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Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements UNIX and Linux RSS News Rob Weir Exposes an Anti-ODF Whisper Campaign - Updated Post 302324318 by Linux Bot on Wednesday 10th of June 2009 12:30:03 PM
Old 06-10-2009
Rob Weir Exposes an Anti-ODF Whisper Campaign - Updated

Alex Brown, the convenor of the OOXML BRM, has been editing Wikipedia's article on ODF. That strikes me odd, like finding out Steve Jobs had been editing the Microsoft Zune page. Some things are simply inappropriate. It puzzles me why Wikipedia allows it, frankly.
If you read the talk page on ODF, you'll see that there are others there trying mightily to spin the article on ODF more negatively than is factual. And such rudeness! Plenty of smears against Groklaw too, I couldn't help but notice. It does seem to me that there is a marked increase in what I view as a concerted submarine marketing effort. Some of it is subtle. Most of it is not. A fair measure of it is mean-spirited. Some of it is lies, pure and simple.
In the good old days, dead people supported Microsoft, if you remember that funny headline about a pro-Microsoft astroturfing campaign, but at least it wasn't a smear campaign, just pro-Microsoft. Nowadays, I think I would have to rewrite the headline to read, "Mean People Support Microsoft." Or worse. You see, Groklaw has been visited recently by several OOXML types, including Alex Brown, Doug Mahue of Microsoft, and Rick Jelliffe, all singing pretty much the same songs, posting on our ODF articles, so I got to watch it close up. I puzzled over it, because they seemed so deliberately rude. Why come here just to be offensive? So I'd remind them that we have a comments policy here, including no ad hominem attacks on anyone. And they would continue on. It was so odd. The last one went away when I told him that if he wished to make a permanent record of how horribly Microsoft supporters conduct themselves, he could post to his heart's content.
It turns out it's not just here, and there is evidently a point to it. Wikipedia is apparently the epicenter. And what is being posted there is reportedly being used in an anti-ODF FUD campaign by guess who.

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WWW::Wikipedia::Entry(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				WWW::Wikipedia::Entry(3pm)

NAME
WWW::Wikipedia::Entry - A class for representing a Wikipedia Entry SYNOPSIS
my $wiki = WWW::Wikipedia->new(); my $entry = $wiki->search( 'Perl' ); print $entry->text(); my $entry_es = $entry->language( 'es' ); print $entry_es->text(); DESCRIPTION
WWW::Wikipedia::Entry objects are usually created using the search() method on a WWW::Wikipedia object to search for a term. Once you've got an entry object you can then extract pieces of information from the entry using the following methods. METHODS
new() You probably won't use this one, it's the constructor that is called behind the scenes with the correct arguments by WWW::Wikipedia::search(). text() The brief text for the entry. This will provide the first paragraph of text; basically everything up to the first heading. Ordinarily this will be what you want to use. When there doesn't appear to be summary text you will be returned the fulltext instead. If text() returns nothing then you probably are looking at a disambiguation entry, and should use related() to lookup more specific entries. text_basic() The same as "text()", but not run through Text::Autoformat. fulltext() Returns the full text for the entry, which can be extensive. fulltext_basic() The same as "fulltext()", but not run through Text::Autoformat. title() Returns a title of the entry. related() Returns a list of terms in the wikipedia that are mentioned in the entry text. categories() Returns a list of categories which the entry is part of. So Perl is part of the Programming languages category. headings() Returns a list of headings used in the entry. raw() Returns the raw wikitext for the entry. language() With no parameters, it will return the current language of the entry. By specifying a two-letter language code, it will return the same entry in that language, if available. languages() Returns an array of two letter language codes denoting the languages in which this entry is available. AUTHORS
Ed Summers <ehs@pobox.com> Brian Cassidy <bricas@cpan.org> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2003-2011 by Ed Summers This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.1 2011-02-16 WWW::Wikipedia::Entry(3pm)
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