This analysis was conceived when the coauthors discovered we’d each been independently seriously tempted to buy a Mac Mini, and realized what that temptation implied.
Web 2.0: Infusing Personality Into Online Interactions
Explore the essence of Web 2.0, emphasizing user-generated content, social networking, and interactive platforms.
Wikia Giving It All Away
Maybe Amazon invested so much money in Wikia, the company that runs the publicly edited Wikipedia, that founder Jimmy Wales started sounding like an end of the summer car commercial. Wales launched OpenServing today, which makes software, bandwidth, storage, computing power, content, and advertising open source. That means free.
Giving Employee Performance A Boost
We have all experienced being singled out because of a mistake or a misdeed many times throughout our lives. But rarely do we get noticed for doing something good.
Intuitive Software Design: The gift that keeps on giving
Since the beginning of computers and software development, the user has wanted ease of use and an intuitive interface.
Matt Cutts Accused Of Not Giving Credit
This is kind of stupid: A ThreadWatch thread (one Aaron Wall decided was small potatoes enough to pull from the front page) calls out Google’s Matt Cutts for not crediting the creator of his WordPress theme.
Giving Blogbeat a Try
Brian Benzinger’s post on Blogbeat prompted me to give it a try. I’ve disabled MeasureMap for the time being.
Sun Giving Oracle Money
Investors in Sun Microsystems have another reason to be concerned about the company’s direction, as Sun plans to pay the initial license fee for Oracle Enterprise Edition database software on its high-end hardware.
Google’s Site Targeting: Giving Control Back to the Advertiser
If you use Google’s Adwords program you know that in the past you had no control over where your text ads were displayed. By adding “site targeting” Google has finally given control back to the advertisers.
Giving Up The Job For The Blog
How far would you go to protect the company you work for? Gauriv Sabnis went above and beyond the call of duty. A blog post of his made a customer of his employer, IBM, uncomfortable. They threatened retaliation against IBM. Even though no one asked Sabnis to leave the company, he did so to protect the image of IBM.