Category: Uncategorized

  • Support tins

    I’m experimenting with BlogAds over on the right sidebar; if you’re interested in advertising on this site, you can click here to find out more. Some specs on the site: 110,000+ visits in the first three months of 2004 150,000+ page views in the same time period (not including RSS traffic) More than 300 inbound…

  • Microsoft Culture

    Scoble writes of a recent interview he did for Channel 9, Microsoft’s latest effort at connecting with the developer community. (Give it a look; even the most jaded Microsoft critic would be hard-pressed to find fault with the transparency Channel 9 represents.) He says: There were no PR people around. No lawyers. No execs making…

  • Paul Allen the Lesser

    Utah has our very own Paul Allen. Not the Paul Allen of Microsoft fame, but a Paul Allen who’s made a name for himself in the high tech community by starting ventures such as Infobases, Folio, and MyFamily.com. Paul knows a lot about starting companies and willingly shares his knowledge with anyone willing to come…

  • Anagram

    Thanks to a tip from Buzz today, I checked out Anagram. Anagram is a slick little application — highlight some text, trigger Anagram, and it intelligently recognizes whether the text is a new contact, a todo, a calendar entry, or a memo. It then adds it to your PIM (currently supports Outlook and Palm Desktop).…

  • Cluetrain Manifesto in practice

    There’s an interesting thread going on at the [non]billable hour right now, between Matt Homann, a lawyer, and the CEO of LegalMatch, a company that used fairly aggressive tactics in pitching their services to Matt. Read Matt’s original post here, and his follow-up (excerpted below) here. The other day, I titled a post, Why I’ll…

  • Decentralized organizations

    From Phil Wolff comes this spectacular assessment of what it takes for volunteer groups to be effective in political campaigns: I’ve been rationalizing the 30-50 hours a week of grassroots campaigning I’ve been investing in the local Kerry campaign since last summer. Changing the world is great, and we’re doing that. My takeaway is what…

  • Reason proves WYSKster was only sort of a joke

    From today’s New York Times, an article on how the print version of the monthly Reason is using personal data on readers in coordination with satellite technology to create magazine covers that picture the neighborhoods of respective subscribers. [beSpacific] Imagine that — every subscriber is getting a magazine with a picture their neighborhood on the…

  • Topix

    Will Cox points out a terrific new (?) news aggregation service: ResearchBuzz points to Topix.net for local news. It’s the BOMB! [Cox Crow] No kidding. It’s even got a page for Naperville, my home town. Best of all, it’s got RSS — so I can read this stuff in my aggregator. Wow.

  • Mmmmm… USB memory sticks

    Catching a spammer at an Internet Cafe: A sysadmin for an Internet cafe in Dublin describes in nice technical detail how he caught an alleged “419” spammer in flagrante delicto. (“419” refers to a Nigerian Advance Fee Fraud.) Evidently, a 419er is that stupid. [Peter Kaminski] Funny — with all that money these relatives of…

  • Skype is much better

    Just spent over an hour on a Skype call with Matt this morning. Wow. The first time around, I had several significant complaints about Skype — I was in the minority at the time, but the sound quality for me was terrible. I had several drops, a couple cases where it would go several seconds…