First POST: Lenses
BY Nick Judd | Friday, November 4 2011
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The Hajj, the once-in-a-lifetime pilgrimage to Mecca required in the Muslim faith by any practicioner physically and financially able to make the journey, will be streamed live on YouTube by the Saudi Ministry of Culture and Information.
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One Colorado town on Tuesday won the right to run its own municipal broadband network.
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Digital Democracy has launched a tool for Occupy Wall Street to reach consensus via pairwise comparison. (First spotted by Good magazine.)
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An email from the Republican National Committee, signed by chairman Reince Priebus:
A key part of our grassroots operation is our new GOP Mobile Army that provides our supporters with real-time campaign updates via text message and exclusive access to the RNC's newest TV & Web ads before they run nationally. If we are to build the solid grassroots operation that we must have to defeat Obama, we need the new GOP Mobile Army to be a true national network of support. This is why I need your help today.
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A California government website for transparency shut down on Nov. 2.
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SCOTUSBlog on the use of blogging to influence courts, via participant Rick Hasen.
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Here in New York, the mayor's new advisory council on technology recently held its first meeting.
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Here's the lead from a new NextGov story about USAJobs, the federal jobs website that's been taking heat for bugs and glitches since the administration took over running it from Monster.com: "Officials from the Office of Personnel Management apologized Thursday for technical difficulties at the recently relaunched website for government job listings and applications, but pointed to user error as the source of many of the problems."
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The Goverment Results Transparency Act, a bill requiring agencies to post program-specific performance data to government websites, has cleared a panel of the House Oversight and Government Reform committee.
