ࡱ> (   0~0http://www.gutenberg.org2http://www.gutenberg.org/j&http://bartleby.com(http://bartleby.com/z.http://books.google.com0http://books.google.com/n(http://wikipedia.org*http://wikipedia.org/ :http://dear_raed.blogspot.com<http://dear_raed.blogspot.com/v,http://www.blogger.com.http://www.blogger.com/n(http://bloglines.com*http://bloglines.com/~0http://feedvalidator.org2http://feedvalidator.org/hhttp://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/dotconhhttp://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/dotcon/ 0DArialr Newmanll0DGaramondewmanll0 DTimes New Romanll00DWingdingsRomanll0@DPalatinoRomanll0PDCourier Newmanll01@0.  @n?" dd@  @@``  41        !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123 0AA@8ʚ;ʚ;g4<d<dj 0Vppp@ <4dddd8A10l 0___PPT10 ^___PPT9@O  =&Electronic Publishing and Misc. TopicsElectronic Publishing$Advantages of Electronic Publishing Convenient easy to do text searches easy to access past issues Dynamic - easy to modify, faster to release Easy to Publish Inexpensive  no paper cost, no distribution cost Disadvantages of Electronic Publishing Limited Audience - Only reach those with Internet access Credibility  more editing, reviewing w/printed materials Readability  difficult to view lengthy work (e.g., Stephen King) Those Annoying Ads Easy to copy difficult to track down offenders difficult to establish ownership $P P4P=P2P'PPCPP  4=2   C CopyrightMost material available on-line is there to: Generate income for the authors Provide information Promote the exchange of ideas Some assume that because something is available on-line, anyone can copy, use, link-to, etc. ! not so US Copyright Law (aka copyright statute) encourages and promotes artistic expression by: Protecting an individual s creative effort Allowing the author to benefit financially from it In US, work must meet 3 requirements: It must be an original work (not derived or copied) It must be in tangible form  written, recorded, videotaped, saved on disk It must be more than an idea (however, an expression of the idea can be copyrighted) As soon a the work is  fixed, the work receives copyright protection -PRPP^P&PPFPPP-"R"]"`"^"& "  " F""" "Copyright (con t)   ZCopyright notices on Web pages remind others not to borrow your work: Paul Kimwong, 2007. All rights reserved. After March 1, 1989 the copyright notice did not need to appear in order to receive protection Consists of: Copyright symbol - &copy; or &169; or word copyright followed by: Name of owner followed by: Year work was first published Also:  All rights reserved needs to appear in other countries (use since you do not know where your Web pages will be viewed) Copyright owner can: Prohibit copies of his/her work OR Profit by charging for copies FP+PlP5P PP PPPyPPAPPF+&l""y""A " "M "Copyright (con t)   Difficult to control access to copyrighted electronic work as the quality of the copy is same as the original (unlike a photocopier) WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization) and US Government believe that copyright protection needs to extend to include electronically published materials Others want to make all info on the Web freely available: Digital Future Coalition, Electronic Frontier Foundation   Information is free. Conflict between cultural desire to make original material freely available and the rights of creators to receive compensation and protectionNPPPP"" "Copyright (con t)   Two approaches to making info freely accessible on-line and ensuring the rights of the owner: Use legal constraints and stiff penalties for copyright violation Develop technology that deals with credit and copyright issues ! digital rights management systems InterTrust s DigiBox containers RightsMarket RightsPublish IBM Cryptolope containers Digital watermarks To avoid plagiarism (that is, using someone else s work and calling it your own): Get permission from copyright owner Do not assume that if an electronic document does not possess a copyright notice that it is not copyrighted  it probably is ^PPhPRPPP8""#""h"R "  " b    %Project Gutenberg/On-line Publishing &&&Some books are available on-line in their entirety  is this copyright infringement? No  copyrights expire a certain number of years after the death of the owner; then the work is said to be in the public domain After copyrights expire anyone can make it available on-line or use it how they would like Project Gutenberg  effort to make previously published books available on-line Books are called e-texts or electronic texts Michael Hart, a student at the University of Illinois in 1971, based Project Gutenberg on premise that anything that can be entered into a computer can be reproduced indefinitely Hart decided to make works of literature available in electronic form for free, anticipating that one day the Internet would be available to the general public; he started with the US Declaration of Independence, then Bill of Rights, then US Constitution, then the BibleUPPPPPUrJ?2Project Gutenberg (con t) PMission of Project Gutenberg: To make information, books, and other materials available to the general public in a form that a vast majority of the computers, programs, and people can easily read, use, quote, and search. Original goal was to make 10,000 books available in the PG Electronic Library by the end of 2001; as of Oct. 2006, there were over 19,000 items in its collection Books are scanned using OCR software by volunteers and usually saved in plain text (aka  plain vanilla ASCII ) so that all hardware and software currently available can read and search the e-text Works are divided into 3 groups: Heavy Literature: Shakespeare, Bible, Moby Dick Light Literature: Alice In Wonderland, Peter Pan References: Dictionaries, almanacs, set of encyclopedias Web address: http://www.gutenberg.org vZZZZ'Z'"T0'On-line Publishing0Other on-line efforts: Bartleby.com  (http://bartleby.com) Electronic text archive that started out as Project Bartleby in January 1993 by Steven H. van Leeuwen Google Print Project  (http://books.google.com) Print Publisher Program  publisher can authorize Google to scan full text of book Print Library Project  Google wants to scan materials from libraries at Harvard, Stanford, Oxford Univ., the U of Michigan, and New York Public Library (controversial) Wikipedia  (http://wikipedia.org)  The Free Encyclopedia That Anyone Can Edit Wiki  type of Web site that allows anyone visiting the site to add, to remove, or otherwise edit all content quickly and easily; considered a collaborative writing tool Started on 1/15/2001, its open nature allows vandalism, inaccuracy, and opinionvPPPPPPP    `  /T0':T0T0 4On-line Publishing (con t) jElectronic Magazines, Newspapers: Goals usually involve making money May need to subscribe or register May only get to see an abridged version with the purpose being to get you to buy print version Supported by advertising Scholarly journals: Not for profit; purpose is to report discoveries and convey info Academics are reluctant to publish on-line: credibility issue E-zines: Electronic version of a zine (fanzine or fan magazine) Self-published for self expression Originally focused on science fiction and comic books, now they exist on any and every topic Not for profit, original zines charged a small fee to cover publishing expenses Web is perfect medium for zines  fast and cheap "PPPP P;P" ;  PtL Communication MechanismsTThen - computers used for computation; Now  Computers provide information and facilitate communication Methods of communication: Email  1972; Allowed sending messages directly to other people or groups of people; Oldest means of communication over the Internet Newsgroups  late 1979 First one was set up between Duke U. and U. of N.C. at Chapel Hill Offers continuous public discussion on a topic Need a newsreader to view or post articles; newsreader is a graphical or a text-based news client NNTP  Network News Transfer Protocol Way news articles are posted Decentralized  messages are not kept on a single server; they are kept on hundreds of news servers around the world PPPPP#X  y w @Communication Mechanisms (con t)! vNewsgroups (con t) Sometimes news groups are moderated  someone reads and evaluates articles Sometimes articles are encoded in ROT13 (aka Caesar cipher) to  hide content (racy joke, movie ending); ROT13 is encoding scheme that maps letters 13 characters down the alphabet: a ! n, b ! o, c ! p, d ! q, etc. V ybir kugzy! Newsgroups are organized in hierarchies  name describes what the group is about; name of newsgroup is formed by hierarchy under which it falls: main topic, then sub-topic, etc. moving from general ! specific alt.animals.dogs.labs comp.lang.java.programmer First newsgroup was termed USENET Big Eight = USENET s original 8 newsgroup categories  comp, humanities, misc, sci, news, soc, talk, rec alt was not part of the original 8 but is now the biggest general category (alt = alternative, free form) P!PPP1P"PPPP"    """"   $$ %/5n @Communication Mechanisms (con t)(! &Mailing Lists (or listserv)  early 80 s Type of broadcast email; many got their start on BITNET Like a personal email distribution list except: Anyone on the list can send email to all others on the list A program called a listserver (not a person) receives and distributes the email Terminology is similar to that of newsgroups except that it uses email, not a newsreader: Subscriber  person whose email address is on the mailing list List owner  person in charge Lurker  person who is subscribed to the list, reads posts, but does not post messages Differences between mailing lists and newsgroups: NG  message copy is stored by your news server  you need to retrieve it; ML  message is delivered to your mailbox NG  uses newsreader (or WWW now); ML uses email client NG  can read news when you want until it expires; ML  need to delete messages or they can fill your mailbox )PhPPZPP2PP h[.Z2    @Communication Mechanisms (con t)! Chat  1988 Internet application that allows you to have a  real-time conversation Chat room  actually a channel or path that allows communication between 2 or more computers on the Internet Uses chat room software  everyone sees what everyone else types IRC  Internet Relay Chat Instant Messaging  11/1996 ICQ (I Seek You)  was first introduced as a free utility by Mirablis AOL releases AOL IM (AIM) and it becomes the leading IM utility Other IM programs: MSN Explorer includes IM Yahoo! messenger Allows users to share: text, Web links, images, sounds, files, talk, and create custom chat rooms Not considered a secure way to communicate  so do not send confidential info thru system Is email the new snail mail??  PPPP*PP *uZ@Communication Mechanisms (con t)! Forum/Discussion Boards Like a newsgroup except that most forums are kept on a single server maintained by the owner of the board Blogs Web logs (on-line diaries) Web page made up of short, frequently updated posts that are arranged chronologically like a journal  like im to the WWW Content and purposes of blogs vary: Internet/Web topics Women s issues News and politics Sports, travel, art, photos, career, personal diary Examples: Baghdad Blogger s  Where s Raed? (http://dear_raed.blogspot.com) Blogger (http://www.blogger.com)  now owned by Google; start your own& PmPPPiP PPmi  $  * T0T0 File SharingNapster  most popular Web site ever created at its peak Program was written by Shawn Fanning who was attending Northeastern U; dropped out in Jan 99 to focus on Napster Pioneered concept of peer-to-peer file sharing (MP3 music files) Store files you want to share on your hard disk and share directly with other people using downloaded Napster software; Central index server kept track of who had what to share This approach worked: No way a central server could have enough disk space to hold all songs (or band width to handle all requests) Took advantage of loophole in copyright law that allows friends to share music files with friends Courts decided it was promoting copyright infringement Records labels sued, forcing Napsters s shutdown in July 2001 It was easy for court order to shut down the site (eventually)  it just had to eliminate central database of song titles PP8PP8 %(File Sharing (con t)  Gnutella replaces Napster with another peer-to-peer network Similarities: Users place files they want to share on their hard disks and make them available to everyone else for downloading in peer-to-peer fashion Users run gnutella software to connect to gnutella network Differences (makes it hard for a simple court order to shut them down): No central database that knows all the files available on the gnutella network- all machines on the network tell each other about avaailable files using a distributed query approach There are many different client applications available to access the gnutella network: BearShare, Gnucleus, LimeWire, Morpheus, WinMX, XoloX JZZHZ Z6ZZBH 6< o  &(File Sharing (con t)  pHow gnutella finds a song: Type in name of song Your machine knows of at least one other gnutella machine somewhere on the network and the song name is sent to them These machines check to see if requested file is on the local hard disk and if so, sends back file name and machine IP address to the requester Machines send out same request to machines they are connected to Disadvantages: No guarantee that the file you want will be found Queries can take some time to complete Your machine is part of the network so it needs to answer requests, etc. Gnutella is itself legal  there is no law against sharing public domain files; it is illegal when people use it to distribute copyrighted musicZ\ZZZZ\,MX(RSSRSS  Really Simple Syndication OR Rich Site Summary OR RDF Site Summary Introduced in 1999 by Netscape (abandoned in 2001) and called Rich Site Summary Another version pioneered by UserLand Software called it Really Simple Syndication Provides a way to have your favorite Web sites notify you when their content has been updated; otherwise: You might keep your favorite sites as bookmarks and check them periodically You might keep them in your head and check periodically Difference between RSS feeds and Web content  Content published in an RSS feed is set up to send out notification whenever new material is available IZZjZZZZFj  ,Ka*RSS (con t)  RSS terms: RSS/XML/Atom are technologies RSS and Atom are two varieties of the same thing  a feed which is a  wrapper for pieces of regularly updated content XML  the base technology that RSS, Atom, and xhtml are built on Syndication  the process of using RSS/Atom for automated updates News reader or aggregator  a program or a Web site that checks your list of bookmarks and lets you know what is new on each site in your list (list only has to be set up one time) Works by pulling in the feeds of your various bookmarks so it also delivers the content that has been updated as well as notifying you that something has changed: You can read the new content in the news reader OR You can leave the reader and visit the site Analogy: News reader acts like a customizable newspaper; you can pull in content from a growing number of sources into one place but the source must provide a feed d ZZZZZ`ZZZ  7    `  +RSS (con t)  Some popular news readers: Bloglines  completely Web-based news reader as well as a feed search tool (http://bloglines.com) Stand alone news readers that are platform specific: FeedDemon for Windows NetNewsWire for Mac OS X Problem with stand alone news readers  information about what feeds you subscribe to and which articles you have read stays on your computer; will not be able to access from home and work To subscribe to a Web site or blog, look for a button or label that says  RSS or  Atom or  Syndicate This or  SUB BLOGLINES and then copy the link that button points to into your news reader //J E  ` C7  T0g{-RSS (con t)  How to create a feed: Use a text editor (if you have a blog, several blogging tools automatically generate RSS files) Your file needs to include at least one item ! item is a Web page that you want others to link to Need 3 pieces of info about each item: Title Description Link Example of item: <item> <title>CS403 Sections 01, 03, and 06 Updates to class FAQs page</title> <description>11/16/06  Added link to search examples</description> <link>http://pubpages.unh.edu/~cs403d/CS403/FAQ/faq.html</link> </item> PP8P'PPPPP"3  '    >7 /RSS (con t)  |Creating a feed (con t) You can include up to 15 items  insert new items at the top Now you need to define the site as a channel; use same tags as with items  title, description, link but this time info is about your entire site: Example: <?xml version="1.0" ?> <rss version="2.0"> <channel> <title>CS403 Sections 01, 03, and 06 Site Updates</title> <description>CS403 Updates to our class site</description> <link>http://pubpages.unh.edu/~cs403d/CS403/</link> <item> <title>CS403 Sections 01, 03, and 06 Updates to class FAQs page</title> <description>11/16/06  Added link to search examples</description> <link>http://pubpages.unh.edu/~cs403d/CS403/FAQ/faq.html</link> </item> </channel> </rss>rPPPbg P0RSS (con t)& ( Creating a feed (con t) Save this file in public_html with .xml extension Change permissions on the file so that it is world-readable Validate it: http://feedvalidator.org (is the RSS file correct?) Syndicate it  let others know about your feed: Visit the RSS directories and search engines as they offer submission pages Post a link on your Web page: Can use ordinary link Many sites use a small orange XML icon to link to feed or blue RSS icon This was an example of making a feed by hand; some alternatives: RSS Headline Creator  fill info into form and your RSS file s code will be generated (you need to copy and paste) Create a Channel (myRSS) Enter the url of any Web pages that lists articles or content on your Web site The myRSS spider will  scrape your page  it will guess at what the headlines are, loads a new page, and generates the RSS filePPjP^PAPPP#j^ Ar ^ FxT01Dot Con Frontline PBS video:  When the Internet bubble burst in March 2000, unlucky investors watched more than $3 trillion of their money disappear. What spurred the incredible don-com bull run on Wall Street? Was the public blinded by dreams of small forunes and easy living or did the nation s investment banks manipulate the IPO market and exploit public trust? August 9, 1995  16-month old Netscape goes public: First big  pop stock (some consider this the start of the Internet boom) Opening price was $28/share, went up to $75/share, closed at $58/share; by Dec. 1995 it was trading at $171/share Proved that you did not need to be profitable to go public  Stock Market Bubble  term applied to a self-perpetuating rise or boom in the share prices of stocks of a particular industry. Dot Con site: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/dotcon vZUZ4ZZZU4*%4T0$X2Dot Con (con t)  DQuestions to consider: What caused the tech bubble to burst? When the stock is bid up in the early days of trading, what money does the company make? What influence did the analysts have who touted their recommendations? So who was getting rich? Who lost out? What is a  Dutch Auction? Google used a Dutch Auction for selling share in August 2004 It uses the Internet to bring transparency and level the playing fieldFPPP/0     ! " #$'),.  0` 3333ff3` 3333f33ff3` "3333̙ff3` Kf3̙` &e̙3g3f` f333̙po7` ___f3̙;/f9` ff3Lm` ff3LmNLm>?" dd@*?nAd@q<nAqFLK#M n?" dd@   @@``PR    M`2p>> @(    H? ?" `}  X Click to edit Master title style!!  @  HT? ?" `  RClick to edit Master text styles Second level Third level Fourth level Fifth level!    S    6H #" `] `}  \*     6 #" ``   V*      6 #" `] `}  V*      C @ABCDE FjJ@3"0`B  s *DjJ"0 `0H  0޽h ? ___f3̙;/f9___PPT10i.  +D=' d= @B + Edge 0 P(    HD? ?"@  X Click to edit Master title style!!    H$? ?"   [#Click to edit Master subtitle style$$    6l #" `] `}  \*     6P #" `]}   V*      6D #" `] `}  V*      C @ABCDE F8c@3"@B  s *DjJ"  ,$0H  0޽h ? ___f3̙;/f9___PPT10i.  +ityD=' d= @B +0 zrp (    0 P    P*    0     R*  d  c $ ?    0  0  RClick to edit Master text styles Second level Third level Fourth level Fifth level!     S  6  _P   P*    6 _   R*  H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10.a 30 0  0(  x  c $а@  x  c $x   H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10.` 3Q$ 0 `$(  r  S  d `}  d r  S  d ` d H  0޽h ? ___f3̙;/f980___PPT10.` `^Y$ 0 $$(  $r $ S !d` `@  d r $ S !dp d H $ 0޽h ? ___f3̙;/f980___PPT10. Pr$  0 ,$(  ,r , S 5d`0.  d r , S 6d` d H , 0޽h ? ___f3̙;/f980___PPT10. o$ 0 0$(  0r 0 S Kd `  d r 0 S d   d H 0 0޽h ? ___f3̙;/f980___PPT10. 0R$ 0 8$(  8r 8 S 4d `}  d r 8 S d ` d H 8 0޽h ? ___f3̙;/f980___PPT10. `%$ 0 @$(  @r @ S 0j `}   r @ S k`0  H @ 0޽h ? ___f3̙;/f980___PPT10. oI7$  0  H$(  Hr H S  access to info in containers requires a Web browser plug-in that will monitor and control use; example: disable COPY, PRINT, SAVE, CGH < 0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. [0 ~vD(  DX D C    %v D S 0% 0  % Copyrights currently expire 50 years after the death of the owner; originally it was 14 years in the US Project Gutenberg was name after a German named Johannes Gutenberg in the 15th century who developed the movable-type printing press. This was the dawning of a new age as they no longer needed to hand-write manuscripts. Today the Web is making a difference in a way similar to the printing press. Currently, over 50 new books are added each week by volunteers.$H D 0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. Pe6p0 @P(  PX P C    % P S h?% 0  % Project Bartleby was named after Herman Melville s Bartleby the Scrivner Wiki wiki = fast, quick in Hawaiian; backronym =  What I Know Is P@ H P 0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. @: 0 6.`X(  XX X C    %. X S H% 0  % Scholarly journals  credibility is an issue as other on-line works have a reputation for lower quality; Traditional journals ensure quality by using or requiring peer review which takes a long time; on-line reviews are quicker (less thorough?) Advantages to on-line journals: 1) can show supporting data  graphs, illustrations, etc where printed journals are typically restricted in the number of pages they can submit) 2) Can add new information and correct errors easilyH X 0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. {~ 0 `(  `X ` C    % ` S T% 0  % |News server  computer that saves, forwards, and manages news H ` 0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. P 0 H@p(  pX p C    %@ p S [% 0  % nMirablis  company founded by 4 Israeli programmers June 98 ICQ is acquired by AOL and becomes part of a suite of on-line services that AOL owns AIM uses proprietary software that was not understood by other IM services BUT AIM becomes very popular because it allows AOL members to communicate with non-members 6440H p 0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. oJ 0   xZ (  xX x C    %  x S j% 0  % \  Baghdad Blogger = Salam Pax s blog was one of the most popular political blogs around o Was one of the first blogs to come from the Arab world written in English o Talked about war and life in Baghddad o Started around 2001 when Internet became available in Iraq (he got access in 2002) o He decided to express himself thru his blog to his friend Raed --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Controversy (from Boston Globe, June 26, 2005):  Marketers say that bloggers are viewed as opinion influencers and trendsetters and getting them to write about a product or service is an effective ways to spread the word. The blogosphere also offers access too a key demographic: young people. According to Forrester Research, Inc., young adults between 18 and 24 make up of all adult bloggers& The more companies can get bloggers to link to their Web sites, the higher their sites will appear on Google s search list (because Google ranks it s matches, in part, on how many Web pages link to a Web site). -------------------------------------------------------- Some advertisers joke that Blog = acronym for  better listing on Google Z'O *H x 0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. MY0 (  X  C    %  S % 0  % Shawn Fanning s uncle, John Fanning acted as Shawn s mentor but ultimately, some feel, took advantage of his nephew  30/70 split (30 for Shawn) Napster spread the load for file downloading across millions of machines  each user machine became a mini serverH  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. ן 0 (  X  C      S  0    H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. @^ 0  (  X  C    %  S % 0  %  H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. E 0 0(  X  C    %  S 8% 0  %  H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. oS  0 @(  X  C    %  S % 0  %  H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. 5  0 P(  X  C    %  S % 0  %  H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. cd0 t(  X  C    %  S % 0p  %XP___PPT92* RA request has a TTL (time to live) limit placed on it so a request may go out 6 or 7 levels deep before it stops propagating. TTL - If each machine knows of just 4 others, that means your request might reach +/- 8,000 other machines on the gnutella network -------------------------------------------------------- Music industry (RIAA  Recording Industry Association of America) is upset but there is no legal way to control it so: They overload the gnutella network with a flood of bogus search packets Filling gnutella servers with corrupted files. Lx" - x >7 H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. "60 F(  X  C    %  S `% 0  % HRDF = Resource Description Framework Syndication = the simultaneous publication in a number of different newspapers and magazines You might have a list of favorite Web sites that you check on regularly  news, weather, sports, stocks, blogs, pictures, wiki, H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. m7@0 P(  X  C    %  S % 0  % RSee our FAQs page for a feedH  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. 0qH0 (  X  C    %  S % 0  % lNote: individual items in a feed are called articles For title and description, use anything you want to describe the page  it does not need to match the html title in the document$, H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10. pHr L,XXv84>#`&t,.<3h@,D@FTHhJ|LNUD:Zp\   $`21Oh+'0h hp    (4<(Electronic Publishing and Misc. Topics Ellen HeppEdgeRaymond Greenlaw12Microsoft Office PowerPoint@;`@0:` @ڮdFG$g  .  y--$xx--'̙-- % % --'̙--%"EE--'@Garamond-. f3.2 &Electronic Publishing and ."System-@Garamond-. f32 3 Misc. Topics .-՜.+,D՜.+,T    On-screen Showa_ !Arial GaramondTimes New Roman Wingdings Palatino Courier NewEdge'Electronic Publishing and Misc. TopicsElectronic Publishing CopyrightCopyright (cont)Copyright (cont)Copyright (cont)&Project Gutenberg/On-line Publishing Project Gutenberg (cont)On-line PublishingOn-line Publishing (cont)Communication Mechanisms!Communication Mechanisms (cont)!Communication Mechanisms (cont)!Communication Mechanisms (cont)!Communication Mechanisms (cont) File SharingFile Sharing (cont)File Sharing (cont)RSS RSS (cont) RSS (cont) RSS (cont) RSS (cont) RSS (cont) Dot Con Dot Con (cont)  Fonts UsedDesign Template Slide Titles 8@ _PID_HLINKSA6http://www.gutenberg.org/http://bartleby.com/http://books.google.com/http://wikipedia.org/http://dear_raed.blogspot.com/http://www.blogger.com/http://bloglines.com/http://feedvalidator.org/5http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/dotcon(_`Raymond GreenlawRaymond Greenlaw  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~Root EntrydO)Current UserSummaryInformation(PowerPoint Document(aDocumentSummaryInformation8