Updated: 9/9/02; 1:07:41 PM
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    News and Observations

daily link  Monday, February 11, 2002

Strengthening Software Financials?

AMR Research offers a quick insight into the improving profile of software vendor's operating model - that is to say, cash burn.

Vendors[base '] Operating Models Have Caught Up With Reality [AMR Research

12:51:52 PM  permalink  source


Customer Service Improvement?

At best, Handspring's trials of a voice response system to aid customers in diagnosing handheld problems sports a 30% success rate. I guess a company that offers no toll-free help line and only limited access to live technicians during business hours would see that as a success worth crowing about. Registration Required

Need to Fix a Computer? Ask Another Computer. Handspring recently began testing an unusual software program that uses artificial intelligence and speech recognition to talk Handspring's callers through repairs. [The New York Times: Technology

8:10:32 AM  permalink 


Banish Editorial Calendars?

For marketing and PR staffers, searching through editorial calendars is a low return, time consuming effort. A new company thinks they have a better way.

Web-Based Service Seeks to Link Writers, Topics. Stephen W.T. O'Keeffe thinks his new company will be able to make the often-adversarial relationship between reporters and public relations executives a little more peaceful. [The Washington Post : Business

8:00:09 AM  permalink  source


Want $3 Million? Here's What It Takes...

Had the opportunity to work on this project and the article understates the amount of work required to do the deal.

It All Begins With an Idea . . .. Many workaday Washington types would think that Prashanth Viswanath Boccasam had taken leave of his senses. But venture capitalists are listening to his pitch. [The Washington Post : Business

7:36:40 AM  permalink  source


RFID's Prompt Privacy Concerns

Grocery stores are already doing this sort of tracking without the benefit of RFID tags - when you provide your "frequent shopper" id, it makes it possible for the store to monitor precisely what you buy and how often. The question of privacy never surfaces, so you can assume that your friendly grocer is selling the data to heaven knows who. But, unlike this scheme, you at least get some sort of compensation for the data you provide in the way of discounts and rebates.

Digital ID: You shop, they snoop?. ZDNet Feb 11 2002 4:53AM ET [Moreover - moreover...

7:00:36 AM  permalink  source


Copyright 2002 © Dale Gardner