-
The best low-tech explanation I’ve read on OpenSocial. If you have any interest at all, this is the one to read.
-
The official page for OpenSocial. Developers only, please. Or else your head asplode.
-
Very well-thought. Good for those hard conversations
-
From complex to overly simple. Gotta be a happy medium
-
Holy crap do I need this. We need this!
-
Fine line between what I do and this. Or… is that a self delusion?
-
Is this a bad thing?
-
Must check this. Want to move. Need to learn new language. Suck.
-
This might help my attitude and outlook
-
Great advice for employees, business owners and freelancers alike. Not quite as extreme as the 4 Hour Work Week, but in a similar vein.
-
I love it when media guys — especially those who don’t get new media — bad mouth the newest thing because the purpose isn’t readily seen. It gets even better when their words come back to haunt them years later.
-
Instead of companies rushing headlong to collect the untold riches from new media, maybe they should think about it for a minute.
-
Mostly I read Vallywag as a guilty pleasure. That and you can find some truth underneath the vitriol. This post is classic and takes a funny look at licensing, pricing structures and more.
-
Maybe I’m off-base with my desire to see live video of remote co-workers?
-
Read between the lines on this story and think of what it means to video consumption — hell, what about “product” consumption?
-
Think the audiobook market sucks? You are correct. But some of us are working to change that
-
It really disappoints me that I’m not better at PowerPoint. I just fall in to the old traps. I think I’ll read this before I do one next time. Great examples
-
Took the test. Yep, I’m one of these. Which is rather puzzling, as I’m not a packrat in the real world. No, that’s my wife’s job. Marking it here so I can go back and see if it’s worth fixing.
-
A list of some great ideas (some better than others) on how you can use Twitter for more than just another time sink.
-
Chris posts a very thoughtful and honest look at the changing nature of the podosphere, citing a few examples to make his point. The only constant in this world is change. Deal.
-
An NYT report on BookExpo America, which wrapped up over the weekend. Not surprisingly, some buggy-whip makers are scared of the changes in the market place. How many times can I say “the only constant in this world is change” before it gets tiresome?
-
Because you don’t have enough ways to Twitter already…