<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Netvouz / emmineb / tag / script</title>
<link>http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb/tag/script?feed=rss</link>
<description>emmineb&#39;s bookmarks tagged &quot;script&quot; on Netvouz</description>
<item><title>How to Write More Clearly, Think More Clearly, and Learn Complex Material More Easily</title>
<link>http://www.ai.uga.edu/mc/WriteThinkLearn_files/frame.htm</link>
<description>Michael A. Covington Artificial Intelligence Center The University of Georgia. (Html slide presentation)</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Wed, 01 Nov 2006 19:12:48 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>How to Write Screenplays. Badly.</title>
<link>http://jerslater.blogspot.com/</link>
<description></description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Thu, 13 Jul 2006 13:40:36 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>Le BaRBeRy v 1.0: Dictionnaire CoRHuPOP (Cognitivo-Rapo-Humoristico-Poético-Oulipo-Psychanalytique)</title>
<link>http://www.barbery.net/lebarbery/index.htm</link>
<description>L&#39;idée de la barberysation (décomposition monophonématique) m&#39;est venue en 1995 en écoutant MC Solaar, un matin à 6h tandis que je me rendais au fort de mon service militaire.  En 2001, Olivier Gillet, une des personnes les plus talentueuses que j&#39;aie jamais rencontrée, a développé pour moi cette première version. C&#39;est à lui que revient la fabuleuse idée de la visualisation en paon, trouvée en regardant le plafond de la Samaritaine. La version 2 doit, par exemple, ajouter une dimension sémantique (dictionnaire de synonymes hiérarchisé, thesaurus) à la simple grille phonético-orthographique de la v1.</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Fri, 09 Feb 2007 09:23:47 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>Lessons From the Science of Nothing At All</title>
<link>http://www.dreamsongs.com/LessonsFromNothing.html</link>
<description>Where I come from we make things from nothing - from dreams and fantasies. The laws of physics don&#39;t apply. Our products weigh zero. We&#39;ve explored just about every product development approach there is - extreme or otherwise: waterfall, iterative, rapid prototyping, community development, and mobs. Imagine this: Dionysus has deleted all the software on the planet - what&#39;s going to happen? You won&#39;t be able to surf the Web, send email, make and run spreadsheets, use word processors, and download music. No more anonymously available dirty pictures, no more mapping services, no more reading newspapers from around the world, no more computer and video games, no more pocket organizers, no more modern warfare, governments will come to a halt. Well, that&#39;s not so</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Sun, 08 Feb 2009 12:11:57 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>Mefi: Confessions of a Book Pirate</title>
<link>http://www.metafilter.com/88638/Confessions-of-a-Book-Pirate</link>
<description>Confessions of a Book Pirate NY Times Arts Beat: Report Finds 9 Million Illegal Downloads of E-Books Attributor Blog: Online Book Piracy Costs U.S. Publishers Nearly $3 Billion posted by brundlefly (105 comments total) 13 users marked this as a favorite</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Wed, 27 Jan 2010 16:58:56 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>Omniglot: writing systems and languages of the world</title>
<link>http://www.omniglot.com/</link>
<description></description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Thu, 13 Jul 2006 13:24:20 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>pastebin - collaborative debugging tool</title>
<link>http://pastebin.com/d4c45d5b3</link>
<description>A pastebin, also known as a nopaste, is a web application which allows its users to upload snippets of text, usually samples of source code, for public viewing. It is very popular in IRC channels where pasting large amounts of text is considered bad etiquette. A vast number of pastebins exist on the Internet, suiting a number of different needs and provided features tailored towards the crowd they focus on most.</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Fri, 04 Jan 2008 17:42:19 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>Sententiae Latinae -- Latin Maxims</title>
<link>http://web.comhem.se/hansdotter/show-off.html</link>
<description></description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Tue, 09 Jan 2007 22:43:30 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>Text Etc. - the craft and theory of poetry | MetaFilter</title>
<link>http://www.metafilter.com/mefi/55323</link>
<description>Text Etc. is a sprawling, highly engaging, nearly obsessive look at the craft and theory of poetry, including sound patterning, fractal criticism, poetry heresies, brief, clear intros to theorists like Bakhtin, Lacan and Foucault, writing instruction and much more.</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Sun, 08 Oct 2006 18:54:27 GMT</pubDate>
</item><item><title>The Playboy Interview: Marshall McLuhan</title>
<link>http://www.digitallantern.net/mcluhan/mcluhanplayboy.htm</link>
<description>In 1961, the name of Marshall McLuhan was unknown to everyone but his English students at the University of Toronto--and a coterie of academic admirers who followed his abstruse articles in small-circulation quarterlies. But then came two remarkable books-- &quot;The Gutenberg Galaxy&quot; (1962) and &quot;Understanding Media&quot; (1964)--and the graying professor from Canada&#39;s western hinterlands soon found himself characterized by the San Francisco Chronicle as &quot;the hottest academic property around.&quot; He has since won a world-wide following for his brilliant--and frequently baffling--theories about the impact of the media on man; and his name has entered the French language as mucluhanisme, a synonym for the world of pop culture.</description>
<category domain="http://www.netvouz.com/emmineb?category=8510405148731529291"></category>
<author>emmineb</author>
<pubDate>Thu, 24 May 2007 11:03:07 GMT</pubDate>
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