Tuesday, March 26, 2002
The Bottom Line is People! Does Jack Welch have a message for the educational institutions and the managers that run the show? I think so! Bob Evans, the editor-in-chief in the Information Week wrote in the March 22 issue an interesting article about Jack Welch, the icon of CEO's in American Business. Mr. Evans conducted the first part of a public interview before technology business audience. What struck Bob was that the bottom line was people. "What Jack Welch did talk about, regardless of the nature or the direction of the question, was people: their inherent goodness, their potential, their intelligence, their inborn desire to achieve and excel. What employees want above all else, he said, is to have a voice, and to have their dignity." Yes! "He spoke of his pride in creating environments where people were given a chance to TBC
8:50:31 PM  #  comment []
remoteEdit looks to very Cool! remoteEdit looks very cool. Providing a relatively easy way to personalize one's weblog, may be the knockout punch that supports one's individuality and original content, and gets more people on board blogging. I have to try it out sometime. The screenshots are very good.
1:38:46 PM  #  comment []
Dave asked: what is this tool doing and why it is that relevant to who in two sentences?

In two sentences:

If you want to change your Radio weblog theme today, you need to know html and understand the basics of radio macros.

With remoteEdit you simply click on a button and edit your theme using Front Page (or any other wysiwyg editor), drag things around, change layout, styles and colors in the familiar visual way of these tools. You click one more nutton and your blog is updated. [evectors Radio Tools]
1:36:15 PM  #  comment []

Russ Lipton: Speak In Your Own Voice. Exactly right. The weblogs that are most interesting are the ones that have something to say about the writer. Teach us what you know. Bring new people into blogging. Be viral.  [Scripting News]
9:55:16 AM  #  comment []
When I need to rekindle my intensity, I read this piece on the Radio site. It's the deep philosophy of the product, borrowed from Jobs and Woz.  [Scripting News]
9:54:34 AM  #  comment []