| | slovo | definícia |  | blog (wn)
 | blog n 1: a shared on-line journal where people can post diary
 entries about their personal experiences and hobbies;
 "postings on a blog are usually in chronological order"
 [syn: web log, blog]
 v 1: read, write, or edit a shared on-line journal
 |  | blog (foldoc)
 | blog web log
 
 (From "web log") Any kind of diary published on
 the web, usually written by an individual (a
 "blogger") but also by corporate bodies.
 
 Blogging is regarded by some as an important social phenomenon as
 it contributes to the easy exchange of ideas among a large and
 growing international community ("the blogosphere").
 
 A blog is just a special kind of website.  The home page
 usually shows the most recent article and links to earlier
 articles, the owner's profile and web logs written by the owner's
 friends.  There is usually a facility for readers to add comments
 to the bottom of articles.  Blogs usually provide an RSS feed of
 current articles, allowing readers to subscribe by adding the feed
 to their favourite RSS reader.
 
 Many sites, e.g. (http://blogger.com/), let you create a blog
 for free.  Many blogs consist almost entirely of links to other
 web logs, some publish original content, a few are worth reading.
 
 (2013-08-15)
 
 |  | blog (jargon)
 | blog n.
 
 [common] Short for weblog, an on-line web-zine or diary (usually with
 facilities for reader comments and discussion threads) made accessible
 through the World Wide Web. This term is widespread and readily forms
 derivatives, of which the best known may be blogosphere.
 
 | 
 | | podobné slovo | definícia |  | blogger (wn)
 | blogger n 1: a person who keeps and updates a blog
 |  | joe bloggs (wn)
 | Joe Bloggs n 1: a hypothetical average man [syn: John Doe, Joe Blow,
 Joe Bloggs, man in the street]
 |  | blog-driven development (foldoc)
 | cut-and-waste code blog-driven development
 
 Code that someone found online (e.g. in a
 blog) and copied and pasted into a product.  The result is
 usually a lot of wasted time trying to track down obscure bugs
 from code that may have made sense in the original context but not
 in the new one.  Also known as blog-driven development.
 
 [{Dodgy Coder
 
 (http://www.dodgycoder.net/2011/11/yoda-conditions-pokemon-exception.html)}].
 
 (2014-07-03)
 
 |  | bloggs family, the (foldoc)
 | Bloggs Family, the 
 An imaginary family consisting of Fred and Mary Bloggs and
 their children.  Used as a standard example in knowledge
 representation to show the difference between extensional and
 intensional objects.  For example, every occurrence of "Fred
 Bloggs" is the same unique person, whereas occurrences of
 "person" may refer to different people.  Members of the Bloggs
 family have been known to pop up in bizarre places such as the
 DEC Telephone Directory.  Compare Mbogo, Dr. Fred.
 
 |  | oblog (foldoc)
 | Oblog 
 A small, portable, Object-oriented extension to
 Prolog by Margaret McDougall of EdCAAD, Dept Arch,
 University of Edinburgh.
 
 (1995-12-29)
 |  | tablog (foldoc)
 | TABLOG 
 A programming language based on {first order
 predicate logic} with equality that combines {relational
 programming} and functional programming.  It has functional
 notation and unification as its binding mechanism.  TABLOG
 supports a more general subset of standard first order logic
 than Prolog.  It employs the Manna-Waldinger
 'deductive-tableau' proof system as an interpreter instead
 of resolution.
 
 (1997-06-19)
 
 |  | bloggs family (jargon)
 | Bloggs Family n.
 
 An imaginary family consisting of Fred and Mary Bloggs and their children.
 Used as a standard example in knowledge representation to show the
 difference between extensional and intensional objects. For example, every
 occurrence of “Fred Bloggs” is the same unique person, whereas occurrences
 of “person” may refer to different people. Members of the Bloggs family
 have been known to pop up in bizarre places such as the old DEC Telephone
 Directory. Compare Dr. Fred Mbogo; J. Random Hacker; Fred Foobar.
 
 |  | blogosphere (jargon)
 | blogosphere 
 
 The totality of all blogs. A culture heavily overlapping with but not
 coincident with hackerdom; a few of its key coinages (blogrolling, {
 fisking}, anti-idiotarianism) are recorded in this lexicon for flavor.
 Bloggers often divide themselves into warbloggers and techbloggers. The
 techbloggers write about technology and technology policy, while the
 warbloggers are more politically focused and tend to be preoccupied with
 U.S. and world response to the post-9/11 war against terrorism. The overlap
 with hackerdom is heaviest among the techbloggers, but several of the most
 prominent warbloggers are also hackers. Bloggers in general tend to be
 aware of and sympathetic to the hacker culture.
 
 |  | blogrolling (jargon)
 | blogrolling 
 
 [From the American political term ‘logrolling’, for supporting another's
 pet bill in the legislature in exchange for reciprocal support,] When you
 hotlink to other bloggers' blogs (and-or other bloggers' specific blog
 entries) in your blog, you are blogrolling. This is frequently reciprocal.
 
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