learn more about the Rich Web Client Activity. (Permalink)
 
  W3C Invites Implementations of Timed Text (TT) Authoring Format 1.0 - Distribution Format Exchange Profile (DFXP)  
   2009-09-24: The Timed Text Working Group invites implementation of the Candidate Recommendation of Timed Text (TT) Authoring Format 1.0 - Distribution Format Exchange Profile (DFXP), used to represent timed text media for the purpose of interchange among authoring systems. Timed text is textual information that is intrinsically or extrinsically associated with timing information. The specification provides a standardized representation of a particular subset of textual information with which stylistic, layout, and timing semantics are associated by an author or an authoring system for the purpose of interchange and potential presentation. Learn more about the Video in the Web Activity. (Permalink)
  Last Call: Mathematical Markup Language (MathML) Version 3.0  
   2009-09-24: The Math Working Group has published a Last Call Working Draft of Mathematical Markup Language (MathML) Version 3.0. MathML is an XML application for describing mathematical notation and capturing both its structure and content. The goal of MathML is to enable mathematics to be served, received, and processed on the World Wide Web, just as HTML has enabled this functionality for text. Comments are welcome through 11 November. Learn more about the Math Activity. (Permalink)
  Five Web Services Drafts Updated  
   2009-09-24: The Web Services Resource Access Working Group published updates to five Working Drafts: Web Services Enumeration (WS-Enumeration), Web Services Eventing (WS-Eventing), Web Services Resource Transfer (WS-RT), Web Services Transfer (WS-Transfer), and Web Services Metadata Exchange (WS-MetadataExchange). The first describes a general SOAP-based protocol for enumerating a sequence of XML elements that is suitable for traversing logs, message queues, or other linear information models. The second describes a protocol that allows Web services to subscribe to or accept subscriptions for event notification. The third defines extensions to WS-Transfer that deal primarily with fragment-based access to resources to satisfy the common requirements of WS-ResourceFramework and WS-Management. The fourth describes a general SOAP-based protocol for accessing XML representations of Web service-based resources. The fifth defines how metadata associated with a Web service endpoint can be represented as resources, how metadata can be embedded in endpoint references, and how metadata could be retrieved from a Web service endpoint. Learn more about the Web Services Activity. (Permalink)
  OWL 2 is a Proposed Recommendation  
   2009-09-22: With more than a dozen implementations of OWL 2 reported, the OWL Working Group has published its OWL 2 Web Ontology Language as a Proposed Recommendation. An ontology is a structured set of terms that a particular community uses for organizing data, such as "title", "author", and "ISBN" for data about books. OWL 2 is a compatible extension to OWL 1, providing additional features for people using ontologies. The OWL 2 document set contains 13 documents, of which 4 are instructional: overview , primer, new features and rationale, and quick reference. The rdf:PlainLiteral datatype, developed for use by OWL 2 and RIF, is also a Proposed Recommendation. Learn more about the Semantic Web. (Permalink)
  W3C Organizes Workshop on Access Control Application Scenarios  
   2009-09-22: W3C invites people to participate in a Workshop on Access Control Application Scenarios on 17-18 November 2009 in Luxembourg. This Workshop is intended to explore evolving application scenarios for access control technologies, such as XACML. Results from a number of recent European research projects in the grid, cloud computing, and privacy areas show overlapping use cases for these technologies that extend beyond classical intra-enterprise applications. The Workshop, co-financed by the European Commission 7th framework program via the PrimeLife project, is free of charge and open to anyone, subject to review of their statement of interest and space availability. Position papers are due 23 October. See the call for participation for more information. Learn more about the Privacy Activity. (Permalink)
 
  W3C Launches Provenance Incubator Group  
   2009-09-22: W3C is pleased to announce the creation of the Provenance Incubator Group, whose mission is to provide a state-of-the art understanding and develop a roadmap in the area of provenance for Semantic Web technologies, development, and possible standardization. The group will be chaired by Yolanda Gil. The following W3C Members have sponsored the charter for this group: Renssealaer Polytechnic Institute, Talis Information Limited, University of Manchester, University of Southampton, University of Southern California Information Sciences Institute (USC / ISI), and Vrije Universiteit. Read more about the Incubator Activity, an initiative to foster development of emerging Web-related technologies. Incubator Activity work is not on the W3C standards track. (Permalink)

last update: October 14, 2009 08:23
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Ofcom prepares to open up on emissions
Aussie broadband is slower than a slow thing in a slow town
Reg Hardware Reviews Digest
iPhone 4: And now we are 3 (Mobile)
Sony Bravia KDL-32NX503 32in LCD TV
Disney throws $763m at social gaming
Social-engineering contest reveals secret BP info
'Death to browsers!' cries Apple mobile-app patent
Microsoft gets dirty with Gmail cloud cash fight
RIM answers Apple iPad with...The BlackPad*
AMD, GlobalFoundries, and the Intel gap
Boffins authenticate Apple 'Antennagate'
MS preps emergency patch for Windows shortcut peril
Microsoft cries foul on Yahoo!-Google Japan deal
3D Dot Game Heroes
Microsoft Street Slide: Street View done properly
Futurologist defends 'malevolent dust' warning
Unisys floats mainframe cloud
BlueArc gets extra greenbacks
US law to neuter libel tourism
UK supermarket starts contactless payments
Microsoft should starve on radical penguin diet
Mozy insists: It's not a bug...
Delegate hacks into Black Hat streaming video
Czechs toast Bud-beating beer win
Xiotech forging secret Katana project
Cyber Security Challenge winner announced
TalkTalk talks up SIM only mobile deals
UK.gov sticks to IE 6 cos it's more 'cost effective', innit
T-Mobile UK pumps out the iPhone 4
Polaroid 300 instant print camera
NatWest dumps O2 Money
YouTube ups video time limit
Alleged expenses fiddlers to face justice
Nude trampolinist bounces free from court
Nexus One phone rockets to 28,000ft
UK.gov drops £6m on Google
Fake Firefox update used to sling scareware
Happy Sysadmin Day!
Chaos surrounds New Zealand iPhone 4 day
Nvidia and HPC's second act
French operator pooh-poohs iOS4
Beware the blizzard of torrents of Starcraft 2
Street View spooked by 10 Rillington Place?
Gaming sites bet on merger
Hitachi details unified management
Data.gov.uk chief admits transparency concerns
Pioneer BDP-330 Blu-ray player
Google site fools interwebs into China blockage scare
'Suspicious' Android wallpaper app nabs user data

last update: August 1, 2010 11:41
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Wi-Fi Networking News
Clearwire Announces Expansion Plans
RyanAir Puts Chatter on 20 Planes...Last Month
Apple Moves to Simultaneous Dual Band Wi-Fi
Hey, What Happened to Those Other Sites?
New Eye-Fi Cards Can Upload Video, Too
New Threaded, Federated Comments
Cablevision's Wi-Fi a Stunt?
Migration of Hosting Platform
In-Flight Plans Start to Take Off
High-Fi News: Alaska Airlines Launches Trial; Noonan Takes Flight of Wi-Fi Optimism
Meraki Goes All In: 802.11n Triple Radio Outdoor Node
All Wi-Fi Networks Would Need To Keep Records under New Law
Delta Backtracks on Its Wi-Fi Rollout Pace
AirTight Plays Up WPA Crack Threat
Southwest Starts In-Flight Trial Monday

last update: March 8, 2009 02:41
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