Tim O’Reilly has a history of convening conversations that reshape the computer industry. If you’ve heard the term “open source software” or “web 2.0” or “the Maker movement” or “government as a platform” or “the WTF economy,” he’s had a hand in framing each of those big ideas. He is the founder, CEO, and Chairman of O’Reilly Media, and a partner at early stage venture firm O’Reilly AlphaTech Ventures (OATV). He is also on the boards of Maker Media (which was spun out from O’Reilly Media in 2012), Code for America, PeerJ, Civis Analytics, and PopVox. His book, WTF: What’s the Future and Why It’s Up to Us, was released by Harper Collins in October 2017. linkedin.com/in/timo3 https://twitter.com/timoreilly
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Jeff Rulifson
While still a student, Johns Frederick (Jeff) Rulifson designed the software for the most impressive event in computing history, the legendary “Mother of All Demos” at the Computer Society’s Fall Joint Computer Conference in which Douglas Engelbart demonstrated essentially all the fundamental elements of modern personal computing: windows, hypertext, graphics, efficient navigation and command input, video conferencing, the computer mouse, word processing, dynamic file linking, revision control, and a collaborative real-time editor. Rulifson’s subsequent career as a computer scientist is an unbroken series of significant contributions in artificial intelligence, office information systems, research, standards, and engineering management. He has advanced the computer art at Stanford Research Institute’s Augmentation Research…
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jrnl
The jrnl project is an effort to make online recorded dialogue more powerful through giving the end user richer interactivity with their information, using the WordPress platform as the place to bootstrap from. Longer Description The project is a passion project to implement specific capabilities to allow a user to access and understand a single or a collection of blogs. Relevance to Doug Engelbart’s Work (this section features items from Engelbartian Capabilities with additions added below, if any) A Journal Advanced Linking High Resolution Linking (without pre-anchors – in progress) Implicit Link (active; select text and point to the blue dot) Limited: ‘Basic ‘Hyper’ Characteristics’ since these characteristics are advanced…
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Search Results Theme for finding own articles (primarily)
This is what I was talking about during our previous meeting. Simple search results for the user to find an article they wrote and quickly copy a link or as citation to add to what they are currently writing, with ability to refine search results based on what tags and categories are used around the keyword.
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Frode’s dream of rich article listing
I will be mocking up something to support the issue of how to find the right article in ones own blog world.
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Thursday 18th of October call
We need to focus more on what we can do with the blue dot menu and what we need to re-code and what effort that will be. I had to leave early which was a shame but Marc-Antoine and Robert joined us. We will also need to design all the functionality we feel should be done: Copy As Citation Shane is using Chris’ code for this. What effort is left? Also, can we simply add to the Copy command so it’s always copied as citation with high resolution addressing?… Dynamic List View Chris would like to build a powerful list view for queries. Frode would like this as well but…
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fast dynamic views & dynamic displays
Based on our previous meeting, thinking and talking with Chris, I have noted down an issue of what we are referring to as a rich, dynamic view of blog articles: I am convinced that in order for the symbol manipulation Doug Engelbart spoke so highly off to be realised, we will have to developed much richer visual authoring and reading environments, both in terms of the visual presentation and the speed and smoothness of interaction. For the jrnl project we have our priorities and here are some further thoughts based on our last group chat: Visually Rich I feel that it will be important to use a visually bigger, wider…
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10/16/2018: Team meeting
Participants Frode Hegland Gyuri Lajos Shane Gibson Christopher Gutteridge Notes There were some issues with connectivity, but Gyuri and I had a follow-up conversation where we outlined his requirements for the integration with WordPress.org websites and MindGraph.co.
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People
It would be great when typing in someone’s name who is also a blogger, at least on the same blog, to have a quick and easy way to link them to their profile.
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Blue Dot
We now have a designed blue dot menu here on jrnl.global with a rudimentary Flow function which the guys are going to improve and then put the code into Shane’s repository at https://github.com/swalkergibson/blue-dot