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How to publish a category to a different FTP server
Weblog by e-Mail About This Weblog A Solid Intranet in Eight Steps Business Requirements for Classifying Content Down the Rabbit Hole Feedback from a K-Log Experiment What We're Doing When We Blog Requirements for K-Log Home Page Cool Tool: Summarizer Free Form Page Summaries Searching for ZCB -- Zero Contribution Barrier Big Business Pressures for Palladium Denmark Case on Linking Counter to Internet Principles Bill Campbell Your Radio Host Jobless Rate up to 5.9 Percent RIAA Goes After Corporate P2P K-Logs, NNTP, and Knowledge Management Open Access for NAB, Not for Users Opera strikes accord with Macromedia The Buffy Syndrome is Real Master of Library Media How to Load a Script Andy Fragen just sent me his untitledPost script. Apple and the Media Just Say No To Dot Doc Building Radio Templates with HTML Brent Ashley Tests Amphetadesk K-Logging vs the Seven Deadly Sins of KM K-Log 101 Presentation Intro to K-Logging Paschal's Kit Rocks Radio with Aggregator on Steroids Enabling Category-specific Stories in Radio Automatic RSS Titles and Links Show Category Listing for Each Post No Joke Shortening RSS Descriptions wipeCloud and Other Tools Links to Categories Macro The Right DMCA Move -- EFF and 2600 Drop Suit On-line Print Services and Print Patents Blogrolling Aggregator Redux In Line for Outlines Deep-seated Insecurities WiFi at Little Airports Theme Design
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Saturday, July 6, 2002How to publish a category to a different FTP serverHere are Dave Winer's directions on publishing a Category to a separate ftp server. I don't know if I have to have the main ftp optionturned on or not. We'll see.This post should appear on the Home Page but not in the pwd-protected directory at www.tfrazier.org. Well, this seems somewhat hosed. Now the Radio server version of the site is munged. And I still can't get anything posted to the ftp site. Bummer. Weblog by e-MailMatt Mower says he is working on a Radio Tool that will let us send categorical posts out via e-mail. This sort of service is a boon to those wishing for as many routes as possible to their audience.As for me, well, it just creates on more way to be ignored...
Blogging by email. Radio wishlist > Post to email..[Curiouser and curiouser!] About This WeblogI started this weblog as an experiment. I thought it would be a good way to collect information regarding some of the major changes happening in the printing, publishing, and media distribution areas. My intent is to look at things from a business/production perspective, weaving in technology and other items as appropriate. I still intend to do that.But along the way I have found myself going down the rabbit hole. The changes in personal publishing being wrought by the weblog are impressive. I think it has serious implications for the publishing industry's future. And I realize that to meet my objectives for this weblog I need to really, truly understand both the technology and methodolgy of blogging. I also need to understand the implications for sharing what I learn and what I'm learning. I have a deep-rooted interest in collaborative computing, knowledge sharing, and the impact it can have on a company, a small business, or a project. I have my own small business in mind -- one that addresses some of the gaps I see forming in the print/publishing industry. To make it work I need to understand how to bring a geographically dispersed team together, to keep them focused, and to keep them all moving full-speed ahead in the right direction. I've been party to too many failed virtual efforts. I've seen companies stagnate, and even come completely apart because they couldn't manage a virtual business. I must learn how to do that if I am to succeed. So forgive my digressions into blogging, klogging, and intranet design. My primary point, and I do have one, will become apparent once I have mastered the basics. Right now the information regarding my topics of interest -- new publishing distribution models, new print production models, new consumer models -- is widely dispersed, disconnected, and hard to find. Publishers don't like what's happening becasue it will force them to change. Printers don't like what's happening for the same reason. Consumers don't like it because the benefits are still just a gleam in the eye of a few visionary people. But it will happen. In the mean time, I'm thinking out loud, trying to share what I learn along the way. I will get back to the point when the time comes. A Solid Intranet in Eight StepsPaul Holbrook points us to another good intranet article from New Architect on intranet design. I really like points:
4. Put usability before consistency. Thanks Paul!
Article: A solid intranet in eight steps. I've never built a built a full-corporate intranet site, though I've been in a few efforts to build group sites. Even those efforts could have used the information in the article Theo Mandel has written: A solid intranet in eight steps" [Paul Holbrook's Radio Weblog] Business Requirements for Classifying ContentReference material for content classification.A couple of articles from KMConnection I found from Paul's site:
Can't get enough Classification. I picked a reference to something called faceted classification from High Context. The back credits on where this comes from are getting a little deep for more (more on that later), so I'll just quote the item:[Paul Holbrook's Radio Weblog] Down the Rabbit HoleDavid Gammel's post on Yahoo! Groups: K-Log lead me to High Context, where David had blogged a post from fellow Atlantan Paul Holbrook. Paul and I have traded a couple of e-mails before becasue I saw a couple of posts in the Userland forum. Paul has a very interesting background -- even doing some work at PARC -- and I wanted to talk to him about possible intranet design. But I haven't been tracking his site. I am now.Among others, Paul had this interesting post on what happens when you start to research something via blogs:
Down the rabbit hole of blogging .... Sometimes following other people's blogs is like talking to someone who won't shut up: you ask one question, and you're in for a 15 minute answer. Well, it's a little like that, except it's not: it's a lot more interesting. Case in point: I pulled a little piece out of my news aggregator this morning on a k-log pilot experiment, and many hours later, I'm left with a pile on interesting pages scattered around my screen that I'm trying to make sense of. (I can't even remember where I found the reference to the k-log item; it's already gone from my aggregator.)[Paul Holbrook's Radio Weblog] BTW Paul, I got my RSS feed truncated. I've added you to my Aggregator and my blogroll. This k-log stuff is getting really interesting. Feedback from a K-Log ExperimentDavid Gammel reports on his first K-Log experiment. It's a quick post and a useful read.
[...] My own experience returning from a week of vacation really illustrates the benefits it has had within our own team. The first thing I did yesterday was fire up our team klog and read what had been going on while I was out last week. I immediately saw a couple items that needed my attention (which I dealt with in a few minutes each) and got up to speed on what the rest of the team had been focusing. All before I had finished my first cup of coffee and long before I had made it through my backlog of 200 e-mails and a few voice mail messages. (See John Robb's comments on the communication efficiency of klogs.) [...][High Context] David has lots of other good KM and Usability items, too. What We're Doing When We BlogThis Meg Hourihan article on the essence of weblogs is good background for K-Log experimenters. Another example of great info brought to us by "John Robb" via Yahoo! Groups: K-Log.
As bloggers, we're in the middle of, and enjoying, an evolution of communication. The traits of weblogs mentioned above will likely change and advance as our tools improve and our technology matures. What's important is that we've embraced a medium free of the physical limitations of pages, intrusions of editors, and delays of tedious publishing systems. As with free speech itself, what we say isn't as important as the system that enables us to say it.[O'Reilly] Requirements for K-Log Home PageFrom one of "John Robb"'s recent posts to Yahoo! Groups: K-Log:
[...] Here is what should be on a K-Log home page (it is easy to set up the K-Log install process to ask for this info and insert it into the template): Maybe Scott can see what's required to get a live Jabber status icon going as part of his Jabber research. Cool Tool: Summarizer Free Form Page SummariesWouldn't it be handy to generate high-quality, impromptu summaries of longer stories or posts that you find while doing web research? Today Jenny Levine at TSL pointed me to |Matt|, who is working on an interesting Radio tool called liveTopics.On Matt's home page I saw a review of Copernic Summarizer:
[...] Often when I am browsing I come across a long article that I'm not sure I want to read. If I have it in front of me I can click the summarizer button on the IE toolbar and let it go to work. If it's a link on a page I'm on I choose "Summarize target" from the context menu. Summarizer also has a live in- browser summary option. This looks like a very nice tool for researchers, quite configurable, and probably something worth looking at if you write longer, expository posts on your weblog (Hmm. Wonder who that could be?) Searching for ZCB -- Zero Contribution BarrierMy intranet/groupware philosophy can be summed up in three words -- Zero Contribution Barrier. Any barrier to effective, convenient contribution should be eliminated where possible, minimized if not eliminated. If you want people to expose what they are thinking -- in order to both capture the best they have to offer and to improve their understanding -- you have to make it EASY for them to contribute and use the system. In simple terms this means give them as many ways into and out of the system as possible.Thinking about this got me to thinking again about finding the maximum number of ways to get info into and out of an intranet. A search for NNTP in Yahoo! Groups: K-Log lead me to "Duncan Smeed", a university professor in Glascow. Duncan uses "Conversant", a Radio-compatible groupware product from Macrobyte Resources. Here's what he said:
[...] Macrobyte makes several products to support Radio Community Servers so I suspect there is some synergy here, and it looks like part of the Macrobyte site is created in Radio (similar look and feel, don't you know). I don't see anything about RSS syndication in Conversant, maybe that's a Radio thing. Macrobyte software is affordable and they offer a hosted service. They also offer system design and consulting. Maybe someone to talk to for triangulation... Big Business Pressures for PalladiumLawrence Lessig was the first (AFIK) to point out the unholy collusion between government and business for building the digital surveillance state. Here Robert Scoble makes a bit more plain just where the pressure for such architectures is coming from and why there is almost no chance of stopping them.
What do you think your corporate IT department says to Microsoft when they come calling? I can just imagine it goes something like this: Business has legitimate productivity, competitive, and liability motivations for wanting this kind of info. Our litigious society has made BigBiz liable for virtually anything the employees do, whether the business knows about it or not. BigBiz simply has too many employees. They can't know them all, they sure can't trust them all, yet the courts hold them accountable for the actions of each. This kind of response is only natural. I'd like to blame the lawyers, but that misses the point. Lawyers don't file suits if they can't find plaintiffs. I'd like to blame the courts but typically these things get jury trials. I'd like to blame the government, but we voted for them. Who does that leave? Denmark Case on Linking Counter to Internet PrinciplesMy friend Tyrone the Attorney says the courts will resolve most of the issues with stupid Internet law. That doesn't seem to be the case in Denmark (but it is Denmark, for pete's sake.) I hope he's right about what happens here.via [Ernie the Attorney] Dave Winer's thoughts on deep linking decision from Denmark
Bill Campbell Your Radio HostA sad day for Atlanta when the Mayor responsible for driving the city to the brink of bankruptcy despite a decade of booming economy gets his own talk show. Too bad it won't be broadcast from the Georgia State Pen. Ex-mayor gets a radio show. AccessAtlanta Jul 5 2002 12:27PM ET [Moreover - Atlanta news] Jobless Rate up to 5.9 PercentThe job market doesn't just feel bad, it is bad. According to this NYT article it's not looking to get better any time soon. If you got one, hang onto it. If you don't well, let's go make one.
Jobless Rate Edges Up to 5.9%; Payroll Growth Remains Weak. The nation's work force rose by 36,000 jobs last month, but the increase was not big enough to prevent the unemployment rate from inching up to 5.9 percent. By Kenneth N. Gilpin.[New York Times: Business] RIAA Goes After Corporate P2PI have reservations about posting this, since it just helps spread the public scare tactics of BigContent. But it's important in as much as I think P2P can play an important role in corporate information exchange and it points out the need for som epolicies about just how and what can go on a P2P server. BigContent strikes $1 million deal with Arizona corporation over an internal P2P server with illegal MP3s.
Peer-to-Peer Web Sites Grow 535 Percent. Lawsuit Settlement Finds Corporations Liable for Allowing Access to P2P Apps[Content Wire - Digital Copyright] K-Logs, NNTP, and Knowledge ManagementI understand how the K-Log links into a discussion forum via comments. And I understand how that discussion group can be combined with other tools to feed back to the K-Log. But I've sort of lost sight of how the NewsGroup fits.Jon's book, Practical Internet Groupware (out of print but available used and online at Safari) was one of the first, and maybe the best, book available on using standard Internet protocols for groupware. It's a great book to read for ideas. And Jon ran the entire Byte publication team on a system similar to that he describes. But he later admitted that the structure required for NewsGroups to work was cumbersome. I wish he would discuss how he thinks NNTP could fit into a POMO KM (a JOHO term) system. I like the idea of simple, open protocols. And I like using NewsGroups for support when companies offer moderated groups. But I'm having trouble weaving the two together.
Microsoft, NNTP, and the mismanagement of knowledge management. Robert Scoble has a theory about why Outlook doesn't include a newsreader: ...[Jon's Radio] Friday, July 5, 2002Open Access for NAB, Not for UsersSo the NAB thinks cable companies and telcos should be forced to allow anyone to do aything they want on their networks -- no discrimination allowed. Funny, I don't see any sentiment like that in the CBDTPA. "One nation, under broadcasters..."
NAB Joins Open-Access Forces. TVinsite Jul 5 2002 9:03PM ET[Moreover - Broadcasting industry news] Opera strikes accord with MacromediaOpera is my favorite web browser. I use MS when I have no alternative (occassionally), or where their product is hands-down the best (rarely). But when I can find other software that works I like to tell people about it.I used MSIE exclusively for over a year in 2000-2001 becasue it was just the best available browser. But Opera went to version 5.x in 2001 and got good enough. I switched. It's now version 6.0 and much better than good enough. It's my primary browser. Some people still write pages with BS, MSIE-proprietary JavaScript stuff and I keep an old version of MSIE (v5 I think) installed just for dire emergencies. But if I find a site that forces me to use MSIE I just usually don't go there. Try Opera. It works.
Macromedia to Embed the Opera Browser in Web Authoring Products The Buffy Syndrome is RealAs one Buffy fan to another, who says it's not real...
posted by nicwolff » July 5 5:26 PM | 2 comments. Buffy the Terrorism Slayer(PDF link) The Center For Strategic & International Studies, which appears to be, like, a bunch of grown-up ex-senators and accused war criminals and former top spooks and such, released this white paper late last September. Master of Library MediaDuring my conversation with Scott Walker on information stewardship, we hit upon the idea of having someone with a strong library science background as part of our intranet design team. Scott suggested I hit the Georgia State web site and take a look at their Master of Library Media program. Sorry, but I couldn't care less if my librarian has ever studied Critical Pedagogy. I admit I have little background in library science, but half our educational problems are based in the silly idea that we need democratic schooling and teaching for social action. What tripe. I suppose the Multicultural Education course will be helpful for those of us who want to imitate the productivity rates of Africa, the social norms of the UAE, or the labor practices of the Asia/Pacific regions. Just when Jenny Levine at TSL had me thinking so fondly of librarians... But I digress. Still seems like a good idea to have a librarian on board. I just wonder if I'll be able to find one that understands free market culture and wants to participate. How to Load a ScriptThis is an obvious question, but one no one answers it in the docs, as far as I can tell. When you read tips about scripts and such there is an assumption that you know what to do with them.I didn't. I do now. Thanks to Andy Fragen's e-mailed instructions with his untitledPost script, I know all you need to do is save the script to a local folder and open it from the Radio App. Once the script is loaded hit the Complile button. You should be ready to go. Andy Fragen just sent me his untitledPost script.Andy Fragen just sent me his untitledPost script. I couldn't make it work, so Andy sent me a new version. The script is supposed to pick up the first sentence of a post and use it as the Title.If this post appears with a title -- it works. It works! Thanks Andy. Apple and the MediaApple has pulled MacWorld press passes for publications that have not sufficiently kissed butt. Jerry Pournelle says he quit covering Apple just because of this kind of stupid behavior.
[from MAIL] They don't send me anything to review now. When they used to, I never heard from them unless I said something they didn't like. By anything they didn't like I include even minor criticisms: anything but fulsome praise was met with a barrage of emails and letters and other forms of harassment, some organized by Apple's marketing people. Just Say No To Dot DocThis week I was talking with Joe Steinbach in Lincoln about the TCPA/MS-Palladium scenario. Joe was wondering aloud how businesses could communicate if they tried to stop using the ubiquitous MS-Office apps as a protest against Palladium.Scott Johnson at fuzzygroup devised the Just Say No To Dot Doc (or JSNTD) campaign. Scott's article has instructions for setting MSWord to save out as RTF by default (in case you don't already know.) He also has an idea for a web service that would help businesses migrate away from MSWord dependence. It sounds good to me, but then I'm your basic contrarian and don't give a rat's ass about total compatibility. I don't know what you do if you're stuck using MSProject or (God forbid) PowerPoint all the time. Are there viable alternatives to those? Anyway, something fun to think about while you're chewing on the latest Bush Administration/BigBusiness conspiracy theory. Building Radio Templates with HTMLWorking with Radio Userland Templates can be confusing, since the simple Radio interface isn't really suited for page design. RemoteEdit is a Radio Tool that extracts a Radio template to an external HTML page, allows you to work on the page with the HTML editor of your choice, and imports the finsihed page back into Radio.Dixie Vogul provides a brief tutorial on ReRu because the documentation is sparse. Brent Ashley Tests AmphetadeskAshley found some functionality in the Amphetadesk skins that I didn't see. And he notes how Morbus Iff responded almost immediately to his queries. Same here. Morbus is intent on making the product rock.
Amphetatesting. I've been having a look at Amphetadesk today. In conjunction with Les Orchard's collapsable-channels-and-items skin, I like it quite a...[brentashley] K-Logging vs the Seven Deadly Sins of KMOne final link to Phil Wolff's essay on how klogs quash the 11 deadly sins of Knowledge Management. I've only browsed this one but it looks interesting.Thanks to [a klog apart] K-Log 101 PresentationCaught sight of this klog gem via McGee's Musings as well.
Klogging 101: What, Why, and How.. Explaining klogging to the gang at the office? To your user group? Intro to K-LoggingA quick intro to k-logging and a brief summary of the benefits. The open narrative style of weblogs lends itself to having people expose what they are thinking in a non-intrusive way -- a contributor-friendly way. K-logs are likely to be a major part of any future intranet/collaboration efforts I undertake.Thanks to Jim McGee for pointing my to a klog apart.
Get up to speed on K-Logging.. brent ashley:[McGee's Musings] Thursday, July 4, 2002Paschal's Kit Rocks Radio with Aggregator on SteroidsMark Paschal's Kit Radio Tool really rocks! It replaces the standard Radio News Aggregator with one that has filters (text, time, span), grouping, date stamping, and color coding. Using the Kit Aggregator it is now possible to subscribe to dozens of feeds, group them by interest category, filter the category by time or key words, and get only a small subset of the thousands of possible articles. This is very nice.I believe such filtering is critical to effective use of RSS and Aggregators in K-Log environments, where you may need to filter down to key articles that pertain to project- or time-specific topics. Oddly, a search for Paschal's name on the K-Logs Yahoo! Group yields zero results. I would think the other K-Loggers would have discussed this improvement. Installation is a snap, directions are clear, and after a little experimentation use seems pretty intuitive. Oh yeah, Kit does all sorts of other things like run scripts, search weblogs, change time/date stamps on posts, edit outlines, and probably other things I don't understand. But if it didn't do anything more than give me control over the aggregator it would be a winner. Paschal also makes Stapler, an RSS generator you can use to create feeds for sites that do't have them. Once you create the feeds Stapler will store them locally, update them, and even aggregate them into combined feeds. Pretty cool. Another gem found courtesy of [Russ Lipton Documents Radio]. Enabling Category-specific Stories in RadioSome months back Mark Woods at On the Mark published this article on Enabling Category-specific Stories in Radio. While not as easy as having Radio support category-specific stories directly, this function is one of the few remainining holes in using Radio for K-Log (knowledge logging) applications.Thanks to [Russ Lipton Documents Radio]. Automatic RSS Titles and LinksAndy Fragen got tired of having blank lines above his posts when he forgot to add a Title. He wrote a callback. Andy Fragen doesn't have blank lines anymore. Andy's cool.I can't make it work (I'm a Frontier idiot) but I will get it figured out. This will be a great way to have my Mail-to-Weblog posts formatted to match my active posts.
Untitled post callback.. OK, I fiddled with the untitled post macro to make it use the first sentence as the title of the post. If anyone wants the callback let me know. Actually here it is. Show Category Listing for Each PostRick Klau points us to yet another nice K-Log feature addition to Radio -- listing the categories for each posting. I like this one. A category listing on each post makes it obvious to new readers there is a classification system here, and help them quickly visualize the structure and where to look for things of interest. Thanks for the pointer, Rick.
Many thanks to Roland Tanglao who pointed me to the comments at Jake's site that explain how to do it. It's simple - just drop a file into your Macros directory, then add one line to your item template. Took less than five minutes. (Roland's site is worth visiting for KM issues, by the way, and Jake's a developer at Userland who's got a number of good things to share re: Radio and blogs in general.)[tins ::: Rick Klau's weblog] No JokeThis is supposed to be a joke. It's funny, but no joke.
Honest lawyers!? [Memepool] Shortening RSS DescriptionsThis thread in the Userland DG is about creating a callback to truncate the default RSS descritpions in Radio. By default, Radio puts an entire post into the RSS. I wanted to send out only the first sentence. This helped. Thanks to Rick Klau for guidance.wipeCloud and Other ToolsA collection of Radio scripts and tools for more advanced users from Andy Fragen. Links to Categories MacroA DG thread that covers two things -- scripts from both Paschal and Phil Wolff for rendering a link-list of categories in a side bar, and Paschal's script for posting the relevant categories as a part of each post.The Right DMCA Move -- EFF and 2600 Drop SuitThe DMCA is an overwrought, overly burdensome, ill-conceived piece of protectionist legislation -- one that suffers the fundamental flaw of attempting to regulate specific technologies rather than behaviors. But this is the right move. 2600's reputation and public persona would have doomed the case. Mainstream America and organizations need to vote with their pocketbooks, and need to inform their legislators that the Internet is not about business opportunities for Hollywood. 2600 and EFF have fired the first shots, but they can't win the war. It's time for the rest of us to step up. Hacker Mag 2600 Drops DMCA Fight. SiliconValley.Internet.com Jul 4 2002 1:27AM ET [Moreover - IP and patents news] On-line Print Services and Print PatentsCafepress.com lets you design and sell swag for your company, your blog, or your company blog. Upload your graphics, pick the product mix, set the price, link back. They appear to produce and sell ad specialities on demand. High margin stuff for them. I don't know about quality. Maybe I'll buy something and see. VistaPrint of Waltham, MA has a lot of online print goods. Price grid is confusing but looks like 250 4/1 cards for under $30. What is the difference between the different business card levels? And why does the site only support MSIE. Bad. Frank found a patent they list -- No. 6,247,011 -- and they claim over 1 million customers. Looks like another silly printing process patent. Update: I found this on while searching for info on the patent Digital-Net and Insty-Prints. Blogrollingblogrolling.com, a web service for managing blogroll lists. I don't think this is any easier than Radio's outliner function -- since that lets you edit a text file -- but it looks like a good solution for other blog software that lacks a good blogroll feature.Aggregator ReduxI've been using AmphetaDesk while on the road. I think it has some configuration options I haven't quite grasped yet. I know Morbus Iff is going to add grouping in the next release. Some aging and auto-delete control would be nice, too.Nothing beats being able to post directly to the weblog, though. I miss that. It's a pain to have to do the cut-and-paste routine 2-3 times to get the URL, the title, the copy, etc. How do other weblogs do that? Do blogger and such have aggregator facilities or some interface element that lets users post from third-party aggregators? In Line for OutlinesI'm starting to wonder if I could use the Outliner in Radio as a text editor -- I really like the blogroll trick. I'm wondering if there is a stand-alone version of it that would run on my laptop. I'm wondering if I could understand enough about OPML files to use it as a source for editing my weblog entries when I'm away from Radio. I saw a couple of docs in the DL on how to use renderers to read OPML files into HTML pages. I'm wondering if I really need to learn still another format. I'm wondering if my energy isn't better spent figuring out what to write instead of worrying about how to write it. Deep-seated InsecuritiesI like the idea of remote access. I'm gonna do it. Soon. I don't like the security issues. I think I'll have to setup a special machine that runs only the apps I want to access remotely, and has no access to other network resources. I'll have to figure out the stupid Windoze Users and Groups permissions so the machine runs in something less than Administrator mode. Lots of programs don't seem to run well like that. I don't know if that's my fault or the programmer's.If I do this I guess I'll be a "remote" user all the time, huh? Even from my primary machine I'll be accessing Radio over the network. Wonder if there are any performance issues. I'll have to experiment. What about a software VPN? Doesn't Windoze have something built-in? It would be nice to have access to my files -- at least a subset of files. Ugh. Document management. Versions. Keeping track. Argh-h-h-h. Must be a better way. Anyone have a suggestion for accessible doc storage? I know X-Drive and all those silly "hard drive in the sky" operations have shut down, and I don't know that I trusted them anyway. I guess putting them in a pwd-protected subdirectory on my web host is about as good as it gets. But then there's uploading, file management, versions, keeping track. Ugh. Maybe I just share out the D: drive on the host machine, mount that across the network and store my project docs and stuff there. Wouldn't be too hard to have a projects or work folder. Since my other machines wouldn't be on when I was gone there would be no chance of getting to them. |