Archive for the 'links' Category
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"Many of you have asked if I could name some software tools that can be used for drawing Sankey diagrams. So I am compiling a list of programs I have tested, or came across during my research. By no means do I wish to endorse any of these products, however, I do have a favorite, as some of the readers of this blog might have observed already.
I am grouping the list in (1) softwares that are specifically designed to make Sankey diagrams, and (2) other programs that do have Sankey as one of their features, but the main purpose for using the software is different. Time permitting I will do individual pages for the tools, and include my test notes and screenshots. The lists are sorted alphabetically."
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"Software I Paid For But No Longer Use
As much as I like open source, I enjoy paying for software. Give me a good solution with a nice interface, and I’ll give you some reasonable amount of money.
Digital life being fluid and transient, even paid software can quickly fall to the bottom of the virtual junk drawer. Sometimes I feel that an application was worth paying for if only for temporary use, and sometimes not."
via. daringfireball.net
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This is a plugin to integrate Drupal users with webcalendar (very good and advanced calendar!)
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"WebCalendar is a PHP-based calendar application that can be configured as a single-user calendar, a multi-user calendar for groups of users, or as an event calendar viewable by visitors. MySQL, PostgreSQL, Oracle, DB2, Interbase, MS SQL Server, or ODBC is required.
WebCalendar can be setup in a variety of ways, such as…
* A schedule management system for a single person
* A schedule management system for a group of people, allowing one or more assistants to manage the calendar of another user
* An events schedule that anyone can view, allowing visitors to submit new events
* A calendar server that can be viewed with iCalendar-compliant calendar applications like Mozilla Sunbird, Apple iCal or GNOME Evolution or RSS-enabled applications like Firefox, Thunderbird, RSSOwl, FeedDemon, or BlogExpress"
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