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<linkhref="https://www.blogger.com/atom/3191291/113761645059106145"rel="service.edit"title="AJAXian Site Comparison with Alexa"type="application/atom+xml"/>
<author>
<name>Brad GNUberg</name>
</author>
<issued>2006-01-18T12:33:00-08:00</issued>
<modified>2006-01-18T20:34:10Z</modified>
<created>2006-01-18T20:34:10Z</created>
<linkhref="http://codinginparadise.org/weblog/2006/01/ajaxian-site-comparison-with-alexa.html"rel="alternate"title="AJAXian Site Comparison with Alexa"type="text/html"/>
<divxmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">My old cohorts with BaseSystem and OpenPortal, Christoper Tse, Paolo de Dios, and Ken Rossi of Liquid Orb Media have just shipped their software and announced their company. The company is named Civil Engines, and the software is called Civil Netizen:
Civil Netizen provides a useful, secure way to easily transfer large files and groups of files between people on the Internet, getting past FTP</div>
<linkhref="https://www.blogger.com/atom/3191291/113756743174780868"rel="service.edit"title="Offline Access in AJAX Applications"type="application/atom+xml"/>
<author>
<name>Brad GNUberg</name>
</author>
<issued>2006-01-17T22:56:00-08:00</issued>
<modified>2006-01-18T19:45:28Z</modified>
<created>2006-01-18T06:57:11Z</created>
<linkhref="http://codinginparadise.org/weblog/2006/01/offline-access-in-ajax-applications.html"rel="alternate"title="Offline Access in AJAX Applications"type="text/html"/>
<divxmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">Update: Julien reports that he's not actually using AMASS in his offline work, but was inspired by it. He rolled his own access to Flash's storage capabilities using ExternalInterface, but he should be aware of the reliability and performance issues with ExternalInterface (I tried to paste 250K of text into the Wiki and the browser locked up for a long period of time as it tried to pass the data</div>
<divxmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">Man, what an amazing event! We had a post-Mash Pit dinner and party at Lonely Palm.
Here's some more info about the three projects that were produced at the end of the day.
The first one was called Whuffie Tracker; the idea there was to produce a single site that could take your list of blogs and online sites, query other remote sites like Technorati and Flickr, and tell you who is talking about</div>
<divxmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">It's demo time at Mash Pit. Everyone is furiously coding, but the clock is almost over. We'll have three demos. I'll try to blog them as people give them.</div>
<divxmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">We're hacking away, very intensely! No time to post! Just 30 more minutes till we have to be done, at 5:15 PM. Nothing like a hard deadline to force you to make hard decisions.</div>
<divxmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">People are doing intros, saying what their skills are and what they are interested in.
We had a big brainstorming session in the morning. The goal was to focus on ideas independent of technology, to force us to focus on whether something is relevant rather than just technologically interesting.
We broke for lunch, sponsored by Ning.
We've formed three groups that are working independently now.</div>
<divxmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">Mash Pit is starting now, Chris is talking. We've got a full house of hackers, programmers, thinkers, and open source folks.
The goal today is to somehow make the work people have been doing with Web 2.0 relevant for normal folks.
We're doing introductions and introducing people to the coworking space. Thanks to Chris for setting up Mash Pit.
We should be lazy today, try to reuse as much</div>