Groklaw's Unix Methods and Concepts Database 19
jbeaupre writes "Groklaw has spawned a new feature that may prove useful well beyond the current SCO litigation. The UNIX Methods and Concepts Database began as a list of books and papers on Groklaw that became so large it demanded organization. The new system was announced and is currently a work in progress."
I'm afraid SCO has a patent on this already. (Score:1)
Re:Go Web 2.0 (Score:2)
Re:Go Web 2.0 (Score:4, Funny)
Taxonomy (Score:4, Insightful)
Unix, and other Linux-like systems :) has important innovations in all three areas. Processing could be further broken down by kernel tasks: memory mgmt, scheduling, threading, filesystems, device drivers. And misc.
Re:Taxonomy (Score:1, Offtopic)
For books there are bibliographies. You find them in your library.
However, I am looking for a web application for book or article collections with reviews, with bibtex export, very 'simple'.
Are there solutions available out there?
Needs work (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Needs work (Score:2)
Re:Needs work (Score:2)
Fancy interface... (Score:2)
But maybe I'm just cranky today.
Anyone else think the scroll bar was a bit inappropriate?
Re:Fancy interface... (Score:2)
So yeah, I agree with you, it really belongs in the bad usability category, especially since it serves no real purpose.
Re:Fancy interface... (Score:2)
But then, I also think Flash is inappropriate.
Call me ignorant but... (Score:2)
Re:Call me ignorant but... (Score:2)
Even now, you occasionally get a pundit who points to legal risks in open source. The downgrading of the SCO case to what is basically a contract dispute with IBM doesn't change that, because pundits can be pretty stupid sometimes. While it's true that if Groklaw disappeared overnight, SCO would still lose, some of the paid mouthpieces wouldn't stop.