beWeeVee is a real time co-operative technology currently implemented as a collaborative real-time editor, allowing several persons to edit a text document at the same time, and see all of the participants' edits in real-time, each with its own color. It is web-based and allows people using any computer to co-operate in a task. beWeeVee's backend is implemented in /.NET and the web frontend is implemented using Silverlight 2.
Huddle Group, a Corvalius' partner, has released beWeeVee for Sharepoint, a webpart that fully integrates Microsoft Sharepoint 2007 and 2010 and allows users to collaborate in real-time with security and versioning provided by Sharepoint itself.
The first tech preview of beWeeVee was launched on 23 June 2009 by Corvalius.
On July 29, 2010, Corvalius has released Beweevee for Visual Studio. An add-in/plug-in for Visual Studio 2008 which enables live collaboration in the IDE.
Huddle Group, a Corvalius' partner, has released beWeeVee for Sharepoint, a webpart that fully integrates Microsoft Sharepoint 2007 and 2010 and allows users to collaborate in real-time with security and versioning provided by Sharepoint itself.
The first tech preview of beWeeVee was launched on 23 June 2009 by Corvalius.
On July 29, 2010, Corvalius has released Beweevee for Visual Studio. An add-in/plug-in for Visual Studio 2008 which enables live collaboration in the IDE.
R.K. Gold (Born July 2, 1991) is the pen name of award winning novelist Ari Goldfarb. Born and raised in Buffalo, NY, Gold began publishing in 2014 when he founded the Earl of Plaid literary journal. Gold graduated from the University of Maryland, with a B.A. in English. His first publication The Little Black Book (2015) developed a small cult following: “Gold reveals the grittier, harder parts of the world to us in jarring prose.”
His debut novella Just Under the Sky won The People’s Book Award in December 2015.
Books
* The Little Black Book, Earl of Plaid, January 26, 2015
* Just Under the Sky, Weasel Press, October 2, 2015
Further publications
* The Useless Degree
* The Gambler
* The Grind
* The Lotus-Eater
* Black Fox Lit.
* Fiction Terrifica
* Ascent Aspirations
* Kool Kids Press
* Vagabond City
* Super Duper Poetry
* Haunted Traveler
His debut novella Just Under the Sky won The People’s Book Award in December 2015.
Books
* The Little Black Book, Earl of Plaid, January 26, 2015
* Just Under the Sky, Weasel Press, October 2, 2015
Further publications
* The Useless Degree
* The Gambler
* The Grind
* The Lotus-Eater
* Black Fox Lit.
* Fiction Terrifica
* Ascent Aspirations
* Kool Kids Press
* Vagabond City
* Super Duper Poetry
* Haunted Traveler
Tim Sillence (1944-2002) was a poet and writer.
He was born in Surrey but when in 1947 his father was posted at RAF Swanton Morley his family moved to Norfolk. After attending Norwich School he joined the RAF and later studied to be a motor mechanic at Norwich Technical College. He was once hailed by a former collaborator on Radio 4 as one of the country's great unsung poets.
Sillence often read his work at Bristow's Bookshop in Bridewell Alley, which he helped found in the late 1960s with Giles Bristow, and where he worked for five years. He was also associated with the counter-culture figure of Jeff Nuttall, author of the book Bomb Culture (1968) during a short residence in the city after its publication. Among his best-known writings are the prose-piece The Great Speed Wars, (1975 reprinted 2013), an account of the Yom Kippor War which he experienced while on a kibbutz in Israel, and also the haiku-like verse-
Norfolk is a flat land
within easy reach
of the Himalayas.
In the 1980's he studied horticulture at Burlingham and worked as a gardener. In his last years he lived in properties run by St. Martin's Housing Trust. He suffered a heart-attack at the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital where he died aged 57.
Well-known around the pubs of Norwich for his story telling and was a regular in 'The Vine', in Dove Street. Friends describe him as an "impish bar-room philosopher with the gift of the gab" who recounted amusing stories, such as the time he ate burgers at a roadside cafe on the A1 with American poet Allen Ginsburg.
He was born in Surrey but when in 1947 his father was posted at RAF Swanton Morley his family moved to Norfolk. After attending Norwich School he joined the RAF and later studied to be a motor mechanic at Norwich Technical College. He was once hailed by a former collaborator on Radio 4 as one of the country's great unsung poets.
Sillence often read his work at Bristow's Bookshop in Bridewell Alley, which he helped found in the late 1960s with Giles Bristow, and where he worked for five years. He was also associated with the counter-culture figure of Jeff Nuttall, author of the book Bomb Culture (1968) during a short residence in the city after its publication. Among his best-known writings are the prose-piece The Great Speed Wars, (1975 reprinted 2013), an account of the Yom Kippor War which he experienced while on a kibbutz in Israel, and also the haiku-like verse-
Norfolk is a flat land
within easy reach
of the Himalayas.
In the 1980's he studied horticulture at Burlingham and worked as a gardener. In his last years he lived in properties run by St. Martin's Housing Trust. He suffered a heart-attack at the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital where he died aged 57.
Well-known around the pubs of Norwich for his story telling and was a regular in 'The Vine', in Dove Street. Friends describe him as an "impish bar-room philosopher with the gift of the gab" who recounted amusing stories, such as the time he ate burgers at a roadside cafe on the A1 with American poet Allen Ginsburg.
John Matheson McCorkindale was the thirteenth Mayor of the Canadian Village of Elkhorn. He was born in 1878 on the Isle of Coll, County Argyll, Scotland. On January 17, 1912, he married Edith Bernice Harrison in Elkhorn. A tailor by trade, McCorkindale operated a shop with his wife until the outbreak of the First World War when he enlisted for active service. On discharge, he established a bakery and confectionery in Elkhorn until he became postmaster in 1926, a post he held until 1950.
McCorkindale was active in community life belonging to both the Great War Veterans' Association and the Masonic Lodge. He was first elected to the village council in 1922 and re-elected in 1923. He was not elected again until 1927 and was a councillor until 1936 when he became mayor. He served two years in that position before again devoting himself to his position as postmaster.
McCorkindale died on November 13, 1961.
McCorkindale was active in community life belonging to both the Great War Veterans' Association and the Masonic Lodge. He was first elected to the village council in 1922 and re-elected in 1923. He was not elected again until 1927 and was a councillor until 1936 when he became mayor. He served two years in that position before again devoting himself to his position as postmaster.
McCorkindale died on November 13, 1961.