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lano, You wrote: [QUOTE]I guess I'd like something in the way of reassurance about the future of the TechSoup I've come to fondly depend on. Is TechSoup Global a separate initiative from TechSoup Stock, or is TechSoup Stock changing? [/QUOTE] The TechSoup.org site -- and all of the services on it from articles to forums to TechSoup Stock --
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Chief_Nerd, I hear the frustration. When I went on a search for some how-tos last night the "build your own RSS feed" items were all pretty technical. They required either hand-writting the feed or some server-side scripting. Generally, I believe that as people wish to build RSS feeds they are choosing content management systems that produce those feeds
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Chief_Nerd, You're right on that the RSS article does not talk about creating the feeds but using them. I'd love to hear more about what was confusing in that so we can make the article better. Also, you're right on that we need to address the how question. How does a nonprofit create an RSS feed? -webb
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cw_sham, I've just a bit digging around in Adobe's site and various other places looking for a tool to help you with the RSS and, while finding how tos, I am not finding anything that makes it easy for you to create it. In general, I find that the easiest thing is to use a tool that generates an RSS feed of specific content types. Are you using
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I also use CoLT . From the above page: CoLT (short for "Copy Link Text") is a tiny extension for Firefox which makes it easier than ever to copy a hyperlink's associated text. For example, if I were to use this extension to copy this link to my blog, the copied text would quite literally be this link to my blog. CoLT also includes a means of copying
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(in deleting a duplicate of the above I also deleted a message from Christian _SEO . He said, basically, that the about page didn't give him reason to trust IMhaha because didn't offer any clue about the company or what they'd do w/ the account information). Agreed on the lack of information on the about page. IM account info is also identity
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Meebo offers the same functionality. Any thoughts on why one is more appopriate for nonprofits than the other? -webb
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You might consider checking out Google Calendar . I'm not sure if it will give you the level of permissions that you are interested in but you might find it interesting and helpful. You might also consider the calendar function that's a part of Yahoo! Groups . Those both emphasize the calendar part of your request. If really you want project
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I don't know that I'd quite recommend Flock . I think it's an interesting tool but it's justthisfar from prime time right now (it still crashes just enough that I'm not sure I'd recommend it). The really sweet thing about Flock -- the think that speaks to squirrel who love shiny things and lives in my geek heart -- is that it
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Sonny Cloward of CERF has a nice blog post on how he's using del.icio.us in his organization: Bootstrap-a-licio.us . So, I gotta say: I'm not sure of the value of an organization having a tag. If you want to control what goes onto your web page (like Sonny's example) it's easy enough to make the relevant del.icio.us links be attached