The Future of Email: Evolve or Die?
Once upon a time email was novel. People were happy to get email, it was easy to deal with, and it was convenient. It was the wave of the future and it was going to make us more productive.
Once upon a time email was novel. People were happy to get email, it was easy to deal with, and it was convenient. It was the wave of the future and it was going to make us more productive.
Maybe we should eschew self-quantifying like Chekhov would most surely ask us to, like Tolstoy would want, like most self-effacing novelists and short story writers would expect. But it's hard to know what their self-assessment was like before all this self-Googling.
If a company invests a percentage of its profits into cause-related initiatives that improve the state of mankind, unless there is a clear economic reward, there is negligible enhancement of the company's value.
Google Communication is oh-so-the-fad and to not look like you are oh-so-old-school, you'd better jump on the bandwagon.
Think like a child and everything gets easier," chanted the speakers at Pasadena Art Center's Design Conference 2008, Serious Play. The conference took place May 7th-9th at the Raymond Avenue campus.
If Spot Runner has evolved to much more than an agency cutting local ads for local businesses, this emphasis still remains core to its mission.
A big autism bomb went off yesterday, about how US medical personnel had determined that vaccines had aggravated a little girl's mitochondrial disorder, resulting in autism. Now, the American people are left to interpret what it all means.
The big news is already old news. It's not that traditional online advertising will go away, but its profitability will suffer as it becomes diminishing-returns efficient.
Once upon a time email was novel. People were happy to get email, it was easy to deal with, and it was convenient. It was the wave of the future and i...
By scolding Britons to "cut [their] food waste," Prime Minister Gordon Brown reinforces the dangerous myth that a shortage of food is the reason food prices have jumped.
A daily American Samoa seat raffle in the Blogger Lounge. The Big Tent. The Mile High Stadium events. The inadequacy of three thousand data lines -- just some of the many mysteries unfolding in Denver.
We were determined to find a pattern, and the one that emerged was not unexpected: corporate executives make political donations cautiously and often split them evenly between the political parties.
In the transition to a clean, green economy, one milestone promises to be symbolically powerful -- Google's target to create renewable energy cheaper than coal.
Anyone in San Antonio, Texas last week would have thought that American education had entered a new digital age.
Online service providers are not government gatekeepers. Prior review of YouTube user content -- as Lieberman demanded -- is not just unworkable, it would write an end to the Internet's essential openness.
Traditional media and advertising business models are "doomed;" social media have little economic future; Google will become less relevant a...
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What was once a glowing leader in online innovation, Google is now beginning to disappoint in a growing number of ways.
Yet if you type 'Miserable failure' in the Google search box... you get pages that reference... George W. Bush! Go figure.
Algorithm? I haven't seen one since Al Gore last danced the macarena.
I miss typing "failure" into the search hitting "lucky" and getting GW's biography page on the White House web site. Just the thing to go with morning coffee.
Is this why I can no longer search "failure" hit the "lucky" button and get the GW biography page at the White House? That was a great side to my morning coffee. I'll miss it.
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