IM Gets Serious

IM Gets Serious. Here's an interesting article from Red Herring about business use of IM, with some quotes from Andre Durand of Jabber, Inc. [JabberCentral]

PFIR announces the Fact Squad

PFIR announces the Fact Squad. People for Internet Responsiblity, a group founded by veteran USENET moderators Lauren Weinstein and Peter G. Neumann, announces The Fact Squad. Fact Squad is a new resource for information regarding technology and its effects on society, dedicated to cutting thr [More Like This WebLog]

Driving Innovation and Creativity through Customer Data

User Interface Engineering: Driving Innovation and Creativity through Customer Data. Many designers understand that the need for customer input is invaluable, but they perceive the process to be too costly. Without the necessary customer involvement, designers end up developing products based on what designers believe customers need, rather than what they actually need. [Tomalak's Realm]

Why We Need Mozilla

Why We Need Mozilla. Cafe con Leche: IE 6 ” Bottom line: any doubt that the IE team at Microsoft actually cares about standards has been erased. More than three years since XML 1.0 was released and almost two years after XSLT 1.0 was released, IE still does not correctly implement these specifications. Even though… Continue reading Why We Need Mozilla

More Business (And Fun) Uses For Old Macs

More Business (And Fun) Uses For Old Macs : Many of these ideas are useful in a business setting, while others are just plain fun. (The Business Mac via Applesurf) [Applesurf]

Wired News

Business News from Wired News – Who's Reading Your Resume?. People who post their resumes on Monster.com, the world's largest job-seeking site, “face considerable threats to their privacy,” according to a watchdog group. In a 24-page report, The Privacy Foundation on Wednesday accused Monster of attempting to sell users' private data to marketers, failing to… Continue reading Wired News

David Hess

David Hess: “With this application, you don't write your story chronologically, from beginning to end. You write your story one memory at a time. The application takes care of inserting the memory on your 'memory map' based on the date it took place.” [Scripting News]