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The best streaming devices for 2025

Engadget

Nearly all streaming devices come with a remote that lets you search and do other operations using your voice, eliminating the need to hunt and peck at on-screen keyboards. They all offer universal search, in which searching for a title takes you to whichever app has it available.

Stream 112
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Free and open source tool #12: Miro

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

Miro is basically a video player, which can recognize RSS feeds, and automatically download videos. You can search YouTube, Google video or about 10 other video sites, and make those searches a new channel. You can search YouTube, Google video or about 10 other video sites, and make those searches a new channel.

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Social Actions API, Semantic Web, and Linked Open Data: An Interview with Peter Deitz

Amy Sample Ward

In 2007, I realized that a much more effective way to aggregate interesting actions would be to subscribe to RSS feeds from trusted sources. I wrote about the potential for aggregating RSS feeds of giving opportunities in a blog post called, Why We Need Group Fundraising RSS Feeds.

API 186
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Google Chrome

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

Google already knows enough about me (it reads my mail, my feeds, my search history, and a few shared documents, to boot,) I’m certainly not going to add virtually everything else I do (the percent of things I do using a protocol other than http(s) is dwindling by the second.) I am going to have to stop using Chrome.

Google 113
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Allan Benamer's NpTech Tag Meta Feed Digg Plig Collaborative Search Mashup

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

People who can touch API's out there have been fooling around with trying to extract data from the NpTech tag for analysis as well as think about ways that we can make the data that has been tagged more filtered via social search, collaborative filtering, and whatever else. Michele Martin's NpTech Search. January 12, 2007.

Mashup 50
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What is private? What is public?

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

as well as newsgroups, commerce sites (like Amazon), review sites, forums, and news groups, and even searches the general Web to find out where your people are and what they’re doing online. It is an inevitable result of our desire for social networks, as well as our desire for information to be portable (like in RSS feeds.)

Public 100
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Web 2.0 Part I

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

I blog, I use Flickr, I search blogs using Technorati, I use del.icio.us The technologies generally connected to Web 2.0 Hallmarks of Web 2.0 sites include a democratic approach to content, organization by tagging, and new, much more flexible and intuitive interfaces. At this point, I use Web 2.0 applications every day. I think Web 2.0,

Web 100