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 Next generation Web publishing
 logoWikis and weblogs make publishing on the Web a snap these days. Or do they ? Weblogs are somewhat constrained by their native chronological journal form, and most wikis could be a lot easier to set-up and update.
 What if your content is more complex and structured than a few blog entries ? What if you want to provide richer presentation and a more advanced reading interface ?
 Enter iJot:
 write your notes directly into your web browser
 organize them using the built-in outliner
 save & publish them, all at once.
 That's it - you've published a web site, complete with weblog and updates feeds.
 Publishing outlines
 Outlines are structured documents, primarily texts, organized in a tree-like hierarchy of paragraphs.
 Their most distinctive advantage over plain text is the small wedge - usually a triangular symbol - that appears at the left of most paragraphs (or nodes) : clicking it reveals (expands) or hides (collapses) the underlying content of the paragraph.
 Thanks to outline inclusion, an interesting property pioneered - like most outliner features - by the amazing Dave Winer, the embedded content does not need to reside in the same document as the containing paragraph.
 Outlining gives the author a way of providing readers with several layers of relevance in the same document: the initial display usually gives a synthetic view, drilling down by 'expanding' or 'including' relevant paragraphs progressively reveals more detailed information.
 An outliner in your browser
 To create outlines, the best tool is an outliner: a text editor that allows you to control the level of detail that's visible, and allows you to reorganize text according to its structure. Outliners as desktop applications have been around for quite a while.
 iJot is the demo service for webOutliner, a new breed of outliner that lives right into your web browser page, thanks to all kinds of not so recent programming techniques now fashionably designated AJAX.
 So how does publication work ?
 Enough said... The next step is to play with the iJot demonstration site. When you're ready to jump in, create your own site.
 Modify its home page.
 Create additional pages.
 Add weblog entries.
 Update the bookmarks navigation widget.
 We'd like to think you'll find it easy. Try following these steps.
 At all times, keep your cool. Remember iJot is still in development. Before it drives you crazy, try joining the ijot-support group/mailing list to hopefully get answers or report bugs.