Nothing and Some More

Hello world... again! Am I Ugly in Grey, or what ??

pop.ul.ar

Looking for the The Google Font? It is Catull, but found out more about the Google logo by reading the Google Font Page

Fancy reading my Looking for the Spam collection ? It's even getting multilingual

Linux, Linux, Linux, Linux... want to try it ??? Knoppix is really nice. And easy. Download, burn, reboot. Et voila, Linux is running...

RSS powered - 28/01/2003

Ca sert d'écrire et d'expliquer:France Inter va diffuser en .ogg en plus du .wma Ca veut dire que y'a pas besoin de WindowsTM pour écouter France Inter via Internet.
Douze Lunes en RSS ? c'est pour bientôt!
Tivo: putting the power of TV back into your hand
Although TiVo's spark in Southern California has yet to catch and spread, technology could change that. Josh Bernoff, a principal analyst at Forrester Research in Cambridge, Mass., who has long been bullish on the technology, maintains the public still hasn't fully grasped the concept; in fact, a Forrester survey a few months ago found that less than a third of consumers are aware of it.
When I feel down reading too much Instapundit, I read Doc and I feel much better: Vampirism and and Consummers and War and thinking about it
And Crossroads on the info highway
As back-office software operations go, Digital Data Divide's is not very cutting-edge, nor is its location on a pot-holed backstreet in Cambodia's capital. But for the disabled people who make up the bulk of the 70-person work force at this nonprofit company, it is a rare opportunity to join the global tech economy.
Their computer work goes to India to be checked for quality and is then dispatched by e-mail or courier to customers in the United States. Among their clients are Tufts University in Boston and the University of Utah, which want to put rare texts online and support the company's mission of hiring disadvantaged Cambodians.
The outsourcing venture is the first for Cambodia, a country not known for its technological capabilities, but it highlights the spread of low-tech computer work from powerhouses such as India to some of Asia's less traveled cyber highways.
Originally published as jemisa.editthispage.com/discuss/msgReader$455
28 janvier 2003