Mail Goggles Come to Google
Mail Goggles suggests something more, but might accidentally stop some happier souls from connecting.
Mail Goggles suggests something more, but might accidentally stop some happier souls from connecting.
Once touted as Platform 2.0, Facebook is now suffocating its applications to make room for a new growth strategy every Web publisher should see coming.
In the information tsunami, some of the best writers are seeking shelter, preferring intimacy and connection to broadcast and reach.
News is breaking. How it’s breaking holds lessons for customer-centric scholarly publishers.
Why would a business person ask an academic what the business model is? Strange days, indeed.
Elsevier’s Article 2.0 experiment is a nice idea built on a faulty approach. It may even be cynical.
Socially networked data visualization becomes a reality with Many Eyes.
A new Technorati report on the state of the blogosphere jibes with observations that blogs have become mainstream.
One of the great joys of the computer age is that we can slice and dice digital information and try to make new sense of it. It doesn’t decay, and the results come quickly. The recently unveiled Many Eyes is […]
The Kindle’s use-case isn’t what I’d assumed. In fact, I’m thinking very differently about it.
Are technology enthusiasts more optimistic about progress? Does that mirror itself in our audiences?
The link is the currency of the Web. Give users more to spend, and they’ll reward you with loyalty.
Google Knol may be just author infomercials, not a vibrant reference work with accountability.
Friday fun with the Large Hadron Collider and rap.
Lies inserted into Wikipedia get corrected quickly, a small study finds.