While
buy buy without prescription treating hypertension may improve sexual dysfunction, some high blood pressure
buy ampicillin online australia medications can worsen sexual symptoms. If doctors advise staying in
purchase cheap (metacam) sale overdose the hospital, therapies like physical therapy or speech therapy may
cheap nexium from canada begin immediately. The thalamus regulates several functions, including sensation, language,
cheap cialis tablets speech, mood, and behavior. The National Institute for Diabetes and
cheapest asacol Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) explains that as the prostate
cialis generic order grows, it can pinch the urethra. Treatment for constipation involves
no tablet changing what a person eats and drinks to make stool
prescription order softer and easier to pass. Inverse psoriasis commonly occurs in
order drops low price drugs folds of the body, such as under the arms and
zofran online stores breasts and in the groin area. People are usually able to.
In today’s Bloug, Lou says we should introduce the memetic web concept to search vendors. That will be our next step.
He cleverly notes that they could tap into the memespaces by recognizing an area code (or some other existing taxonomy like ISBN) and then prepending the memespace identifier, when they know it.
Our simple proposal for ISBN is just MEMOISBN-0596000359. This is the meme ID for the Polar Bear book (Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, by Lou and Peter).
See the memespaces page for others.
Search engines will also be key players in the control of meme ID spamming.
Any good contacts to recommend at Google et al.?
This entry was posted
on Tuesday, November 8th, 2005 at 10:34 pm and is filed under Uncategorized.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
Both comments and pings are currently closed.
Edit this entry.
November 14th, 2005 at 1:01 am e
If a search engine could reliably recognise (say) an ISBN, why would it need the memespace prefix at all? Could it not just recognise a probable ISBN in the query, and then search its index of ISBNs it’s previously recognised on pages?
November 14th, 2005 at 11:53 am e
Matthew,
The presence of an ISBN on a page does not mean the page is “about” the book, only that the book is mentioned there.
Right?