Content Is Dethroned
Content from yesteryear no longer works in the modern world. We have to re-imagine.
Content from yesteryear no longer works in the modern world. We have to re-imagine.
Amazon’s new iPhone app leverages camera phones and humans in a new way. Can science education take a similar approach?
Is the fate of print pre-ordained, or an outcome of suicidal circulation strategies?
A major label is now getting most of its revenues from digital sources, but the pie is shrinking. Is it? Or is it just showing how inflated the pie was in the era of fixed media?
The New York Times has 10,000 Kindle subscribers. What else is coming?
Google’s new SearchWiki implementation has grabbed some attention, but will it actually make a difference to users?
Bragging about downloads is akin to saying your site doesn’t work well. Authors will soon start to notice.
Obama is to Roosevelt as YouTube is to radio = a major moment in communications.
Bow down before your duly elected and merciful leader.
Circular reasoning and tradition cloud an otherwise significant report on what constitutes scholarship today.
Open source has come to hardware, illustrating again why the lessons still don’t apply to scholarship.
It’s only been 6,000+ days since the Web launched, proving that some things are only possible in practice.
Morgan-Stanley’s 2008 Internet Trends report is out, and the shocks emanate from the complex interrelationships of the trends.
A new report from Forrester Research (paid report) reveals that social media is growing in nearly every way possible, with some aspects rocketing into majorities of the population. The author of the report, Josh Bernhoff, provides an overview in his […]
Obama.com and Military.com settle any differences by focusing on the people.