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Review: Panteli's "Trust in Global Virtual Teams"
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Posted by askimberley on Sunday, March 05, 2006 - 04:16 PM
(585 Reads)
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A review of the article "Trust in Global Virtual Teams" by Niki Panteli, accessed on Ariadne, which I have considered in the context of its relevance to the discussion to open source development methods.
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Hosting a PostNuke Blog on the Cheap
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Posted by askimberley on Friday, October 14, 2005 - 03:37 PM
(517 Reads)
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Given that I have chosen to host my FIS blog on a commercial hosting service, the service which I have opted to use for this purpose bears some mention. Godaddy is among the cheapest of major commercial hosting companies to offer a relatively full-featured hosting solutions (i.e., web, mail, database, CGI), and its offering is really only remarkable for its slightly cheaper price for basic services, as compared to the majority of its competitors. At $3.95USD/month for mail, PHP, 1 MySQL database supported by PHPMyAdmin and domain registration presently for free, it's at least on par with the general mass of dirt cheap virtual hosting options available right now.
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Project Profile Assignment: Slashdot.org
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Posted by askimberley on Monday, October 03, 2005 - 03:26 AM
(599 Reads)
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Slashdot.org is a web community and information technology news resource which constitutes one of the earliest examples, if not the earliest example, of blog journalism to have appeared on the World Wide Web. Indeed, at the time of Slashdot's creation in 1997, the terms 'weblog' and the abbreviation 'blog' did not exist in any notable popular usage.
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Using PostNuke
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Posted by askimberley on Thursday, September 22, 2005 - 03:02 AM
(336 Reads)
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The experience of working with PostNuke for the first time has been a largely positive one. The knowledge required to implement a generic PostNuke install is nothing more than the experience necessary to implement Gallery or PHPBB and a plethora of configuration options are nicely tied together by the admin interface, with direct dabbling in config files being completely unnecessary for most purposes. Getting the most out of it in the long run and fully configuring a template to work well with a specific set of desired functions would seem to require some dabbling in PHP or at least cutting and pasting of relevant snippets of code, but the basic install and module configuration is simple as can be.
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