Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Stop Whining About Facebook’s Redesign
Do you hate Facebook’s new design? Do you find the homepage too noisy, with important updates from your friends getting buried under a stream of banal comments from high school classmates and other people you pity-friended? I bet you think the site’s confusing, too. I’ve got news for you: You’ll get over it soon enough.
Monday, March 23, 2009
I Can Has Internet Millions
For the Web’s cognoscenti, the lolcats fad is so over. I Can Has Cheezburger, the site that sparked captioned-cat-picture mania, launched in January 2007. The online world’s early adopters learned about the phenomenon that February, when Boing Boing first linked to the site. Over the next few months, lolcats showed up in Gawker, Slate, the Wall Street Journal, and Time. Last October, Eric Nakagawa and Kari Unebasami, the site’s founders, published “I Can Has Cheezburger?: A LOLcat Colleckshun,” a book that spent 13 weeks on the New York Times paperback best-seller list.
Monday, March 16, 2009
Bono Has a BlackBerry?
A question inspired by this week’s news that Research in Motion, the company that makes the BlackBerry, has become the chief sponsor for U2’s next bombastic world tour: Who exactly is profiting from this deal?
Friday, February 27, 2009
Fear the Kindle
It’s hard not to love Amazon’s new e-book reader. For starters, it’s gorgeous. Unlike its bulky predecessor, the redesigned $359 Kindle, which came out this week, is light, thin, and disappears in your hands. In my few days using it, I was won over: The Kindle is the future of publishing. And that’s what scares me.
Thursday, February 26, 2009
Jurassic Web
The Internet of 1996 is almost unrecognizable compared with what we have today: It’s 1996, and you’re bored. What do you do? If you’re one of the lucky people with an AOL account, you probably do the same thing you’d do in 2009: Go online. Crank up your modem, wait 20 seconds as you log in, and there you are–”Welcome.”
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
Why Microsoft Should Forget About Yahoo and Buy Palm
Nearly a year ago, Microsoft made an unsolicited $44 billion bid to buy Yahoo. No good came of it: Yahoo’s executives, who appeared chronically allergic to any move that might reward shareholders, wasted a precious year fending off Microsoft rather than finding a way to beat their chief corporate rival, Google.
Thursday, November 6, 2008
A Radical Business Plan for Facebook
Allow me to propose something crazy. Tech companies should start charging people to use their services. No, seriously. Let’s take the biggest example of a Web site that has no clear path to profitability: Facebook.
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Chuck Knol
There are two articles about Sarah Palin on Google Knol, the search company’s abysmal new Wikipedia-like reference guide. One of them is a mess.
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