Edu_RSS
Merger mania in and around eLearning
Schon seit Jahren steht "Konsolidierung" ganz oben auf jeder Agenda, wenn es um die Zukunft des e-Learning-Marktes geht. Jetzt hat SumTotal also Pathlore übernommen, und mit Blick darauf und einige andere aktuelle Bewegungen spricht der Autor von "this much needed... From
www.weiterbildungsblog.de on August 5, 2005 at 6:51 p.m..
Kulturkrieg im Cyberspace
"Frankreich ruft zu den Waffen", heißt es zum Einstieg. Und dann wird Jean-Noel Jeanneney vorgestellt, Präsident der französischen Nationalbibliothek, der sich Sorgen um Europas intellektuelle Identität macht und darüber geschrieben hat ("Quand Google défie l'Europe"/ "Wenn Google Europa herausfordert").... From
www.weiterbildungsblog.de on August 5, 2005 at 6:51 p.m..
Ethan in Jordan and Terrorism explained in Unix
Ethan blogs about his trip to Jordan. Quite fascinating, including Ahmad Humeid's tantalizing idea that Jordan could be a bridgeblog country. A snippet from Ethan's post: ...I was busily looking for Jordanian geeks, and ignored the small group that was beginning to form, as they were clearly "the cool kids", laughing, chain smoking and snapping digital photos. Turns out the geeks are the cool kids in Amman, a city is starting to take technology very seriously. Ethan also points to Jad Madi's The War against Terrorism for Geeks. The parts I understood — I speak first-year U From
Joho the Blog on August 5, 2005 at 6:48 p.m..
Berlind on the new tempo of fact-checking
David Berlind writes a long piece about fact-checking that concludes: ...as the established media community picks up the pace, there are those of us in it who would prefer to keep constant the number of chances we're taking. But if the PR community doesn't also reinvent itself to keep pace with the media revolution by responding to the fact checkers on blogopshere time, it will leave those writers with no choice but to take more chances. I don't know about you, but if I were a PR professional, I sure wouldn't want to be the guy that blew that one... From
Joho the Blog on August 5, 2005 at 5:48 p.m..
Do not click
DontClick.It is an experiment in clickless navigation. I can't tell if my irritation with it is due to the unfamiliarity of clickless navigation and/or if their UI is irritating. E.g., I found it harder to pick from the middle of a list because mousing over an entry selects it. But if its point is that clicking is a part of the rhetoric of our neurology, it's a point well made. (From UI Hall of Fame, via Lockergnome.) [Tag: ui]... From
Joho the Blog on August 5, 2005 at 5:48 p.m..
Merger To Create Major E-Learning Player
More on the SumTotal - Pathlore merger. "Combined, Pathlore and SumTotal--which itself was created by the merger of E-learning vendors Docent and Click2Learn in 2004--have combined revenue of about $100 million and 1,500 customers, including several large health-care companies, financial-services firms, manufacturers, and government agencies." Also very much worth looking at is this
chart of e-learning acquisitions posted by Clark Aldrich to the Learning Circuits blog. By Marianne Kolbasuk McG From
OLDaily on August 5, 2005 at 5:45 p.m..
Two New Developments Point to Loss of OMA DRM Momentum
This story is more about Microsoft expansion into the mobile phone and mobile computing industry than it is about digital rights management, though the expansion is enabled by a mapping from OMA DRM to XrML (aka MPEG REL). I'm quite sure people in the industry realize that if Microsoft's standard (MPEG REL) becomes ascendant they will have as much freedom in the market as, say, competitors to Microsoft Word. By Bill Rosenblatt, DRM Watch, August 4, 2005 [
Refer][
OLDaily on August 5, 2005 at 5:45 p.m..
Interview: Jerry Wennstrom on Learning
I will say quite frankly that I don't believe most of what is written in this article, though it is interesting and worth a link. The author is trying to explain the source of learning and creativity, and finds it in the removal of the self from society and in the listening to the inner voice, surrendering ourselves to the mystery of the self and the world.Well maybe. I do think we have to trust in ourselves and our abilities, and I am all in favour of getting away to the forest for some quiet reflection. But I don't see anything mystical in this. Creativity and learning requi From
OLDaily on August 5, 2005 at 5:45 p.m..
What Can Schools Do? Knowledge, Social Identities and the Changing World
The author takes note of two enquiries launched by the Australian government. "One is an inquiry into what quality research in universities looks like, and how that can best be measured every year. The second is an inquiry into teacher education and whether it is sufficiently 'evidence-based' and producing competent classroom-ready teachers." And she provides the appropriate cautions: "People who think that the only issues for people who work in university education faculties are how to produce a good teacher in their first week on the job, and who think the only good research should From
OLDaily on August 5, 2005 at 5:45 p.m..
Six Degrees of Who Cares?
Yeah, OK, we know that LinkedIn (and Friendster, and Orkut - one wonders why the author has it in for LinkedIn) doesn't really deliver the social nirvana advertised. But does this? "The connections we remember the most are the ones we've made in person where we've exchanged cards and conversation - possibly even emotions and ideas." Cards? I lose cards by the dozen - and always seem to forget my own. Conversations? Maybe, but depending on my dim memory for faces and names is just asking for trouble. "If a good friend or business associate introduces me, in person, to someone, I& From
OLDaily on August 5, 2005 at 5:45 p.m..
Understanding the CC License Selection Behavior of Flickr Users
David Wiley advances and supports an interesting theory about Creative Commons license selection by Flickr users: "Proportion of creators choosing the license ∝ Proportion of rights reserved in the license." In other words, the more rights are given away, the fewer people will opt for the license. The data don't support that hypothesis, and Wiley suggests that "it may be that the best explanation for selection behavior has more to do with sentiments that resonate with the terms 'noncommercial' and 'sharing' than with complicated theoretical structures regarding t From
OLDaily on August 5, 2005 at 5:45 p.m..
Improving Wikipedia's credibility
Improving Wikipedia's credibility. One of the long-standing problems in wikis is vandalism. Here's what the mother of all wikis is doing about this problem.
Web's Wikipedia to tighten editorial rules-founder. Aim is to prevent vandalism, such as occurred following the election of the new Pope Benedict in April, when a user substituted the pontiff's photo on the Wikipedia site with that of the evil emperor from the Star Wars film series. [
Bill Brandon: eLearning on August 5, 2005 at 4:48 p.m..
Ajax the Windows Killer
Ajax the Windows Killer. "AJAX overcomes a severe limitation in traditional web interfaces, which must reload anytime they try to call up new data. By contrast, AJAX lets users manipulate data without clicking through to a new page, Dornfest said. That's putting an end to page refreshes and other interruptions that have handicapped web-based applications until now."
You Say You Want a Web Revolution. A programming technique called AJAX enables software developers to create powerful programs that fun From
Bill Brandon: eLearning on August 5, 2005 at 4:48 p.m..
AARRGH!
So is
this a good thing or a bad thing? I mean, we all want to be at the top of search results, but... From
weblogged News on August 5, 2005 at 4:47 p.m..
Two Internet Baedeckers
Frances Jacobson Harris, a librarian at the University Laboratory High School at Illinois, has written a guide called I Found It on the Internet: Coming of Age Online: ...readers learn, for example, how teens use online jargon like "Leetspeak" to jockey for status; blogs to display their wit and uniqueness; instant messaging to exclude others but also to collaborate on homework projects. David Teten and Scott Allen have written The Virtual Handshake: Opening Doors and Closing Deals Online, which is about what its subtitle says. I haven't read either book.... From
Joho the Blog on August 5, 2005 at 2:45 p.m..
Airport tries to block free wifi
Continental Airlines has been offering free wifi in its Presidents Club lounge. Logan Airport doesn't like that because, according to an article in the Boston Globe (link will break soon), it interferes with security devices: Last month, a Massport attorney warned the airline that its antenna "presents an unacceptable potential risk" to Logan's safety and security systems, including its key card access system and State Police communications. Massport told the airline it could route its wireless signals over Logan's WiFi signal, at a "very reasonable rate structure." In response, From
Joho the Blog on August 5, 2005 at 2:45 p.m..
Library Widgets for Your Desktop?
Widgets "Yesterday Yahoo announced that it has scooped up Konfabulator. The most immediate effect is that the ~proTM version of Konfabulator is now free!... Konfabulator is a program that emulates for windows quite nicely the widget functionality found in Mac OS X Tiger. While the two systems are not compatible with each other, the end result is the same. You download small ~widgetsTM which display on your desktop. I just have four simple ones - we From
The Shifted Librarian on August 5, 2005 at 12:16 p.m..
Last Call: SPARQL Variable Binding Results XML Format
2005-08-02: The RDF Data Access Working Group has released a Last Call Working Draft of the SPARQL Query Results XML Format. The SPARQL query language (pronounced "sparkle") offers developers and end users a way to write and to consume search results across a wide range of information such as personal data, social networks and metadata about digital artifacts like music and images. SPARQL also provides a means of integration over disparate sources. Comments are welcome through 1 September. Visit the Semantic Web home page. (News archive) From
World Wide Web Consortium on August 5, 2005 at 12:15 p.m..
Last Call: Web Services Description Language (WSDL) 2.0
2005-08-03: The Web Services Description Working Group has published Last Call Working Drafts of the Web Services Description Language (WSDL) Version 2.0: the Primer, Part 1: Core Language, Part 2: Adjuncts and the SOAP 1.1 Binding. An XML language, WSDL describes network services and is used to document distributed systems and automate communication between applications. Comments are welcome through 19 September. Read about Web services. (News archive) From
World Wide Web Consortium on August 5, 2005 at 12:15 p.m..
Respecting Lotus Notes
Richard Schwartz
wonders why
this item didn't mention Lotus Notes as a security exemplar: Lotus Notes has had evidence-based code access security -- PKI-based digital signature on code, and the ECL to control finely-grained permissions -- since release 4.5. It's been there for nearly a decade. True. It's also true that, as Richard suggests, Lotus Notes suffers From
Jon's Radio on August 5, 2005 at 12:15 p.m..
Pre-blogging the PDC
As Microsoft gears up for its annual Professional Developers Conference, Michael Herman -- CTO and founder of
Parallelspace -- is asking some probing questions about the agenda: Is the PDC going to be one large Microsoft "technology fair" with no strategic intent other than giving each product group a venue to promote their own technology bits? ...leaving developers to guess what is strategic and what is not. (50% probability) [
Jon's Radio on August 5, 2005 at 12:15 p.m..
A conversation with Jonathan Robie about XQuery
Back in 1998 there was no consensus that anyone would need a full-fledged XML query language. Today, XQuery is being implemented by all the major relational databases, by middleware vendors, in content management systems, and by open source projects. It's even becoming part of the SQL standard. "You've got to consider that success for a language," says Jonathan Robie, one of the prime movers in the development of XQuery. ... As XML becomes the lingua franca for everything from XHTML Web pages to Word documents, the value of a general From
Jon's Radio on August 5, 2005 at 12:15 p.m..
Blog biology
Given our common interests in service-oriented and event-driven architecture, it was inevitable that
Brenda Michelson and I would cross paths. The way that it happened, the other day, was routine for me, but I'll describe it here anyway because I know that it isn't yet routine for lots of folks, and it sheds light on one of the subtlest and most interesting aspects of blogging. ... From
Jon's Radio on August 5, 2005 at 12:15 p.m..
On the virtues of virtual UI
Here are five species of application that seem, at first glance, to have little in common: mainframe "green screen," Win32/VB, Java/Swing, Web browser, and .Net WinForms. An enterprise application portfolio is likely to include members of each of these species. Nobody chooses this diversity; it just happens, and it complicates everything from development and deployment to maintenance and testing. ... Might these various species in fact share common DNA? ... One company with a refreshingly pragmatic approach to isolating common softw From
Jon's Radio on August 5, 2005 at 12:15 p.m..
CME Outfitters Announces Live CE Activity: "An Individualized Approach to the Psychological and Medical Challenges of Bipolar Disorder" Premieres Wed. October 5, 2005
CME Outfitters, LLC, announces an upcoming live and interactive CE activity titled "An Individualized Approach to the Psychological and Medical Challenges of Bipolar Disorder." Offered as a live satellite broadcast, webcast, and telephone audioconference premiering Wednesday, October 5, 2005, from 12:00 p.m.HYPHEN1:00 p.m. ET, the activity will focus on providing clinicians with the evidence-based information to effectively diagnose bipolar disorder and implement appropriate treatment strategies. [PRWEB Aug 2, 2005] From
PR Web on August 5, 2005 at 12:14 p.m..
Treating Drug Addicts With More Drugs
Government-funded clinical trials for drug substitution addiction treatment practices have increased substantially in the last decade. [PRWEB Aug 2, 2005] From
PR Web on August 5, 2005 at 12:14 p.m..
Biology Online Rewards Contributors
Biology-Online.org now pays to the contributors. You can earn money as a forum Moderator or by submitting content. [PRWEB Aug 3, 2005] From
PR Web on August 5, 2005 at 12:14 p.m..
Full Sail Solidifies Its Position As One of the Top Colleges in the Nation
Full Sail Real World Education named one of top "Best Music Programs" in the country by Rolling Stone Magazine. This comes after being named one of the top Game Design schools in the world by Electronic Gaming Monthly and one of the best New Media Schools by Shift Magazine. [PRWEB Aug 3, 2005] From
PR Web on August 5, 2005 at 12:14 p.m..
Announcing the best Mathematics preparation manual for all secondary school standardized tests.
The author of the book, the Ph.D. in Applied Mathematics, the experienced teacher of all secondary school and undergraduate college levels presents this two volume manual where volume one is providing extensive and intensive training to furnish readers with required knowledge from zero level to successful scores on all standardized tests (Sat, ACT, etc.). Second volume provides the continuation and prepares readers to all requirements of the most sophisticated in the area of mathematics colleges and universities of the world. [PRWEB Aug 4, 2005] From
PR Web on August 5, 2005 at 12:14 p.m..
Wireless Networks: Untangled but Still Tied in Knots
Recently, the State of Utah announced awarding NLE a 2 year contract for the sale and implementation of a multi-vendor management and security console for wireless networks WLAN. Under this contract of promising relief, NLE can provide all the necessary software, hardware and installation services for the State's wireless management and security endeavors. The network will use the Airwave Management Platform (AMP), and a combination of other security tools to manage and secure all major wireless vendors. [PRWEB Aug 4, 2005] From
PR Web on August 5, 2005 at 12:14 p.m..
Sacramento says YES to SAFE's campaign to safeguard Italy's cultural heritage
The non-profit group SAFE | Saving Antiquities for Everyone will present its Say YES to Italy campaign at the Festa Italiana in Sacramento, California. During the Italian food and music festival, on Saturday August 6, 11am to 10pm and Sunday August 7, 11am to 7pm SAFE will reach out to Northern California's Italian American community to generate awareness and support for SAFE's campaign to stem the destruction of the Italy's cultural heritage. [PRWEB Aug 5, 2005] From
PR Web on August 5, 2005 at 12:14 p.m..
Industry leader, Michael Platt, speaks at higher education investor conference.
Olathe, KS HYPHEN (August 3, 2005) HYPHEN Michael Platt, CEO and owner of PlattForm in Olathe, Ks., was invited to speak as an authority on the postsecondary education advertising and marketing industry at the Higher Education Investor Conference in New York, NY. [PRWEB Aug 5, 2005] From
PR Web on August 5, 2005 at 12:14 p.m..
Innovative Project for Students Have Been Launched in UK
In attempt to help UK Students to successfully manage their studies a new non-commercial project has been launched this summer. UK Student Portal aims to help students with every aspect of academic issues such as essay and dissertation writing, group work, making effective presentations, and etc. In the light of the recent plagiarism discussions web site provides separate section on referencing and plagiarism to ensure that students have access to valuable information. [PRWEB Aug 5, 2005] From
PR Web on August 5, 2005 at 12:14 p.m..
Now Your Assistive Technology Will Never Be Out of Date
Does your organization only deploy new software once a year? Does this always leave you behind for an entire year? Did you ever wonder if you have the most current version of an application? Do you actually know that you don't have the most current version of an application, but aren't sure of the best way to get the updates you need? Those are common questions that all software users ask every day. To address that issue with our products, Premier Assistive Technology has just integrated technology known as "Live Update" into its Accessibility Suite version 4.0. Now you will on From
PR Web on August 5, 2005 at 12:14 p.m..
Offical FreeCulture.org T-shirts Now on Sale
If you'll excuse the blatant self-promotion, we'd like to let you know that you can support FreeCulture.org by buying one of our new, snazzy t-shirts for only $20 shipped in the US and Canada, or $27 internationally. From
Lessig Blog on August 5, 2005 at 12:13 p.m..
Au revoir
Elizabeth may get a chance to sneak in one last post from Defcon -- if she doesn't get hacked -- but I'll go ahead and wind things down. Thanks to Larry for having us, and thanks to you readers for coming to hear a bit about us. Your feedback is... From
Lessig Blog on August 5, 2005 at 12:13 p.m..
Ten Things That Will Be Free
Welcome! I will be blogging for Larry Lessig for the next couple of weeks, most of which I will be at the Wikimania conference in Frankfurt, Germany. Wikimania is the first major conference of the Wikimedia Community, and my keynote opening talk on Friday will be entitled "Ten Things That... From
Lessig Blog on August 5, 2005 at 12:13 p.m..
Free the Encyclopedia!
As I work through the list of ten things that will be free, the order that I go in has no special meaning. Even so, it should not be surprising that the first thing I'll discuss is the encyclopedia, since I'm best known as "the Wikipedia guy". "Imagine a world... From
Lessig Blog on August 5, 2005 at 12:13 p.m..
Free the Curriculum!
The second thing that will be free is a complete curriculum (in all languages) from Kindergarten through the University level. There are several projects underway to make this a reality, including our own Wikibooks project, but of course this is a much bigger job than the encyclopedia, and it will... From
Lessig Blog on August 5, 2005 at 12:13 p.m..
2005 Minister's Awards for Excellence - Employers of New Apprentices
Now in their fifth year, these awards represent a great opportunity for all businesses to be recognised for their important work in providing training opportunities to local communities. The winning employers each received $5,000, a certificate and a unique hand-crafted award. The award winners were announced on Monday August 1, 2005. From
EdNA Online on August 5, 2005 at 12:13 p.m..
Science Week 2005 - Is Almost Here!
Australia's National Science Week starts on Friday August 13 and concludes on Sunday August 21. There are tonnes of activities for everyone, including things to do online. For example; the National Science Quiz, Watch Science, Which Famous Scientist Are You? Plus an opportunity to send in pictures of school events. From
EdNA Online on August 5, 2005 at 12:13 p.m..
Call for Nominations : Inaugural Australian Vocational Student Prize
The Australian Vocational Student Prize will be awarded for the first time in 2005 to encourage and recognise outstanding senior secondary students undertaking a Vocational Education and Training in Schools programme or School-based New Apprenticeship. 500 vocational education students who have demonstrated a high level of commitment, skill and achievement to achieve exceptional outcomes will be selected from across Australia. Each student will be recognised with a cash prize of $2,000 each and a certificate. From
EdNA Online on August 5, 2005 at 12:13 p.m..
E-learning in Indigenous Communities - A Work in Progress
Two extensive reports funded by the 2000-2004 Australian Flexible Learning Framework have identified significant progress but identify ongoing challenges in flexible learning initiatives in Australia's Indigenous communities. One of these reports written by Metta Young and Peter Robertson explores the current state of information and communication technologies used by Indigenous people living in desert Australia. The other complied in partnership between Charles Darwin University and the Desert Knowledge Co-operative Research Centre, explores the relationship between technologies, cultu From
EdNA Online on August 5, 2005 at 12:13 p.m..
International Achievement Studies - ACER Report
The results of two international studies released late 2004, provide the most recent evidence we have on how levels of school achievement in Australia compare with international standards. Australian Council for Educational Research (ACERÂ’s) chief executive Geoff Masters, has compared the results and discusses what we can learn from the findings. From
EdNA Online on August 5, 2005 at 12:13 p.m..
Still Time to Register for the Buckyballs DownUnder at National Science Week 2005
Buckyballs DownUnder is a National Science Week event resulting from a collaboration between education.au limited (EdNA Online) and DECS SA (Technology School of the Future). Sir Harry Kroto won the 1996 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for his discovery of the ball-like C60 carbon molecule Buckminsterfullerene, a discovery which has since impacted on the science of nanotechnology. On the morning of Wednesday 17 August 2005 Sir Harry will deliver his world-reknowned 'Buckyball' workshop to middle school students gathered at the Technology School of the Future in South Australia. The present From
EdNA Online on August 5, 2005 at 12:13 p.m..
Google's dissatisfied results
Liz Lawley found a feature of Google that I can't reproduce, but she's got the screen capture to prove it. Maybe it's in beta, or maybe Google likes Liz more than it likes me. Anyway, for a search Liz did that had 34 million returns, after the fifth item Google suggested an altered search query and listed the results for it. Sounds like it could be useful. (And Liz's screen capture is much clearer than my description.) [Tag: google]... From
Joho the Blog on August 5, 2005 at 11:46 a.m..
Blogs as "Global Thought Bubble"
So the
New York Times has an editorial about blogs today. It's natural enough to think of the growth of the blogosphere as a merely technical phenomenon. But it's also a profoundly human phenomenon, a way of expanding and, in some sense, reifying the ephemeral daily conversation that humans engage in. Every day the blogosphere captures a little more of the strang From
weblogged News on August 5, 2005 at 11:45 a.m..
Portents
Rick Santorum says something sensible about "Intelligent Design." Bob Novak walks off "Inside Politics" and gets suspended by CNN. One more such event and I'm going to start preparing for The Rapture. (In my case, that means buying heavy weapons and downloading all the music I want.) [Tags: RickSantorum BobNovak]... From
Joho the Blog on August 5, 2005 at 9:49 a.m..
The End of Textbooks
Jimmy Wales (the creator of
Wikipedia)
is guest posting over at Lawrence Lessig's blog on "Ten Things That Will Be Free." Today's installment is a free curriculum: The second thing that will be free is a complete curriculum (in all languages) from Kindergarten through the University level. There are several projects underway to make this a reality, including our own Wikibooks project, but of course this is a much bigger job than the encyclopedia, and it will take much From
weblogged News on August 5, 2005 at 9:47 a.m..
The Cruelest Cut
"It is like sex was in colour before and is now in black and white." - middle aged man speaking 6 months after his circumcision. I was circumcised at 3 years of age - it is my first memory. The memory is of blowing into a balloon at the doctors surgery, falling unconscious and then waking up with a fire in my lap. My penis hurt incredibly and was wrapped very tightly in many bandages. When we were walking from the surgery to the car I had to stop in the street and ask my mother to unwrap the bandages which were so tight and constricting. She was embarrassed and refused at first, until I From
kuro5hin.org on August 5, 2005 at 8:45 a.m..
Grid Meets P2P - Paul Shread, Internet News
A new Global Grid Forum paper examines ways to make grid computing and peer-to-peer (P2P) applications work together. The paper, by Karan Bhatia of the San Diego Supercomputer Center, Per Brand of Sweden's SICS, Sergio Mendiola of Oracle Corp., Microsoft From
Techno-News Blog on August 5, 2005 at 7:46 a.m..
Fancy Meets Function on Runway
The Siggraph Cyber Fashion Show sports futuristic designs and accessories like wearable sensors, integrated cameras and GPS. The techno designs could populate your future closet. Xeni Jardin reports from Los Angeles. From
Wired News on August 5, 2005 at 6:46 a.m..
You Say You Want a Web Revolution
A programming technique called AJAX enables software developers to create powerful programs that function independently from the PC's operating system. Will it wipe out Windows? By Ryan Singel. From
Wired News on August 5, 2005 at 6:46 a.m..
U2's City of Blinding Lights
Twelve thousand daisy-chained LEDs. Spycams controlled by a PlayStation. The Vertigo tour is a monster concert machine -- and the ultimate rock 'n' roll R&D lab. By William Gibson from Wired magazine. From
Wired News on August 5, 2005 at 6:46 a.m..
The Reality Behind Reality TV
A Hooking Up star explains why the reality TV show about online dating barely includes anything about the internet. Commentary by Regina Lynn. From
Wired News on August 5, 2005 at 6:46 a.m..
Europe Follows Grokster's Lead
Peer-to-peer software makers could face prison time under an EU proposal that makes the U.S. Supreme Court look like pansies. The recording industry says it still doesn't go far enough. By Bruce Gain. From
Wired News on August 5, 2005 at 6:46 a.m..
the burden of letting things happen
Designing a social software based intranet within an organisation involves a change process. You need to adjust and promote the organisation from loosly joined entities to decentralized but still densly knitted nodes in a collective brain. Those things do not happen by just implementing a software solution.Most of your energy and capital needs to go into conceiving such a virtual organization. You need to decide what kind of spaces you create, if every individual has one, when it has one, if there is space for the entire company, who is a role-model, who is the gardener, what are your po From
thomas n. burg | randgänge on August 5, 2005 at 5:45 a.m..