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![]() | 1 | initial version | posted 2015-01-16 11:45:35 +0200 |
A fair amount of busywork can grow out of forum moderation and content management, and plenty more actual work on top of that. With some word and phrase statistics collection (by regular expression matching), displayed as SVG, interested parties will be able to see better what people are writing about. The statistics' anonymity will be useful to avoid scaring potentially timid newer users, who may be non-native contributors, from posting. Non-anonymity might lead to counter-productive or less than sociable behaviour.
Computed lists as tools leading to visualisations (near-instant knowledge) where readers gain insight quickly instead of after a few paragraphs (interpretation and reflective reasoning) would really kit out this subdomain on jolla.com, as far as I can tell.
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard key positioning.
![]() | 2 | retagged |
A fair amount of busywork can grow out of forum moderation and content management, and plenty more actual work on top of that. With some word and phrase statistics collection (by regular expression matching), displayed as SVG, interested parties will be able to see better what people are writing about. The statistics' anonymity will be useful to avoid scaring potentially timid newer users, who may be non-native contributors, from posting. Non-anonymity might lead to counter-productive or less than sociable behaviour.
Computed lists as tools leading to visualisations (near-instant knowledge) where readers gain insight quickly instead of after a few paragraphs (interpretation and reflective reasoning) would really kit out this subdomain on jolla.com, as far as I can tell.
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard key positioning.
![]() | 3 | No.3 Revision |
A fair amount of busywork busywork can grow out of forum moderation and content management, and plenty more actual work work on top of that. With some word and phrase statistics collection (by regular expression matching), displayed as SVG, SVG, interested parties will be able to see better what people are writing about. The statistics' anonymity anonymity will be useful to avoid scaring potentially timid newer users, who may be non-native contributors, from posting. Non-anonymity might lead to counter-productive or less than sociable behaviour.
Computed lists as tools leading to visualisations (near-instant knowledge) where readers gain insight quickly instead of after a few paragraphs (interpretation and reflective reasoning) would really kit out this subdomain on jolla.com, as far as I can tell.
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard key keyboard's character positioning.
![]() | 4 | No.4 Revision |
A fair amount of busywork can grow out of forum moderation and content management, and plenty more actual work on top of that. With some word and phrase statistics collection (by regular expression matching), displayed as SVG, interested parties will be able to see better what people are writing about. The statistics' anonymity will be useful to avoid scaring potentially timid newer users, who may be non-native contributors, from posting. Non-anonymity might lead to counter-productive or less than sociable behaviour.
Computed lists as tools leading to visualisations (near-instant knowledge) where readers gain insight quickly instead of after a few paragraphs (interpretation and reflective reasoning) would really kit out this subdomain on jolla.com, as far as I can tell.
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.
![]() | 5 | No.5 Revision |
A fair amount of busywork can grow out of forum moderation and content management, and plenty more actual work on top of that. With some word and phrase statistics collection (by regular expression matching), displayed as SVG, interested parties will be able to see better what people are writing about. The statistics' anonymity will be useful to avoid scaring potentially timid newer users, who may be non-native contributors, from posting. Non-anonymity might lead to counter-productive or less than sociable behaviour.
Computed lists as tools leading to visualisations (near-instant knowledge) where readers gain insight quickly instead of after a few paragraphs (interpretation and reflective reasoning) would really kit out this subdomain on jolla.com, as far as I can tell.
A useful resource giving dozens of examples of **awk** scripts is http://awk.info/?TextMining
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.
![]() | 6 | No.6 Revision |
A fair amount of busywork can grow out of forum moderation and content management, and plenty more actual work on top of that. With some word and phrase statistics collection (by regular expression matching), displayed as SVG, interested parties will be able to see better what people are writing about. The statistics' anonymity will be useful to avoid scaring potentially timid newer users, who may be non-native contributors, from posting. Non-anonymity might lead to counter-productive or less than sociable behaviour.
Computed lists as tools leading to visualisations (near-instant knowledge) where readers gain insight quickly instead of after a few paragraphs (interpretation and reflective reasoning) would really kit out this subdomain on jolla.com, as far as I can tell.
A useful resource giving dozens of examples of **awk** awk scripts is http://awk.info/?TextMining
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.
![]() | 7 | No.7 Revision |
A fair amount of busywork can grow out of forum moderation and content management, and plenty more actual work on top of that. With some word and phrase statistics collection (by regular expression matching), displayed as SVG, interested parties will be able to see better what people are writing about. The statistics' anonymity will be useful to avoid scaring potentially timid newer users, who may be non-native contributors, from posting. Non-anonymity might lead to counter-productive or less than sociable behaviour.
Computed lists as tools leading to visualisations (near-instant knowledge) where readers gain insight quickly instead of after a few paragraphs (interpretation and reflective reasoning) would really kit out this subdomain on jolla.com, as far as I can tell.
A resource giving dozens of examples of awk scripts is http://awk.info/?TextMining
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.
![]() | 8 | No.8 Revision |
A fair amount of busywork can grow out of forum moderation and content management, and plenty more actual work on top of that. With some word and phrase statistics collection (by regular expression matching), displayed as SVG, interested parties will be able to see better what people are writing about. The statistics' anonymity will be useful to avoid scaring potentially timid newer users, who may be non-native contributors, from posting. Non-anonymity might lead to counter-productive or less than sociable behaviour.
Computed lists as tools leading to visualisations (near-instant knowledge) where readers gain insight quickly instead of after a few paragraphs (interpretation and reflective reasoning) would really kit out this subdomain on jolla.com, as far as I can tell.
A resource giving dozens of examples of awk scripts scripts is http://awk.info/?TextMining
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.
![]() | 9 | No.9 Revision |
A fair amount of busywork can grow out of forum moderation and content management, and plenty more actual work on top of that. With some word and phrase statistics collection (by regular expression matching), displayed as SVG, interested parties will be able to see better what people are writing about. The statistics' anonymity will be useful to avoid scaring potentially timid newer users, who may be non-native contributors, from posting. Non-anonymity might lead to counter-productive or less than sociable behaviour.
Computed lists as tools leading to visualisations (near-instant knowledge) where readers gain insight quickly instead of after a few paragraphs (interpretation and reflective reasoning) would really kit out this subdomain on jolla.com, as far as I can tell.
A resource giving dozens of examples of awk scripts is http://awk.info/?TextMining
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.
This approach would go some towards mitigating the issues raised by postings like 427: features & ideas breakdown request.
![]() | 10 | retagged |
A fair amount of busywork can grow out of forum moderation and content management, and plenty more actual work on top of that. With some word and phrase statistics collection (by regular expression matching), displayed as SVG, interested parties will be able to see better what people are writing about. The statistics' anonymity will be useful to avoid scaring potentially timid newer users, who may be non-native contributors, from posting. Non-anonymity might lead to counter-productive or less than sociable behaviour.
Computed lists as tools leading to visualisations (near-instant knowledge) where readers gain insight quickly instead of after a few paragraphs (interpretation and reflective reasoning) would really kit out this subdomain on jolla.com, as far as I can tell.
A resource giving dozens of examples of awk scripts is http://awk.info/?TextMining
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.
This approach would go some towards mitigating the issues raised by postings like 427: features & ideas breakdown request.
![]() | 11 | retagged |
A fair amount of busywork can grow out of forum moderation and content management, and plenty more actual work on top of that. With some word and phrase statistics collection (by regular expression matching), displayed as SVG, interested parties will be able to see better what people are writing about. The statistics' anonymity will be useful to avoid scaring potentially timid newer users, who may be non-native contributors, from posting. Non-anonymity might lead to counter-productive or less than sociable behaviour.
Computed lists as tools leading to visualisations (near-instant knowledge) where readers gain insight quickly instead of after a few paragraphs (interpretation and reflective reasoning) would really kit out this subdomain on jolla.com, as far as I can tell.
A resource giving dozens of examples of awk scripts is http://awk.info/?TextMining
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.
This approach would go some towards mitigating the issues raised by postings like 427: features & ideas breakdown request.
![]() | 12 | retagged |
A fair amount of busywork can grow out of forum moderation and content management, and plenty more actual work on top of that. With some word and phrase statistics collection (by regular expression matching), displayed as SVG, interested parties will be able to see better what people are writing about. The statistics' anonymity will be useful to avoid scaring potentially timid newer users, who may be non-native contributors, from posting. Non-anonymity might lead to counter-productive or less than sociable behaviour.
Computed lists as tools leading to visualisations (near-instant knowledge) where readers gain insight quickly instead of after a few paragraphs (interpretation and reflective reasoning) would really kit out this subdomain on jolla.com, as far as I can tell.
A resource giving dozens of examples of awk scripts is http://awk.info/?TextMining
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.
This approach would go some towards mitigating the issues raised by postings like 427: features & ideas breakdown request.
![]() | 13 | No.13 Revision |
A fair amount of busyworkBusywork can grow out of from forum moderation and content management, and plenty more management. On top of that, actual work on top of that. With some word and phrase . Text statistics collection (by by regular expression matching), matches displayed as SVG, interested parties will be able to lets us see better what people are writing about. The statistics' anonymity will concerns people. Anonymity can be useful to avoid scaring potentially timid newer users, who may be non-native contributors, from posting. Non-anonymity might lead to counter-productive or less than sociable behaviour.too.
Computed lists as visualisations tools leading to visualisations (near-instant knowledge) allow near-instant knowledge where readers gain get universal understood immediate insight quickly instead of after a few having go power through paragraphs (interpretation of non-native reading, interpretation and reflective reasoning) reasoning. This would really kit out this subdomain on jolla.com, as far as I can tell.
A resource giving dozens of examples of awk scripts is http://awk.info/?TextMining
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.
This approach would go some towards mitigating the issues raised by postings like 427: features & ideas breakdown request.
![]() | 14 | No.14 Revision |
Busywork can grow from forum management. On top of that, actual work. Text statistics collection by regular expression matches displayed as SVG lets us see better what concerns people. Anonymity can be useful too.
Computed visualisations tools allow near-instant knowledge where readers get universal understood immediate insight instead of having go power through paragraphs of non-native reading, interpretation and reflective reasoning. This would seem useful and enable collaborative understanding across human language barriers that English prose simply cannot do. Want more customers? Communicate with well-made graphics, not just text.
A resource giving dozens of examples of awk scripts is http://awk.info/?TextMining
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.
This approach would go some towards mitigating the issues raised by postings like 427: features & ideas breakdown request.
![]() | 15 | No.15 Revision |
Busywork can grow from forum management. On top of that, actual work. Text statistics collection by regular expression matches displayed as SVG lets us see better what concerns people. Anonymity can be useful too.
Computed visualisations tools allow near-instant knowledge where readers get universal understood universally understood, immediate insight instead of having go power through paragraphs of non-native (often non-native) reading, interpretation and reflective reasoning. This would seem useful and enable collaborative understanding across human language barriers that English prose simply cannot do. Want more customers? Communicate with well-made graphics, not just text.
A resource giving dozens of examples of awk scripts is http://awk.info/?TextMining
By using regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will be the extremes of the result range, that is, the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.
This approach would go some towards mitigating the issues raised by postings like 427: features & ideas breakdown request.
![]() | 16 | No.16 Revision |
Busywork can grow from forum management. On top of that, actual work. Text statistics collection by regular expression matches displayed as SVG lets us see better what concerns people. Anonymity can be useful too.
Computed visualisations tools allow near-instant knowledge where readers get universally understood, immediate insight instead of having go power through paragraphs of (often non-native) reading, interpretation and reflective reasoning. This would seem useful and enable collaborative understanding across human language barriers that English prose simply cannot do. Want more customers? Communicate with well-made graphics, not just text.
A resource giving dozens of examples of awk scripts is See also: http://awk.info/?TextMining
By using regular Regular expressions typos might be easier to catch. The interesting parts, I believe, will can catch typos. Interesting may be the extremes of the result range, that is, marginal results: the fewest and least matches, with some useful clumping of phrases from one end to the other. clause parts clumping.
Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.
This approach would go some towards mitigating the issues raised by postings like 427: features & ideas breakdown request.
![]() | 17 | No.17 Revision |
Busywork can grow from forum management. On top of that, actual work. Text statistics collection by regular expression matches displayed as SVG lets us see better what concerns people. Anonymity can be useful too.
Computed visualisations tools allow near-instant knowledge where readers get universally understood, immediate insight instead of having go power through paragraphs of (often non-native) reading, interpretation and reflective reasoning. This would seem useful and enable collaborative understanding across human language barriers that English prose simply cannot do. Want more customers? Communicate with well-made graphics, not just text.
See also: http://awk.info/?TextMiningSome tangental links...
Input handling: http://awk.info/?TextMining Output: http://quantifiedself.com/
Regular expressions can catch typos. Interesting may be the marginal results: the fewest and least matches, with some clause parts clumping.
Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.
![]() | 18 | No.18 Revision |
Busywork can grow from forum management. On top of that, actual work. Text statistics collection by regular expression matches displayed as SVG lets us see better what concerns people. Anonymity can be useful too.
Computed visualisations tools allow near-instant knowledge where readers get universally understood, immediate insight instead of having go power through paragraphs of (often non-native) reading, interpretation and reflective reasoning. This would seem useful and enable collaborative understanding across human language barriers that English prose simply cannot do. Want more customers? Communicate with well-made graphics, not just text.
Some tangental links...
Input handling: http://awk.info/?TextMining Output: http://quantifiedself.com/
Regular expressions can catch typos. Interesting may be the marginal results: the fewest and least matches, with some clause parts clumping.
Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning.positioning (assumes forum access by Sailfish/Jolla Phone).
![]() | 19 | No.19 Revision |
Busywork can grow or missed focus tends to emerge in forum management from forum management. time to time. This may be because some easier actions, low-hanging fruit, get done more often and more readily than is more useful than harder tasks. On top of that, that there is that actual work. Text statistics collection by regular expression matches displayed as SVG lets us see better what concerns people. Anonymity can be useful too.
Computed visualisations tools allow near-instant knowledge where readers get universally understood, immediate insight instead of having go power through paragraphs of (often non-native) reading, interpretation and reflective reasoning. This would seem useful and enable collaborative understanding across human language barriers that English prose simply cannot do. do, particularly to bridge the chasm leading to languages yet to be part of Sailfish OS localisation achievements.
Want more customers? Communicate with well-made graphics, not just text.
Some tangental links...
Input links - input handling: http://awk.info/?TextMining
Output: http://awk.info/?TextMining ; output: http://quantifiedself.com/
Regular expressions can catch typos. Interesting may be the marginal results: the fewest and least matches, with some clause parts clumping.
Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning (assumes forum access by Sailfish/Jolla Phone).
See also: Question, Comment and Answers Visualisations Question.
Documentation metadata visualisation on the content of the phone, while it can raise the spectre of concerns about encroachments on privacy, are also good for prospective user empowerment. The way Google knows more about users do, than you do about your own use and phone content, visualisation could help Jolla set Sailfish above competing offerings.
The last paragraph is not a separate Question. It is a logical step ahead when visuals become larger in the daily work of device users and distributors.
![]() | 20 | No.20 Revision |
Busywork or missed focus tends to emerge in forum management from time to time. This may be because some easier actions, low-hanging fruit, get done more often and more readily than is more useful than harder tasks. On top of that there is that actual work. Text statistics collection by regular expression matches displayed as SVG lets us see better what concerns people. Anonymity can be useful too.
Computed visualisations tools allow near-instant knowledge where readers get universally understood, immediate insight instead of having go power through paragraphs of (often non-native) reading, interpretation and reflective reasoning. This would seem useful and enable collaborative understanding across human language barriers that English prose simply cannot do, particularly to bridge the chasm leading to languages yet to be part of Sailfish OS localisation achievements.
Want more customers? Communicate with well-made graphics, not just text.
Some tangental links - input handling: http://awk.info/?TextMining ; output: http://quantifiedself.com/
Regular expressions can catch typos. Interesting may be the marginal results: the fewest and least matches, with some clause parts clumping.
Most common typo
might lead to a prediction fix or a change in one localisation's virtual keyboard's character positioning (assumes forum access by Sailfish/Jolla Phone).
See also: Question, Comment and Answers Visualisations Question.
Documentation metadata visualisation on the content of the phone, while it can raise the spectre of concerns about encroachments on privacy, are also good for prospective user empowerment. The way Google knows more about users do, than you do about your own use and phone content, visualisation could help Jolla set Sailfish above competing offerings.
The last paragraph is not a separate Question. It is a logical step ahead when visuals become larger in the daily work of device users and distributors.
For example: a histogram of page edit (diff) size and distribution over a page's history, with all content at a given moment measured, for example, as a concatented string That could display on every Question header section or every search results list.