Headlines 2.0
Editors still write headlines like they’re for print and people. With online, headlines shift to a new environment and have at least two more audiences.
Editors still write headlines like they’re for print and people. With online, headlines shift to a new environment and have at least two more audiences.
The link is the currency of the Web. Give users more to spend, and they’ll reward you with loyalty.
UAL loses $1 billion in value, thanks to the power of apomediation combined with a mess in the metadata.
Google Knol may be just author infomercials, not a vibrant reference work with accountability.
Michael Heller’s book “The Gridlock Economy” explains many things, including airport congestion, Google Books, and the drop in drug discovery.
Friday fun with the Large Hadron Collider and rap.
Lies inserted into Wikipedia get corrected quickly, a small study finds.
Text messaging and its social and linguistic effects are examined in a new book.
The SSP TMR has closed, but much of the meeting was captured. Here’s your guide, and insights on why the meeting will evolve next year.
Listen to interviews from David Perlmutter (“Blog Wars”), Scott Hensley (WSJ), Fabien Saveney (ScienceBlogs), and more at the SSP TMR blog.