Cocoal.icio.us: A Cocoa del.icio.us Client for Mac OS X

Cocoal.icio.us: A Cocoa del.icio.us Client for Mac OS X I can't remember where I found this, but this is a great little client for folks who use del.icio.us for bookmark management. Basically it is a client interface for your del.icio.us account. The paned window interface allows for the viewing of sites right in the application. Also it has a great search feature. I can see this being used by students to easily review sites they have gathered for research.

WorldChanging

WorldChanging: Another World Is Here Worldchanging is a multi-author web site that focuses on technology, the developing world, and solutions to problems. With the recent tragedy in South Asia the articles and posts here have been very informative and timely. The most recent post points to W. David Stephenson's list of 10 key security model elements and discusses them in terms of a warning and response system for any kind of emergency or disaster.

Where You Can Contribute to International Response Fund

redCross A quick look around this morning finds that some very popular sites such as Amazon, Apple, Google, A9, Yahoo and others have rewritten their home pages to point folks to South Asia Response Fund locations. Amazon makes it very easy with one-click giving... Update: More places to make donations...American Red Cross: donate to the International Response Fund, United States Agency for International Development, Donate to the International Response Fund, UNICEF: Support South Asia Tsunami Relief Efforts, Center for International Disaster Information

The Web and Disaster...

Today Will Richardson wrote about how information from the tsunami effected areas of the Indian Ocean is being published by not only traditional news sources, but also bloggers and how a tool such as RSS can be used to help one keep up to date with the latest information. He points to a New York Times piece which highlights some specific sites that illustrate this point. Will's post also contains a link to a Google News Feed he created using a form off of Justin Phlister's site. This form creates an RSS feed based on Google News search criteria.

While reading some of the weblogs pointed to in the Times article, I came across AlertNet. Reuters AlertNet is a humanitarian news network. It aims to keep relief professionals and the wider public up-to-date on humanitarian crises around the globe.As you can imagine, the Alertnet site is publishing quite a bit of information on the Indian Ocean earthquake.

It was originally set up as a response to the Rwanda crisis of 1994, the Reuters Foundation became interested in media reports of poor coordination between emergency relief charities on the ground. It surveyed charities on what could be done to remedy this. The conclusion was that there was a need for a service that would deliver operation-critical information to relief charities worldwide, incentivise relief charities to swap information with one another, and raise awareness of humanitarian emergencies among the general public.

AlertNet attracts upwards of three million users a year, has a network of more than three hundred contributing humanitarian organizations and its weekly email digest is received by more than 10,000 readers.

After a bit of hunting around, I also found an Alternet RSS feed from Newsisfree.

Vera Katz

A Woman of Our Times (washingtonpost.com) Katz was a refugee, born in Germany, fleeing the Nazis as a child, then walking with her family away from Nazi-occupied France through the Pyrenees to Spain, then going on to Portugal and, finally, New York.

David Broder has a nice article on our mayor and her career as her term of office ends. Vera Katz has had a very interesting life and career and Broder hits the highpoints...

The Graphing Calculator Story

The Graphing Calculator Story I was frustrated by all the wasted effort, so I decided to uncancel my small part of the project. I had been paid to do a job, and I wanted to finish it. My electronic badge still opened Apple's doors, so I just kept showing up.

Facinating story behind the classic Macintosh application, Graphing Calculator, and the guys who kept working on it and got it included on the machine even after being laid off from Apple...

Google and University Libraries...

Google Library (Google Weblog) Much of the discussion around this endeavor has focused on its effect for the largely-affluent and privileged children who go to the major universities from which the books are taken. Will they stop going to the library? Will they miss the smell of dead trees? Will they be able to do research more efficiently? With all due respect, this is the wrong group to think about. The real beneficiaries of this scanning should be the less fortunate people around the world who barely have access to a library, let alone a world-class one. Let us scan these books for them.

This post from Aaron Swartz at the Google Weblog explains some of the particulars of the agreement between Google and 5 major university libraries to digitize their entire library collections. He points out the projected timelines and at the end makes a very good point about why this matters. We have a lot of issues with copyright to deal with, but in the end what Google and the universities in the agreement are doing is making their collections available to the world. This is really pretty amazing... Combine this with initiatives such as Google Print and if you weren’t' already doing so, you really have to start to think differently about how we teach kids to access information...

Googling Libraries

Technology > Google Is Adding Major Libraries to Its Database" href="http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/14/technology/14google.html?hp&ex=1103086800&en=9d5c79b92752adff&ei=5094&partner=homepage">The New York Times > Technology > Google Is Adding Major Libraries to Its Database Google, the operator of the world's most popular Internet search service, plans to announce an agreement today with some of the nation's leading research libraries and Oxford University to begin converting their holdings into digital files that would be freely searchable over the Web...

The goal is to expand the Web beyond its current valuable, if eclectic, body of material and create a digital card catalog and searchable library for the world's books, scholarly papers and special collections...

This is pretty interesting...