<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xml:lang="en-us"><title>Charles Dietrich: latest blog entries</title><link href="http://www.netmolecules.com/blog/" rel="alternate"></link><link href="http://www.netmolecules.com/feeds/atom-latest/" rel="self"></link><id>http://www.netmolecules.com/blog/</id><updated>2012-06-07T05:08:29Z</updated><subtitle>Latest blog entries for Charles Dietrich.</subtitle><entry><title>Status Update</title><link href="http://www.netmolecules.com/blog/entry/status-update/" rel="alternate"></link><id>http://www.netmolecules.com/blog/entry/status-update/</id><summary type="html">Good news: I am available to take on work in the month of May 2011. Bad news: I won&amp;#39;t be available for 2 years after that.</summary></entry><entry><title>Design Inspiration</title><link href="http://www.netmolecules.com/blog/entry/design-inspiration/" rel="alternate"></link><id>http://www.netmolecules.com/blog/entry/design-inspiration/</id><summary type="html">For this website, I undertook a crash course in design. Here are 6 of the sites that I found inspirational.</summary></entry><entry><title>Google Wave: a hypothetical case study</title><link href="http://www.netmolecules.com/blog/entry/google-wave-case-study/" rel="alternate"></link><id>http://www.netmolecules.com/blog/entry/google-wave-case-study/</id><summary type="html">Here&amp;#39;s my prediction: Google&amp;#39;s wave federation protocol will be the new way to edit and publish shared unstructured data on the web. Waves will store data for blogs and documents. Waves will replace many documents now stored in custom content management systems.</summary></entry></feed>