Could happen to anybody Permanent link to this item in the archive.

Oh shoot, I didn't mean to nuke that part here yesterday, I was just going to edit it, then I got frustrated and bailed it was gone. Just a slip. Oh, right, well, yeah there was this other time earlier this month when I got frustrated and you know... same deal... tried to edit... frustrated... bailed... poof. What, February? Hmmmm.... February, ohhhhh yeah. Right. Honestly you know what happened is I was just going to edit this entry and darned if I didn't get frustrated so I just bailed, and I guess the paragraph wasn't there anymore. Then later that day I went back to see if I could put it back and the silly old blog went all kerflooey! The damned cursor jumped down a couple paragraphs and started adding in text about giving thanks and praise. I dunno what the heck it was doing, copying in some kind of religious spam, I guess. Unreal!

Sounds like the World Outline?  Permanent link to this item in the archive.

Ray Ozzie's brother, Jack, introduces himself, and talks more about SSE on the Microsoft Team RSS blog. I haven't tried to dig very deep into SSE yet. This bit interested me:

 "For example, why do your work and family calendars have to be separate? With SSE you could share your work calendar with your spouse. If your calendar were published as an SSE feed, changes to your work calendar could be replicated to your spouse’s calendar, and vice versa. As a result, your spouse could see your work calendar and add new appointments, such as a parent-teacher meeting, or a doctor’s appointment."

For one thing I really like the idea of integrating work and life, and being the same person everywhere I go.

Plus, the description of calendar sharing strikes me as being kind of world-outlinish?

I would like to read about more examples of applications. I guess calendaring doesn't interest me that much.