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Times Wire and it aims to be a real time 'river of news', taking a large leaf from the book of Twitter and Friendfeed. The site is described as "a new layout of New York Times news in reserve chronological order." It updates every minute with the latest news and blog posts from across NYTimes.com.
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Valeo today announced that the Group's 30,000 Internet-connected employees now have access to a new communication and collaborative working platform based on Google Apps Premier Edition and supported by Capgemini.
The progressive roll-out of the new system is giving employees access to a suite of online products which will increase administrative efficiency and improve collaboration between the 193 Valeo entities in 27 countries.
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The open-minded traveler just inputs their departing city, enters general travel dates (ie. this weekend, July, after August, etc.), and clicks to explore deals. Initial results are displayed on a summary page, where users can see the lowest price available for flight, hotel, and vacation deals in North America and the Caribbean.
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What if you could get tomorrow's newspaper today?
Now you sorta can, by tracking the short messages on Twitter written by the journalists who do the muckraking for major media outlets.
Muck Rack makes it easy to follow one line, real time reporting.
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Its purpose is to make visible the invisible portion of film history by acting as a collaboration platform for internet users to bring together relevant information and surviving documents concerning Lost Films.
The archive of titles currently contains over 3500 films believed or declared to be lost.
A constantly growing network of collaborators has been responsible for building up this archive.
Initial collaborators submitted almost 500 of these titles to a specially set up Wiki during the earliest stages of Lost Films' development.
Others, meanwhile, have been kind enough to allow Lost Films to reproduce information already published elsewhere.
The archive was specially developed using a new Open Source Software called CollectiveAccess.
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The Internet Archive contains films and photos taken in 1989 and 1990, during the time of the Fall of the Wall and the reunification. All of the material is from private collections, making the Archive a very personal collection of impressions and atmospheres, and affording the observer a different glimpse of historical events and their effects on daily life in both the East and the West.
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Here are answers from Vignette's perspective on Jeremiah's recent post on 7 Questions Some Brands Are Asking
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