// archives

Archive for April, 2009

You are here: Home » Archives for April 2009

Pearltrees

Pearltrees a great way to cover a subject!

Links for 30-04-09

Shared links The Twitter flight (well, train) 7 JavaScript Differences Between Firefox & IE « Web Design Articles & Tutorials The Other Web2.0: Not Business As Usual Brands, social, clutter and the sundae What is the return on investment of the social web for nonprofits? Want to Figure Out Your Social Media ROI? Consider a [...]

Creative with WP Greet Box

WP Greet Box lets you show a different greeting message to your new visitors depending on their referrer url. For example, when a Digg user clicks through from Digg, they will see a message reminding them to digg your post if they like it. Another example, when a visitor clicks through from Twitter, they will [...]

Does layout matter?

No layout does not matter for readers,

Links for 29-04-09

Shared links Twitter Quitters Post Roadblock to Long-Term Growth Pulp Browsers

Web3.0 is not about Web

The next web is not about the Web.

Links for 28-04-09

Shared links Shouting LOL in a crowded theatre: trolling, griefing and Web 2.0 dickery The Death and Life of Geocities Smooth move! Amazon acquires iPhone E-Book app ‘Stanza’. Live Oracle Webcast and Virtual Lab – Powered by AWS Free dj mixes generate more downloads? New Chart Options for the Visualization API The Mystery Of CSS [...]

Whose data is it anyway

It’s not about defaults, it’s about ownership. On Facebook, you are not allowed to give other people access to your data, because your data belongs to Facebook. On FriendFeed or Twitter, you can choose to be public or private, but either way you can still access your data and do what you want with it. [...]

Links for 27-04-09

Shared links Web3.0 or The semantic web Geocities to be shut down later this year Building a URL Shortener The More Things Change, the More They Stay the Same Facebook to open up to developers: Here comes the feed frenzy Dave Winer Thinks Twitter Is Just Another App, But It’s Not The long view in [...]

Data

Data is a precious thing and will last longer than the systems themselves. Tim Berners-Lee

Twitter Remote