Thursday, August 5, 2004

> Dan Gillmor: Mark Glaser reports at Online Journalism Review that big media companies are "starting to work with -- instead of against -- the blogosphere." About time.
[Dan Gillmor's eJournal]   6:20:25 PM  Link  Google It!  
> Jonathan Schwartz: Dan Farber has a good note - as does BusinessWeek - on the recent goings on. And Doc Searls has an even more interesting point about the moebius nature of cluetrains.
[Jonathan Schwartz's Weblog]   3:43:56 PM  Link  Google It!  
> Mark Hurst: I told her that seemed a tad low for an annual budget to be spent improving the site for customers, especially given that the annual revenue of the company was around $50 million. "Well," she responded, "we already spend $30 million a year just on advertising, so there's not much left over."
[Tomalak's Realm]   2:06:01 PM  Link  Google It!  
> Don Park: I just realized that if blogging becomes any more popular, trial lawyers will be using services like Technorati as jury selection tools and to find ways to discredit witnesses in the court room.  Maybe they are doing that already.  I also wonder if blog readers can be used as character witnesses. Interesting food for thought.
[Don Park's Daily Habit]   12:58:13 PM  Link  Google It!  
> Steve Kirks: Patrick Ritchie has an alternate News Aggregator layout brewing. It's better than mine, using XHTML div statements to mimick the original layout done with tables. I put it on my test system and I like it much better than my alternative mentioned Tuesday. If you are a web developer working on Radio themes and want to help decide the standard structure and classes for Radio's XHTML, now is the time to contribute...
[house of warwick]   12:32:07 PM  Link  Google It!