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Archive for the 'Websites' Category

Googlebombing ‘failure’

Posted by Marissa Mayer, Director of Consumer Web Products

If you do a Google search on the word [failure] or the phrase [miserable failure], the top result is currently the White House’s official biographical page for President Bush. We’ve received some complaints recently from users who assume that this reflects a political bias on our part. I’d like to explain how these results come up in order to allay these concerns.

Google’s search results are generated by computer programs that rank web pages in large part by examining the number and relative popularity of the sites that link to them. By using a practice called googlebombing, however, determined pranksters can occasionally produce odd results. In this case, a number of webmasters use the phrases [failure] and [miserable failure] to describe and link to President Bush’s website, thus pushing it to the top of searches for those phrases. We don’t condone the practice of googlebombing, or any other action that seeks to affect the integrity of our search results, but we’re also reluctant to alter our results by hand in order to prevent such items from showing up. Pranks like this may be distracting to some, but they don’t affect the overall quality of our search service, whose objectivity, as always, remains the core of our mission.

“A dead simple AJAX timesheet app”

Loggr

Schedule incoming phone calls with the Popularity Dailer

Feel left out in a room full of people talking into their cell phones instead of to each other? The Popularity Dialer schedules recordings to call your cell phone at a predetermined time to give the impression that you too are "in demand."

The recordings are hilarious - and pretty realistic! - one-sided conversations with a male or female "friend" or your "boss" timed just so that you’d respond in kind. Ok fine, we’re not suggesting that you actually use this to seem more popular, but it could be just the thing to escape a bad date or drawn-out meeting. "Sorry, gotta take this!" - Gina Trapani

The Popularity Dialer [via kottke.org]

From lifehacker

Simile

SIMILE is a joint project conducted by the MIT Libraries and MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. SIMILE seeks to enhance inter-operability among digital assets, schemata/vocabularies/ontologies, metadata, and services. A key challenge is that the collections which must inter-operate are often distributed across individual, community, and institutional stores. We seek to be able to provide end-user services by drawing upon the assets, schemata/vocabularies/ontologies, and metadata held in such stores.

SIMILE will leverage and extend DSpace, enhancing its support for arbitrary schemata and metadata, primarily though the application of RDF and semantic web techniques. The project also aims to implement a digital asset dissemination architecture based upon web standards. The dissemination architecture will provide a mechanism to add useful “views” to a particular digital artifact (i.e. asset, schema, or metadata instance), and bind those views to consuming services.

To guide the SIMILE effort we will focus on well-defined, real-world use cases in the libraries domain. Since parallel work is underway to deploy DSpace at a number of leading research libraries, we hope that such an approach will lead to a powerful deployment channel through which the utility and readiness of semantic web tools and techniques can be compellingly demonstrated in a visible and global community.

The SIMILE Project and its members are fully committed to the open source principles of software distribution and open development and for this reason, it releases the created intellectual property (both software and reports) under a BSD-style license. The SIMILE Project team members gladly welcome community efforts and would particularly like to recognize SIMILE’s contributors.

Check out some of the cool projects (including Exhibit and Timeline)

http://simile.mit.edu/

Timeline

Timeline is a DHTML-based AJAXy widget for visualizing time-based events. It is like Google Maps for time-based information. Below is a live example that you can play with. Pan the timeline by dragging it horizontally.

Timeline website

Exhibit

Exhibit is a lightweight structured data publishing framework that lets you create web pages with support for sorting, filtering, and rich visualizations by writing only HTML and optionally some CSS and Javascript code.

It’s like Google Maps and Timeline, but for structured data normally published through database-backed web sites. Exhibit essentially removes the need for a database or a server side web application. Its Javascript-based engine makes it easy for everyone who has a little bit of knowledge of HTML and small data sets to share them with the world and let people easily interact with them.

Exhibit website

Create your own icon at the Tiny Icon Factory

tiny_icon.png

Make your own wee little icon with the Tiny Icon Factory, a site where you can also browse through tens of thousands other tiny little icons.

You can use tiny icons in a variety of ways; on a website, blog, etc. And there’s SO many here at the Tiny Icon Factory that it’s hard to walk away just choosing a few.— Wendy Boswell

FooPlot: Online Graphing Calculator

Check it out at FooPlot.com

Find local deals with BidNearBy

Find and compare deals from local stores, Craigslist, eBay, Amazon, and more with BidNearBy.com, a Google maps mashup.

Here’s how it works: just type in your zip code (they’ve already geo-tagged you via your IP address, but it’s not absolutely perfect), then type in what you’re looking for. BidNearBy then will retrieve all the corresponding results from your area within a maximum 200-mile radius, so you can see exactly how well you might fare by keeping it local, or by going online.

Send Anonymous Text Messages

I can think of a few good uses of this…

http://www.blog.owaysweet.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/04/anontxt.pngEver want to text someone anonymously? Hit up AnonTxt and just enter in an alias, a subject, and the message itself, and it’ll be quickly sped to the cellphone number of your choosing.

Of course, the message appends "anontxt" to the sender’s name, so the recipient knows where it’s from. So if you really want to spoof someone’s phone—say to make your co-worker think your boss is flirting with her—you’ll have to look elsewhere. And you can contact anontxt to block your number if someone is pranking you repeatedly. – Jason Chen

Product Page [Anontxt - Thanks Natas]

From Gizmodo

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