Alpha Publicity

The buy (ovral pills drug information contained herein is subject to change and is zoloft online not intended to cover all possible uses, directions, precautions, warnings, zithromax sale drug interactions, allergic reactions, or adverse effects. This muscle plays quinine online stores a key role in moving the foot upward — dorsiflexion cialis internet — and turning the foot inward — inversion. Although heart ventolin for sale disease death rates are falling among Black people in the cheap atrovent in uk U.S., they remain significantly higher than they do for other order discount zyprexa online effects racial groups. Blood clotting, also known as coagulation, is an discount viagra overnight delivery important process that can prevent excessive bleeding. The gastrointestinal system discount estrace of people with ovarian cancer and malignant bowel obstruction cannot purchase lasix online function normally, so these individuals cannot typically digest food and fluids..

In our first week, we introduced the concept of memography™ and the memetic web™ to Peter Morville, David Weinberger, and Steve Krug (October 25).

This week we sent introductory emails to a number of key individuals who influenced the development of the basic concepts.

Library Science - Marcia Bates, Kathryn La Barre, Joan Mitchell, Elaine Svenonius, Arlene Taylor.

Information Architecture - Lou Rosenfeld, Peter Merholz, Eric Reiss (IAI Board)

Information Retrieval - Stephen Levin, Mark Sanderson (ACM-SIGIR)

Knowledge Management - Tom Davenport, John Sowa, Etienne Wenger

Taxonomy - Joseph Busch (and Ron Daniels), Seth Earley

Search Engines - Stephen Arnold, Avi Rappaport

Semantic Web - Tim Berners-Lee

Content Management - Tony Byrne, Martin White

User Interface - Jared Spool (and Joshua Porter)

Technorati - Dave Sifry

Comments are closed.