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Cool, this actually worked! I got an RSS feed - simply stating the BlogThreads title. The link brought me here - which means it was an ipso facto [manga] comment notification. How simple and sublime. Now I have to just remember the different syntax between this Wiki - and Pete Kaminski's SocialText? systems - which we've been using for: PC Forum, SSA (the Social Software Alliance) and the O'Reilly ETCON. [1] |
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Cool, this actually worked! I got an RSS feed - simply stating the BlogThreads title. The link brought me here - which means it was an ipso facto comment notification. How simple and sublime. Now I have to just remember the different syntax between this Wiki - and Pete Kaminski's SocialText? systems - which we've been using for: PC Forum, SSA (the Social Software Alliance) and the O'Reilly ETCON. [1] |
The thread itself is defined in the abstract by following the links from one post to another. The BlogThreads concept proposes that blog authors explicitly denote that a post is part of a BlogThread? via some action beyond simply creating a link.
David Janes has something similar: [BlogThread]. -[Michael Fagan]
Cool dudes - but I think you have to explain how this works and what the benefits are before I go for it. It kind of scares me when you keep saying: "save a backup of my template" - are you intendin gon this to crash, expire or somehow go stale? - MarcCanter
What's this about template backups? Is the Wiki giving you weird messages? I've never seen that ... - PhillipPearson
No, Marc's talking about BlogThread?, I think -[Michael Fagan]
Cool, this actually worked! I got an RSS feed - simply stating the BlogThreads title. The link brought me here - which means it was an ipso facto comment notification. How simple and sublime. Now I have to just remember the different syntax between this Wiki - and Pete Kaminski's SocialText? systems - which we've been using for: PC Forum, SSA (the Social Software Alliance) and the O'Reilly ETCON. [1]