Foundcity is a social mapping tool for creating a personalized map of your life on-the-fly. Using your mobile phone, you tag or capture photos throughout the day, label them with any words you want, and send them to your map
Announcing Vyew 2.0: Free Web Conferencing and Always-On Collaboration * 100% Browser-based - No downloads or installs * Shared viewing of: DOCs, PPTs, XLSs, JPGs, PDFs and more * Real-time Desktop Sharing and Screen Capturing * Tools to Whiteboard, Draw
I've been thinking about the best approach to implement pure function verification in the Scala compiler. An approach similar to the one in D would fit a lot better than the one used in Haskell (which would break all existing code and cause some problems due to strict evaluation). A solution using annotations would be quite simple to implement:
DocumentCloud runs every document you upload through Thomson Reuters OpenCalais, giving you access to extensive information about the people, places and organizations mentioned in each.
Java & MPEG-7 based tools for textual as well as semantic annotation and retrieval of digital photos and images, supporting structured, unstructured and semantic, graph like annotation and content based, metadata based and semantic image retrieval.
# Highlight, Clip and Sticky-Note for any webpage * just as you would on paper --> write on any webpage! * make them private or public --> interact on any webpage! # Share your online findings with your friends and colleagues * complete with highlights an
Hibernate Annotations is my preferred way to map my entity classes, since they don't require any external file (thus keeping mapping info in your Java files), is fully integrated with all Hibernate mapping capabilities and Hibernate documentation encourages us to use this kind of configuration because it's more efficient.
Annotation driven mapping in Hibernate uses the standard JPA API annotations and introduce some specific extensions to deal with some Hibernate features. You can find a full reference in the official documentation.
Now you can annotate anything, anywhere on the web, by signing up and installing our bookmarklet!
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F. Amardeilh, P. Laublet, and J. Minel. K-CAP '05: Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Knowledge
capture, page 161--168. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2005)
O. Aubert, and Y. Pri&\#233;. HYPERTEXT '05: Proceedings of the sixteenth ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia, page 235--244. New York, NY, USA, ACM Press, (2005)