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Tuesday, April 23, 2002
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weblogs.com/0001015/images/2002/04/22/earth.gif"> I needed a testbed to expose bugs in our implementation of the MetaWeblog API, so I did an experiment I've wanted to try for some time. This new weblog tracks NY Times articles as they enter UserLand's content management system, on their way to people's desktops via the news aggregator in Radio. All these articles appear on the Times website, but they can be hard to find unless you know where to look. If the NY Times had a weblog, this is what it might look like. If it becomes popular, I might dress it up with a new template and a better address. [Scripting News]
right.
12:27:40 PM
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Dan Bricklin comments on the NY Times auto-blog. "This type of news feed, with reverse-chronological headlines, summaries, and links to articles in real-time, is good for catching up. It's different than a normal news page, sorted by what's most important, where the new stuff may be at the bottom. Breaking stories have frequent updates, and they show up as that." [Scripting News]
12:27:04 PM
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© Copyright
2003
Elmer Masters.
Last update:
4/8/2003; 10:05:11 AM.
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