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Saved by 562 people (-341 private), first by anonymouse user on 2006-03-02
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Mihai from the Google Reader team just posted some interesting data about observed namespaces across all feeds tracked in their system. The namespace data provides information not only about popular ways of expressing data, but also gives insight into blog software market share within a sample such as Google Reader subscriptions.
Dublin Core as the top namespace is not too surprising. What jumps out is the number of feeds using the default configuration on a variety of platforms, giving a glance into market share.
- Blogger - 12%
- FeedBurner - 4%
- Windows Live Spaces - 4%
- LiveJournal - 2.5%
Technorati and Google Calendar feeds appear to have equal subscription numbers among gReader users. Feedster and PubSub subscriptions each have about 1/4 of the popularity as Technorati.
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- Oscar Wilde
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ỷ giá bình quân liên ngân hàng ngày 3/1/2007 do NHNN công bố là 1USD là 16.096,00VNĐ. Tuy nhiên, tỷ giá giao dịch của các ngân hàng thương mại niêm yết trên trang web của NHNN chỉ ở mức 16.035 mua vào và 16.055 bán ra.
Trong khi đó, mức giá do Ngân hàng Ngoại thươ
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One way to do that is to add some small gadgets that display search results for queries related to your site. You can now add a book bar, a news bar, a video bar or a map. I added a news bar at the bottom of the page: it shows the latest news about Google, it occupies a small amount of space, it's always up-to-date and hopefully displays relevant news. The downsides are that the widget increases loading time and the animations might become annoying.
It would be interesting if Google combined these solutions with Related Links, that shows news, videos relevant for a page. For my news bar, the widget could shows news about Google related to the topic of the page.
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- Abraham Lincoln
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- Abraham Lincoln >
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- Robert Anton Wilson
- An English Professor
- Dwight D. Eisenhower
- Jack London
- George Jean Nathan
- Peter Ustinov
- Colette
- Wilson Mizner
- Thomas Jefferson
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I recently went down memory lane and revisited an article I had written on Good to Great Recruiting. One of the key chapters in this book was about great leadership, and it got me thinking whether this same model applied to great recruiting leaders. I'll be having some conversations and exploring this over the next few posts. Here's an excerpt from the article discussing Level 5 leadership:
Collins describes five levels of leadership, in which the very top level (Level 5 Leadership) — the level which drives the greatest sustained results — is not the highly visible Lee Iacocca or Jack Welch CEO we usually associate with greatness. While highly ambitious, Level 5 leaders sacrifice their own profiles and channel their energies into ambition for their organizations. They blend humility and modesty instead of personal flair, often deflecting any talk of their own responsibility for the company's success and instead pointing to their great teams, market conditions, or even dumb luck.
Most importantly, Level 5 CEOs set up their organizations for continued success after they leave. There is less likely to be a crash associated with the loss of a dominant or defining personality. They also do a much better job of surrounding themselves with future leaders, whereas good or mediocre companies often followed a "genius with a thousand helpers" model.
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on 2009-10-08 by benpbenp
hi ppls
on 2009-10-09 by belgarion270
And God said, Let randomness fart!
on 2009-10-10 by ovetto
i love tofu, i love sticky notes
on 2009-10-14 by erella
i forgot how much fun igoogle is.
on 2009-10-15 by ironblood
lol
on 2009-10-15 by ironblood
lol
on 2009-10-15 by tvlachak
iGoogle is the best way to organize all the Google Services under one roof!
on 2009-10-16 by erella
there are way more cool gadgets and widgets
on 2009-10-23 by devine123
wat
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Weather
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on 2008-04-14 by leapoff2
hello
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- Bertrand Russell
- Robert Heinlein
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- Bertrand Russell
- Robert Heinlein
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First, the bad news: No, Google is not announcing a business wiki or presentation product at the Office 2.0 conference. However, I did get a demo of a few new features in Google's spreadsheet.
First, there's a new autofill function. If you enter a series of consecutive numbers, it will extend the series. OK, yawn. But, using data provided by the old Google Sets experiment, the spreadsheet will automatically fill in a row or column with items it thinks match your selection if they're not in an obvious sequence. For example, highlight a name of a state, press Ctrl (on a PC) and drag down a few cells, and the spreadsheet will fill in other states. You can also try a state of mind (e.g., "happy") to get other emotions. Or names. The more items you select before you control-drag, the more likely Google is to fill in items you expect, as opposed to wild guesses.
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Advertising Programs - Business Solutions - Privacy Policy - Help - About Google - Mobile
©2007 Google
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on 2009-10-08 by wills1
yay it has youtube
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Public Comment
on 2007-06-13 by andiod69
on 2008-05-31 by awflasher
on 2009-06-26 by youngredrabbit
on 2009-10-08 by benpbenp
on 2009-10-19 by soulfire78