These are my links for June 7th through June 8th:
- Channel 4 beats BBC in race to place its archive online for free | News – The broadcaster will become Britain's first to offer its archived content – beating the BBC, which screens programmes for seven days after they air via its iPlayer service.
- Fergiland – Your place for ploughs, parts, grass cutters and mowers for your vintage Ferguson T20 or MF35 tractor.
- Boomtown – xbox – Xbox 360 – LONDON & DUBLIN – 28 May 2009: Millions of entertainment fans will soon have the way they watch TV transformed, as Xbox 360 and Sky announce a ground-breaking partnership which will enable, for the first time ever, premium live television to be watched through a games console.
- Tweet My Gaming: Tracking game popularity trends on Twitter. – Tweet My Gaming is a real-time feed of video game conversations happening on Twitter.
- Scan Your Books And Search Them On Google – One of the most useful, if often-overlooked, features of Google Book Search is the ability to enter your own books and create a personal library which you can then search if Google has scanned those books. (And chances are it probably has). If you are trying to find a passage or a factoid you once read but can’t remember the book no matter how hard you wrack your brain, the ability to search your personal library can come in handy. Except who wants to enter each book one at a time?
- Watch Internet TV – Live Streaming Video From Livestream.com – looks like a webcam service – interesting.
- A Map Of Social (Network) Dominance – Even on the Web, world dominance must be achieved one country at a time. While Facebook has long been the largest social network in the world, and should soon pass MySpace in the U.S., it is not the largest social network in every country. The map above created by Vincenzo Cosenza resembles more a game of Risk, with Facebook sweeping across the globe from the West.
- Friends of Ferguson Heritage Ltd. – The Friends of Ferguson Heritage Ltd. exists to encourage and assist enthusiasts in their interest in the engineering achievements of the late Harry Ferguson. The club made a healthy start, and has grown rapidly since the first magazine was published (issue one was for Spring/Summer 1994), and the excellent magazine (pictured right) is now received three times a year by members. The internet came too late for Harry Ferguson, otherwise he would, no doubt, have made good use of it.