News to know: Mumbai attacks, Microhoo, Holiday shopping, HDTVs
Here are today’s notable headlines. You can get News To Know via email alert and RSS daily:Jennifer Leggio: Mumbai attack coverage demonstrates...
Here are today’s notable headlines. You can get News To Know via email alert and RSS daily:Jennifer Leggio: Mumbai attack coverage demonstrates...
Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang made an interesting comment during his appearance at the Web 2.0 Summit this week.
Exxon Mobil got "brand-jacked."About two weeks ago, someone named "Janet," believed to be a spokesperson for the oil company, started posting one-liner comments about the company on Twitter.
Speaking the Graphing Social Patterns conference (covering the business and technology of Facebook) in San Jose today, Linkedin founder and chairman Reid Hoffman poured cold water on the notion that a single social graph would prevail. "One graph that includes all types of relationships in one perfectly orchestrated universe is a geek, blogger dream.
InfoWorld and Baseline have overviews of announcements made at the Enterprise 2.0 Conference in Boston this week.
Social media is a double-edged sword for politicians and companies. Consider Barak Obama's MySpace page, which wasn't run by Barak Obama.
While I was enjoying the sunny Saturday in San Francisco, my feed reader filled up several points to Euan Semple's post, "The 100% guaranteed easiest way to do Enterprise 2.0?
The past Saturday, I organized a half-day "startup workshop" to give a few young Web 2.0 companies in Hong Kong a chance to share their startup experiences with the general public.
For web-based businesses like Google and MySpace, AJAX flings open the door to new malware propagation methods few things are more scary than malicious attacks on the code of your websites or apps. And in this web 2.
Harry Fuller, and old friend and executive editor at CNET, has a comment about the You Tube guys' video posting about the sale of their company to Google. He's amazed at the speed and reach of the communication by the company about its sale, but the real message, I think, is that the announcement is the beginning of the botch job.