Official Google Reader Blog: Share anything. Anytime. Anywhere. (77)
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Jenna Bilotta (1)
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Google Reader (50)
3 weeks
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Have you ever wanted to share something that you were reading, but you didn't want to go through the hassle of subscribing to a whole feed for a single interesting article? And what about sharing content from sites with no feeds? There you are, reading along, and you think to yourself, "If only everything on the web had a 'Share' button like in Google Reader!"
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Foomandoonian said:
Testing the new Google Reader functionality. It's really well though out, but I can't seem to get my profile on my shared items page!
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Eric said:
This is a test.
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onethumb said:
Ok, this is too dang cool. I hope this gets propagated to FriendFeed!
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gabor said:
ez király, zoli, ilyesmit akartál?
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Eric said:
An integration of Google Notebooks?
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Joe said:
Cool
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Bradley said:
This sharing so so cool!
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Flexdaddy said:
Have you ever wanted to share something that you were reading, but you didn't want to go through the hassle of subscribing to a whole feed for a single interesting article?
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Bradley said:
This is very cool!
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Tony W said:
Yay. Google Reader now supports adding a note to a shared item
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Tyler said:
I seriously was wishing for this feature just yesterday when I saw a KUTV news report that was done but when I came to Reader to share it I realized I only had a KSL feed and I was about to subscribe to a KUTV feed when I got distracted.
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Daryl Milne said:
Cool!
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Alex said:
GoogleReader的share功能变得更加实用了,现在我能添加一些自己的说明在这里。
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m. said:
Move towards social reading...
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Peter said:
This is such a great way to keep track of new, websites, tips and tweaks that you want to keep on hand, but don't neccesarily want to bookmark! Not only does it make it easy to share with friends, but you can easily keep track of those great articles you don't have time to read!
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Drew Raines said:
There are officially too many places to store links.
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-ds said:
Share apo edw, share apo ekei.. share apo pandou!
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Tod Maffin said:
Okay, now this is cool. :)
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mhusson said:
I agree with Nick, this is a cool feature for Reader to have. Now if they could just integrate this with Blogger...
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XY3 said:
Ух ты! Будем юзать.
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paul said:
And the notes are automatically imported into FriendFeed!
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ZT said:
Тестую нову функцію Рідера. Чи буде мета-соціальна мережа, яку будує Google, життєздатною покаже час.
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Guy and Chas said:
Just testing the new Google Reader feature.
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Tero said:
Handy way to share things outside subscribed feeds.
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Sean said:
This is freakin' awesome!
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Bo Madsen said:
Testing the "share with a note"-option within Google Reader.
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Gryphon said:
Yay for Google!
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luxus said:
cool jetzt kann man hier notes eintragen!
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Dmitry Roslyakov said:
Круто!
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lostfire said:
I love this feature!
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Juvenn said:
Google Reader updated, more share, more interesting.
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Kirby M. said:
Google Reader takes on social bookmarking with a bookmarklet and notes.
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Rory M said:
This is interesting. Looks like another attempt of Google's to completely unify all their various social aspects.
The problem I'm having with Google currently isn't the level of quality their services provide. It's the complete lack of design unification their products show. Their stuff may be simplistic-looking, but it's almost all ugly. That's a problem for me.
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Adam W. said:
Devlin makes a good point. Why keep bookmarks in delicious or elsewhere if I can share them and store them all in Reader. I can still do private and public sharing. I can search. AND its one less tool... we'll see.
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Nils Öhman said:
Kommentarer till delade länkar gör Google Reader ännu mer användbar.
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oleg40a said:
that's cool
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SonniesEdge said:
Could be useful...
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Rafa de Castro said:
Y que menos que compartir esta noticia con una nota...
Why would you want to call me? (36)
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Sarah (82)
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Signal vs. Noise (788)
1 month, 2 weeks
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I spent almost 45 minutes on the phone with my bank today because of an error with their online banking. I didn’t want to, I had to, after their email support told me my issue couldn’t be handled online. It was such a mind-numbing, protracted, time wasting experience that it made me ask myself, “How can anyone ever ask us why we don’t offer phone support?” In a perfect world, calling a business for help ...
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Juvenn said:
We all want assurance that our money is being spent on something maintained by human beings who speak our language and hopefully live in our same country.
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Federico Giacanelli said:
It’s time to stop thinking that phone support is so essential.
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Nick said:
YES! Completely agree ... went through this today with Bank of America.
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Chuck LeDuc said:
"It’s time to stop thinking that phone support is so essential."
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Adam said:
Written proof that 37signals doesn't allow their employees to walk on water. Bummer.
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KevM said:
Email conversations are asynchronous. Letting you get on with your life. That is if the support organization is responsive. 15 minutes is awesome. My experience is more like a 3 day email turn around.
Advice for entrepreneurs: Throw out that five-year plan, build something now, and don't take any money (46)
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Matt (548)
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Signal vs. Noise (788)
1 month, 3 weeks
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A couple of Getting Realish ideas spotted in Best Life magazine: Greg Gianforte is the author of “Bootstrapping Your Business: Start and Grow a Successful Company With Almost No Money.” In Follow Your Dream, he advises throwing out your five-year plan and focusing on building something now instead. Gianforte describes how to build a company from sales rather than enlisting professional financiers. The secret is to stop sweating your five-year plan and start moving the ...
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Kevin Gilbert said:
Good stuff.
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Tom said:
Sweat equity is the best equity. “Taking money from someone else kills more start-ups than anything else does. Do everything you can to avoid taking money. If you must, your best prospects are potential customers. You have something they want, so if they invest in you, it can be a win-win situation.”
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jonezy said:
some good advice here! this is what we did @ Q4 basically
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ntutak said:
good stuff.
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etlund said:
Greg Gianforte is the dude who started RightNow Technologies in Bozeman and they do the Help Desk/Knowledge base software for TONS of big websites out there. I got to see his philosophy in action when he was first getting started. He recruited me to help him build up the PERL (programming language) KB so he could 'give it' to the community and get some more people using the system. It seems to have worked! As luck would have it, the next week we found out R was pregnant and we moved to Helena so I didn't get in on that one.
The early days: How 37signals built buzz out of the gate (83)
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Matt (548)
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Signal vs. Noise (788)
1 month, 3 weeks
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When 37signals first started out, we didn’t make products. We did client work. From the beginning, we allotted a lot of time for side projects. Things that would get us attention (eNormicom), experiments with new ways of selling our services (37express), ways to show off our design thinking (37Better Project), etc. Here are a few of the key non-client projects that enabled us to build up an audience before we launched Basecamp: The 37signals manifesto ...
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urbansamoan said:
great tips on creating a buzz before you launch
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Juvenn said:
the development of 37signals
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Kevin Gilbert said:
I think we could learn much from these guys.
BMW's fascinating GINA Light Visionary Model design study (17)
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Jason (312)
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Signal vs. Noise (788)
2 months, 4 weeks
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BMW presents GINA, a new take on car design, materials, and flexibility. The GINA replaces the traditional metal/plastic skin with a textile fabric skin that’s pulled taut around a frame of metal and carbon fiber wires. Even the shape of the car can change. Fascinating and creative design study. The rear lights just shine through the skin: Here’s a video of the design in action.
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a.andreev said:
Bangle shows a transforming textile cabrio by BMW. I know it does not make sense, but check it out. Note to self - got to go visit the BMW museum...
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Juvenn said:
Fascinating BMW
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jessmartin said:
This is an amazing car design by BMW that represents what happens when you think outside of the box. Inspiring.
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John said:
this joint is hottttttt
How to Revive a Lackluster Blog Entry (1)
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3 months, 2 weeks
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You have the perfect topic and the perfect points to go along with it, but no matter how you write or rewrite, it just isn’t coming together to be the blockbuster blog post you know it can be. It is mediocre and lackluster at best, nothing that will get Stumbled or submitted to any social media site, nor is it worthy enough to really justify anyone leaving a comment, unless to say how poor the ...
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Juvenn said:
How to write blog post
Launch: The Backpack Journal (2)
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3 months, 2 weeks
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A few weeks ago we gave everyone a peek at in/out, our internal app for keeping track of who’s doing what and what everyone’s recently completed. We mentioned that we were considering building it into Backpack. Today we’re pleased to announce that the Journal is now part of Backpack. Just log into your Backpack account and click the Journal tab. The Journal is available on all plans—from free to Max. The Journal eliminates the need ...
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Juvenn said:
Backpackit get updated, status available now
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Mitch said:
Definitely cool for a small connected workgroup. I wonder if this is going into Basecamp?
Develop with Git on a Google Code Project (2)
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Leslie Hawthorn (15)
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Google Open Source Blog (17)
3 months, 2 weeks
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By Benjamin Lynn, Google Developer ProgramsDo you often work offline? Wish you could make local commits that you can reorganize and upload later? Would you like to have your own copy of the entire history of the project which you can peruse at your leisure?Do you want to serve code and its history to others? Have changes you want to share but it's too early for the public?Working on several issues in parallel? Need to ...
(title unknown) (1)
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4 months
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Marc Feldman, 1945-2007 Rochester Marc J. Feldman, professor and scientist in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Rochester, passed away December 4, 2007 at age 62. Feldman was a founder and early pioneer in the field of superconducting quantum computing. As leader of the Superconducting Electronics Laboratory at Rochester, he led a number of major projects to explore advanced computing concepts. "Marc will be missed tremendously by all, not only ...
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Juvenn said:
超导量子计算先驱Marc Feldman(1945-2007)于2007年12月4日去世
(title unknown) (1)
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4 months
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Room-temperature quantum oscillations in diamond crystals UCSB|CNSI|Kavli TU Delft|Ames DOE In Science Express, Science and concurrent UCSB press release, Hanson, Awschalom et al. report on striking experimental observations of quantum oscillations in diamond crystals at room temperature. "We were stunned by these unexpected experimental results, and extremely excited by the ability to control and monitor single quantum states, especially at room temperature," said David Awshalom. "To our surprise, when looking at longer times, the oscillations ...
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Juvenn said:
科学家们很惊奇地在室温下的晶体中观察到单一量子的旋转态。
(title unknown) (1)
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4 months
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Time Reversal in Bose-Einstein Condensates Toulouse | CNRS In arXiv 0804.3514, Martin, Georgeot, and Shepelyansky of Quantware MIPS Center investigate time reversibility in Bose-Einstein condensates (BEC). "We show that inside the regime of quantum chaos, time-reversal dynamics can be inverted from explosion to collapse. The accuracy of time reversal decreases with the increase of atom interactions inside BEC, until it is completely lost – though, surprisingly, quantum chaos helps to restore time reversibility. Existing experimental ...
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Juvenn said:
波斯-爱因斯坦凝聚态中的时间可逆性?
Getting the most out of Backpack as a GTD ("Getting Things Done") solution (1)
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37signals (59)
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37signals Product Blog (22)
4 months
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Brett Kelly, a programmer from Southern California, writes The Cranking Widgets Blog, a personal productivity blog that focuses on David Allen's Getting Things Done. He recently published a post about why he loves Getting Things Done with Backpack. So, what does Backpack bring to the table that makes me so giddy? Well, several things, actually… Polish - Seriously, Backpack looks and acts just like you want it to. One of the driving concepts in the ...