Year: 2002
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Managing Your Links in Radio’s Outliner
Just documented how I’m now managing my links list in my Radio outliner. There are probably other ways to do it, but this is exactly what I was looking for. Very cool.
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Brobeck Team Not Leaving for Clifford Chance
Update: Brobeck Team Won’t Move to Clifford Chance. Citing “practical challenges,” negotiations by Clifford Chance to hire a team of partners led by Tower Snow Jr., the former chairman of San Francisco’s Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison, fell through this week. Whether the Brobeck lawyers — either individually or as a group — are looking elsewhere…
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Who Said Nobody Likes Lawyers?
Congrats, Ernie! Ernie passes the 10,000 page view milestone (as noted at the Radio Community Server). What I really want to do is set up an RCS site that’s for the law blogs … but that requires a dedicated machine. And right now, I can’t seem to find one for the task. I think that’s…
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Fun Matrix Fact #147: Who Does Neo Work For?
Early in The Matrix, Thomas Anderson (aka Neo) walks into his company’s building. The name of the company is written in large letters on the outside of the building. A few minutes later, he gets a call from Morpheus. Morpheus tells him to run to his boss’s office to escape. As he does so, you…
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Measuring ROI on KM investments
I’m finally getting around to responding to Chris’s post from a few days ago. He raised an interesting point about his CIO’s insistence on identifying the ROI for his firm’s upcoming CRM investment. (Disclaimer: I work for a software company that sells CRM software to professional services firms. You can learn more here. The post…
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Don’t Sniff Those Packets!
There’s a lot of folks at the O’Reilly Emerging Technology conference, and this is another conference with 802.11b wireless access (aka “wi-fi”) to allow any geek with an antenna to have access to the Net. Well, Rob Flickinger from O’Reilly decided to run a program called EtherPEG to watch the packets of information flowing across the wireless…
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Innovation and Imitation
Good read over at MIT’s Technology Review: Mimetic Management. The author is Michael Schrage, a Fortune columnist and research associate at MIT Media Lab. The article touches on innovation, picks up yesterday’s thread about listening to customers, and tries to identify what motivates customers: [I]ts also critical for innovators to know who their customers and clients…
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The Innovator’s Dilemma
Blogs as Disruptive Innovation. One of the most thought-provoking business books in the last several years was Clay Christensen’s The Innovator’s Dilemma. It got carried into lots of meetings as entrepreneurs and consultants tried to justify their latest fantasy as the next disruptive innovation. I’m reasonably sure that most of them never bothered to read…
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RSS Subscriptions and Traffic Monitoring
Here’s an interesting thought: to the extent that page views are a barometer of your site’s popularity, the RSS feed of your site actually contributes to fewer people viewing your site. In other words, people get my posts delivered to their desktop if they subscribe to my RSS feed – meaning that they don’t have…
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Faster: The Acceleration of Just About Everything
I finished reading Faster by James Gleick last week. Gleick (whose personal site is at Around.com) is my favorite author on technical matters. If he could make me understand Chaos theory, he can do anything. (If you haven’t read Chaos, you should: excellent overview of fractals, the law of unintended consequences, etc.). His biography of…