Blogging clients allow you to prepare posts and then upload them directly. Useful for
-composing drafts of posts offline
-easier editing of HTML
-easier inserting and handling of photos
-easier editing of existing postsHere's a list of the ones I know of. Any additions welcome.
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I've been going insane this morning, thinking I might have mysteriously lost my ability to type, or even recognize valid HTML…and I've been seeing really weird stuff everywhere I type on the web.
It looks like the problem is Webkit, the browser I usually use. I updated it this morning, and it seems…
I'll be doing a session at the upcoming ScienceOnline 2011 conference on ebooks with David Dobbs, Tom Levenson and Carl Zimmer:
Here's the description:
Sunday, 11.30-12.30
eBooks and the science community - Carl Zimmer, Tom Levenson, David Dobbs and John Dupuis
Ebooks are by far the fastest growing…
Yesterday, a bunch of us (e.g., Paul, Brian, Ruby, Wayne, Jackson, Mark and me) got together for tea at Anton's house, analyzed the past year of bloggy activity and plotted to take over the world next year: meetups (a.k.a. beer-blogs-bowling events), science blogging conference, faithblogging,…
The day before yesterday, my copy of The Open Laboratory 2007, the second annual science blogging anthology, arrived in the mail.
So yesterday, Reed and I met at a coffee shop and looked it over. It looks great! Reed knows what he's doing and is a perfectionist, so of course the book looks…
Don't know about the Windows clients he talks about, but his Mac info is either a bit out of date or wrong. Deepest Sender for example is not compatible with the latest version of FireFox, while Ecto at $17.95 US is not free.