TITLE OF PAPER: Divmod URL OF PRESENTATION: _URL_of_powerpoint_presentation_ PRESENTED BY: REPRESENTING: _name_of_the_company_they_represent_ CONFERENCE: PyCon 2005 DATE: _date_of_your_conference_here_ LOCATION: _venue_and_room_in_venue_ -------------------------------------------------------------------------- REAL-TIME NOTES / ANNOTATIONS OF THE PAPER: {If you've contributed, add your name, e-mail & URL at the bottom} Divmod is an online repository for mail, calendaring, phone, etc. Data is kept private, and they give you as many open-standards-based ways (POP, IMAP, RSS, Q2Q, ...) as possible to pull data in and out. For $10/mo ($4.95/mo. during the beta period), you get 1GB storage spreaed across all services. You get 120 minutes of voice long distance. They provide a PIM and web space, blogging, amongst your-friends sharing, .... Built on Twisted They use a facet-based categorization system, not a hierarchy. They implemented something like ye olde Apple Data Detectors to notice certain types of computer-understandable data within emails and such: phone numbers and phrases like "next Thursday" get recognized, e.g. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- REFERENCES: {as documents / sites are referenced add them below} -------------------------------------------------------------------------- QUOTES: -------------------------------------------------------------------------- CONTRIBUTORS: {add your name, e-mail address and URL below} -------------------------------------------------------------------------- E-MAIL BOUNCEBACK: {add your e-mail address separated by commas } -------------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTES ON / KEY TO THIS TEMPLATE: A headline (like a field in a database) will be CAPITALISED This differentiates from the text that follows A variable that you can change will be surrounded by _underscores_ Spaces in variables are also replaced with under_scores This allows people to select the whole variable with a simple double-click A tool-tip is lower case and surrounded by {curly brackets / parentheses} These supply helpful contextual information. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Copyright shared between all the participants unless otherwise stated...