Freeze, Zoom In, and Enhance — The Computer Image Trope in TV Dramas
It’s the holidays, so time to watch some crime dramas. Look for these modern cliches as you enjoy the thrills.
It’s the holidays, so time to watch some crime dramas. Look for these modern cliches as you enjoy the thrills.
Two fiction publishers decide to delay release of their e-books, further marginalizing their books. Meanwhile, an STM book publisher gets it right.
How much more data will it take before everyone gets it?
Social media is becoming the norm. Will laggards be viewed as anti-social in 2010?
What early design compromises in building the Internet are still with us today? How does it add expense to running sites? Can we upgrade an entire planet?
The new Nook is over-packaged, and has design and technical issues that keep it from competing well with the Kindle. Too bad.
As Google adds real-time Web features to its search over the next few days, it may be the last nail in the coffin for publisher-centric commodity information.
The WSJ stance against Google reveals the power of the real-time Web and value-inertia among the ad sales people at WSJ, not predation by Google.
In addition to print’s continuing decline, blogs in science are mature, profitable, and going local, as SEED, ScienceBlogs, and National Geographic show through their moves.
“Sports Illustrated” is showing off a new reading tablet for TIME properties. Is it also a preview of an Apple tablet?