%HTMLlat1;
]>
Jon Udell
http://www.xml.com/pub/at/26
Jon Udell, who also writes Byte.com's "Tangled in the Threads" column, has been watching developments in groupware and collaborative online publishing for many years. Udell was one of the architects who designed the Safari Tech Books Online service. In this monthly column, he reports on developments in blogspace and web services. Published on XML.com.
Copyright 2004, O'Reilly Media, Inc.O'Reilly & Associatesen-us
http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2004/03/17/udell.html
Through his LibraryLookup project, Jon Udell finds that you don't need to understand what REST is in order to benefit from its use in a system.
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2004-03-17T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media
http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2004/02/18/udell.html
Jon Udell enhances his lightweight XML search server by adding database backed storage, using the Berkeley DB XML database, and retrieving and indexing all of the weblogs he reads.
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2004-02-18T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media
http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2004/01/21/udell.html
Jon Udell creates a lightweight XML search server using Python and the libxml/libxslt libraries.
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2004-01-21T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media
http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2003/12/23/udell.html
In this write-up of his keynote address to the XML 2003 conference, Jon Udell explains that the key thing about XML is the way anXML document
can become a shared construct, a tangible thing that processes and
people can pass around and interact with.
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2003-12-23T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media
http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2003/10/08/udell.html
Adding behavior to data can make it a lot smarter. In this article, Jon Udell explores and experiments with the DOM API for making small sections of web pages and XML documents interactive and productive.
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2003-10-08T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media
http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2003/09/17/udell.html
There'll be no master plan to the Semantic Web, says Jon Udell, just a lot of talking, listening and imitating.
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2003-09-17T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media
http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2003/08/13/udell.html
Continuing his experiments in pure XML-backed web sites, Jon Udell investigates various ways in which XSLT can be used to produce interactive pages from XML data.
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2003-08-13T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media
http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2003/07/09/udell.html
When we convert to a database-backed Web application in order to solve problems of shared editing and presentation-oriented file formats, we trade away the convenience of the file-oriented approach. Can we have our cake and eat it too?
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2003-07-09T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media
http://webservices.xml.com/pub/a/ws/2003/06/10/xpathsearch.html
Jon Udell further explores the benefits of preserving structure in web content, suggesting that the availability of structured search for content could motivate the creation of the structured content itself.
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2003-06-10T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media
http://webservices.xml.com/pub/a/ws/2003/05/13/email.html
Ever had trouble finding a particular email? So did Jon Udell, so he put together Python, Jython and Lucene in order to create a local web service that indexed his Microsoft Outlook mail store.
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2003-05-13T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media
http://webservices.xml.com/pub/a/ws/2003/04/15/semanticblog.html
One of XML's promises is fine-grained, specific searching, but this doesn't come without a lot of effort in data preparation. Jon Udell looks for the sweet spot that marries spontaneity and structure.
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2003-04-15T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media
http://webservices.xml.com/pub/a/ws/2003/03/04/spring.html
Jon Udell puts together web services, XML, and Amazon to enhance Spring, a "concept-centric" visual organizer for Mac OS X.
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2003-03-04T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media
http://webservices.xml.com/pub/a/ws/2003/02/11/udell.html
Jon Udell examines the recent hype over network-based approaches to organization. If, as Jon concludes, the network is not only the computer, but also the operating system <i>and</i> the software development environment, how might this impact your role as a software developer?
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2003-02-11T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media
http://webservices.xml.com/pub/a/ws/2003/01/13/udell.html
Jon Udell shows how Web services--such as Erik Benson's <i>All Consuming</i> book site, or his own project, <i>LibraryLookup</i>--which can express themselves in terms of links, are poised to create powerful affordances for use, for imitation, and for discovery.
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2003-01-13T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media
http://webservices.xml.com/pub/a/ws/2002/12/09/udell.html
Jon Udell describes a proof-of-concept application using Groove Web Services, showing implementations in both Perl and C#.
Jon UdellJon UdellO'Reilly and Associates, Inc.2002-12-09T00:00-08:00text/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly Media