The usefulness of Flash for applications in the browser takes a giant step forward with Gliffy, a tool that provides the kind of diagramming functionality one has to pay for with Microsoft Visio.
Domesday – 900 Years of English History Online
I’d bet that few people haven’t heard of the Domesday Book, the survey of England commissioned in 1085 by William I (William the Conqueror) who conquered England after the Battle of Hastings in 1066.
Content Strategy Affects Your Reputation Online
Do they trust your emails and articles? Media Post’s Email Insider newsletter has an excellent article today on how your content strategy can affect your sender reputation.
Build and Protect Your Corporate Image(s) Online
If I were to start talking about optimizing content, most of our readers immediately conjure up visions of text words, words, words.
The Logic of Online Gambling Laws
A gambling website that takes bets on anything from poker to sports to celebrity news is taking bets on which of Technorati’s top 100 blogs will take the #1 spot at the end of the year. But is that legal? Well, sort of.
Online Advertising and Children
Food companies (no clue why others are not using it) are using the internet more and more to deepen children’s exposure to marketing messages through online games and commercials, blurring the lines between advertising and entertainment, a new study has found.
Toggl – Another Online Timetracker
Time tracking seems to be hot right now. As of several months ago (or so), I didn’t know of any legit standalone web based time trackers.
RSS tops Blogging in searches for Online PR
RSS and content syndication are good online PR search terms.
Feds’ Online Gambling Sting Gets ‘Ridiculous’
The US Justice Department is making clear that only certain types of gambling are okay online and there’s no exception for advertising agencies running campaigns for offshore sports betting companies. The penalty for running that campaign: a charge of racketeering and up to 20 years in prison.
FTC Busts Online Realtors On Antitrust Case
The Austin Board of Realtors found itself on the receiving end of the Federal Trade Commission’s ire due to the FTC’s contention the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) used by the Board blocked the marketing of certain listings from the service.