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PHP Nuke Management and Programming

PHP?Nuke is free software, released under the GNU License. It is a CMS (Content Managment System) that integrates in its inside all the instruments that are used to create a site/portal of information (meant in broad sense). Given the immense number of present functions in the installation and in an even greater quantity of modules developed from third parties, the system is also adept to the management of
• Intranet business,
• e?commerce systems,
• corporate portals ,
• public agencies,
• news agencies,
• online companies,
• information sites,
• e?learning systems
• and so on…
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2007 has been a great year for the Web. On the one hand, there has been an upswing in the number of Web 2.0 start- ups globally, while on the other hand, popular Web 2.0 start-ups like Facebook, jaiku, feedburner and others have been acquired or invested in by the giants of the Web like Microsoft and Google. Closer home in India, the trends have been similar, though still in a nascent stage, as social networking became a buzzword with Orkut. That led to start-ups like Minglebox (which obtained funding from Sequoia Capital), BigAdda (backed by Reliance), Desimartini (recently acquired by HTMedia), and many others. Though launches occurred at a lower frequency than in the US, India has seen over 150 Web 2.0 start-ups launched during this year (according to internal research at WATConsult) in different spaces from social networking, social bookmarking and blogging, to media sharing, local search, etc. Let’s take a look at some of the…
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E-Health and the Web 2.0

1. E-Society and knowledge uptake in the public health sector
Generally, the health sector is one of the most knowledge-intensive sectors among all of the public service areas. Thus in this sector, the statement that “technology is the highest contributor of productivity growth” is more valid and more timely than in other publicly financed territories.
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The mercurial rise of social networking sites and user-generated content has rekindled users’ interest in accessing Web-based services on the move. That the mobile phone is an inherently personal device which is not only with us most of the time, but also contains a huge amount of personal data (contact lists of names and phone numbers, stored messages and emails etc.) makes it a logical extension for the social network and the host of other collaborative Web 2.0 applications gaining traction.
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X1 and Microsoft SharePoint: Unified, Secure and Actionable Search for All SharePoint Content The X1 Content Connector for Microsoft SharePoint enables your end users to find, preview and take action on content in their SharePoint environments. X1 enables powerful, unified search capability across multiple SharePoint sites, local files and local email. Users receive federated search results from both local and enterprise server-based content and preview them in native format. Users can also perform common functions from within the X1 interface such as Check-in, Check-out, or custom post-search actions that align with your business processes.
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The X1 Content Connector for Microsoft Exchange gives users immediate access to any content in their Exchange cluster through the X1 Enterprise Client. X1 enables powerful, unified search capability across Exchange server clusters, local files and local email. Users can search Exchange and receive results federated with search results from local and enterprise server-based content. Through seamless integration with Microsoft Outlook ®, users can perform common email functions from inside the X1 interface
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Googling for information on the World Wide Web is such a common activity these days that it is hard to imagine that just a few years ago this verb did not even exist. Search engines are now an integral part of our lifestyle, but this was not always the case. Historically, systems for finding information were driven by data organization and classification performed by humans. Such systems are not entirely obsolete — libraries still keep their books ordered by categories, author names, and so forth. Yahoo! itself started as a manually maintained directory of web sites, organized into categories. Those were the good old days.
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Since 1979, the U.S. Army Research Laboratory has been developing and distributing the BRL-CAD constructive solid geometry (CSG) modeling package for a wide range of military and industrial applications. The package includes a large collection of tools and utilities including an interactive geometry editor, raytracing and generic framebuffer libraries, a network-distributed image processing and signal-processing capabilitym and an embedded scripting language.
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