A web of web things created, touched, or seen by Chris Casciano of Place Name Here.
Dr. Moira Gunn speaks with William Gibson, author of the books "Neuromancer" and "Spook Country," about where we are headed in this post-internet age.
In the fall of 2004, indie filmmaker Patrick O'Brien noticed an involuntary shaking in his legs. It wasn't until May 2005 that the cause of the shaking was officially diagnosed as Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS, better known as Lou Gehrig's disease).
Seattle police believe a missing father was a victim of a random crime or took off after he didn't make it home to bake Valentine's Day cookies with his 4-year-old daughter.
If you follow the Rangers, you're sure to have read Journal News beat writer Sam Weinman's blog, Ranger Report. Weinman is usually the one asking the questions, but we had the opportunity to turn the tables on him.
Nate Weaver (Wevah) of the Camino development team gets interviewed in this 6th part of an ongoing series.
Nate Weaver (Wevah) of the Camino development team gets interviewed in this 6th part of an ongoing series.
The microformats movement was officially launched with the unveiling of the Microformats.org website one year ago at Supernova 2005. At that time, Knowledge@Wharton spoke with Tantek Ãelik, one of the founders of Microformats.org, about his vision for a more flexible worldwide web with content that can be easily interpreted, collected, and repurposed for other applications.
An interview with designer and illustrator (and former co-conspirator) Sheldon Bryan
There's a language used by kids for instant and text messaging, and it's a lot more complicated than L-O-L for "laughing out loud." While it can be used as an online shorthand to be more efficient when communicating, it can also disguise inappropriate conversations.
There's a language used by kids for instant and text messaging, and it's a lot more complicated than L-O-L for "laughing out loud." While it can be used as an online shorthand to be more efficient when communicating, it can also disguise inappropriate conversations.
Allan Odgaard has written a number of applications and utilities in his time as a programmer. He's written demos for the C64 and calendar apps for the Amiga. He even wrote a nifty MP3 player called MusicMate. But that's...