GooHack Searches of the Day - Goo
Well, to promote our new hack search engine, GooHack, we will be doing “GooHack searches of the Day” daily and try to find some interesting new hacks for all you hacker readers.
So to start out, I did a Goo Hack search on the term “Goo” and found some interesting stuff:
How to make glow stick goo - Lol… I really need this guy next time I am at a rave.
The future of Goo - Yey, goo is officially awesome and being continually improved by companies.
How to make Nasa-grade Space Goo - Don’t you just love Goo?
What is Goo exactly?
Goo is a term for a slimy, shapeless mass. - according to Wikipedia
Web2.0 Expo - Stewart Mader from Wikipatterns Interviewed!

If you don’t know wikis, it might be a good time for you to get familiar as wikis have not been fully utilized as blogs have been. (Before you know it, the world will become a “wiki wiki” world…)
As a wiki fanatic myself as I have built the world’s first-ever MediaWiki based social networking site, I am a collector of any new books related with wikis in general.
One of the books that I haven’t gotten a hold of was, wikipatterns by Stewart Mader, creator of wikipatterns.com. I am a big fan of anyone who’s creating new sites with wikis so…
What intrigued me about his creation Wikipatterns.com, is the idea itself, not really the software built on it. I am still dumbfounded about what wikipatterns exactly is but Stewart was nice enough to explain it to me in plain English at Web2.0 Expo today:
Click Here to View in Full Screen Mode
(Thanks Stewart, and thank you for the book! I love wiki books, make sure to check out my wiki creation too, SiteHoppin.com!)
Stewart also runs Grow Your Wiki blog, check it out as it has lots of interesting stuff for all you wiki lovers.
I will probably do another write-up after I finish the book so hold on while I get all that wiki stuff in my head and spit it back out to you readers in plain English.
Wikipatterns, btw, is based on Wiki software by Atlassian, a company who specialized in Enterprise Wikis.
We will have a short video re-cap by Atlassian’s president, Jeffrey Walker in a little bit, explaining further the advantages of using wikis to replace e-mails and documents.
What do you think, will Wikis be the future of mass collaboration? (If it isn’t already?)


























