#1. Delete the old Delicious add-on. In FireFox, go to “Tools”, “Add-ons”, select “Delicious” and click on “Uninstall”.
#2. Install the new Delicious add-on. – Please, do it, mister Jason Ruspini. I sadly saw that you abandoned your Delicious bookmarks.
#3. To try your Delicious add-on for the first time, bookmark this David Pennock blog post bragging about Yahoo! (the owner of Delicious) being a user-generated company. – DISCLOSURE: Even though I love Google Search, Google News, Google Mail, Google Analytics, Google Calendar, and Google Reader [*], I love the openness of the Yahoo! people, especially in regard to free, open-source software, which they support heartfully.
#4. Bookmark these two Delicious links on prediction markets:
- All the Delicious social bookmarks (a.k.a. social favorites) on prediction markets
- The most popular social bookmarks (a.k.a. social favorites) on prediction markets – Yes, both CFM and Midas Oracle are in the short list. Not that I want to brag about it. It’s not my style.
#5. Bookmark these two Delicious webspots:
- Chris Hibbert‘s social bookmarks – The Zocalo guy seems to be a right libertarian.
- Mike Linksvayer‘s social bookmarks – The Creative Commons guy seems to be a left libertarian.
Technical Note: In addition to bookmarking them, some people would like to subscribe to their feed.
Remark: I’m still waiting for this schmuck of David Pennock to switch from Yahoo! My Web to Delicious. Our great prediction market luminary (or so he thinks he is) complained indirectly (bravitude, connais pas) about Yahoo! maintaining two different social bookmark services. “Do what I say, not what I do.”
#6. Bookmark the NewsFutures blog. – The two main themes are: How great NewsFutures is, and how great EJSS is.
Humor aside, it’s an interesting blog. EJSS is the only prediction market consultant who elaborates, even though it’s once a quarter, only.
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[*] 126 users are using Google Reader to read us daily. A big hello to our 57 NetVibes subscribers, by the way.
They are more numerous than the BlogLines subscribers, now. For your information, NetVibes is a feed reader that is displayed as one page. Don’t ask.
Like Tom Bell, I’d prefer to have the term ‘liberal’ back.