Mirror, Mirror, on the Wall...
...who is the secure-est browser of them all? The answer may surprise you...
On Open Enterprise blog.
open source, open genomics, open creation
...who is the secure-est browser of them all? The answer may surprise you...
On Open Enterprise blog.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 4:20 pm 0 comments
Labels: chrome, chromium, economics of security, Firefox, internet explorer, open enterprise, safari, sandbox
Tim on mobile openness:On the opening day of Mobile Internet World in Boston, the man credited with inventing the World Wide Web told a packed hall that the mobile Internet needs to be fully and completely the Internet, nothing more and nothing less. It needs to be free of central control, universal, and embodied in open standards.
“The Web is an open platform on which you build other things,” he said. “That’s how you get this innovation. The Web is universal: you can run it on any hardware, on any operating system, it can be used by people of different languages…It’s a sandbox where people can [play and] exercise their creativity. It’s very important to keep the Web universal as we merge the Internet with mobile.”
Posted by Glyn Moody at 11:04 am 0 comments
Labels: mobiles, open standards, openness, sandbox, tim berners-lee, walled gardens
PLoS ONE, the new way of publishing scientific papers, has gone live. As well as fascinating papers on the Syntax and Meaning of Wild Gibbon Songs, to say nothing of populist numbers like Regulated Polyploidy in Halophilic Archaea, you can also find a sandbox for playing around with the new features of this site. It's obviously premature to say whether this experiment in Web 2.0 science publishing will work, but it certainly deserves to.
Posted by Glyn Moody at 10:40 am 0 comments
Labels: archaea, gibbons, online publishing, PLOS, sandbox, Web 2.0
To the extent possible under law,
glyn moody
has waived all copyright and related or neighbouring rights to
this work.
This work is published from:
United Kingdom.