Strategy
Competing with brains, not brawn
Friday, August 30, 2002
Competing with brains, not brawn
Why The DMCA Sucks - Reason #637
Astounding. Apple is using the DMCA as a club in a case that has about as much to do with copyright as my big toe does.
Brand Management: The Long, Long View
So, how do you keep a century old brand interesting? Personally, I'd vote for better prrizes and more peanuts...Cracker Jack: A Survivor in the Snack Business [NPR News (Audio)]
Controlling Market Direction, Dominence Through Standards
Steering the course. Vendors struggle to control the direction of Web services standards [InfoWorld: Top News]
Buyers Fight Back On Licensing Negotiations
Software buyers have begun to rely on consultants to help negotiate software licensing deals, driven in no small measure by the economy. Times are tight, and buyers are looking much more closely at costs.
Astounding. Apple is using the DMCA as a club in a case that has about as much to do with copyright as my big toe does.
News.Com: Apple: Burn DVDs--and we'll burn you. At issue in the legal threat is Apple's well-received iDVD application, which permits users to burn DVDs only on internal drives manufactured by Apple. In unmodified form, it does not permit writing to external drives manufactured by third parties. [Tomalak's Realm]
Brand Management: The Long, Long View
So, how do you keep a century old brand interesting? Personally, I'd vote for better prrizes and more peanuts...Cracker Jack: A Survivor in the Snack Business [NPR News (Audio)]
Controlling Market Direction, Dominence Through Standards
Steering the course. Vendors struggle to control the direction of Web services standards [InfoWorld: Top News]
Buyers Fight Back On Licensing Negotiations
Software buyers have begun to rely on consultants to help negotiate software licensing deals, driven in no small measure by the economy. Times are tight, and buyers are looking much more closely at costs.
Negotiating the software pact maze. Faced with increasingly complicated licenses, technology buyers are turning to third-party negotiators to squeeze the best deal out of software makers--and to avoid the contract tender traps. [CNET News.com]