Old Articles: <Older 731-740 Newer> |
|
Fast Company November 2005 Linda Tischler |
The Beauty of Simplicity Marissa Mayer, who keeps Google's home page pure, understands that less is more. Other tech companies are starting to get it, too. Here's why making things simple is the new competitive advantage. |
Fast Company November 2005 Lucas Conley |
Web Graffiti 2.0 A new application based on social bookmarking lets humans, as opposed to algorithms, index the Web. |
Fast Company November 2005 Paul Lukas |
Point, Click, Design How an inspiration during a bout of food poisoning eventually became the popular photo-sharing Web application. |
InternetNews November 22, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
A White Hat Approach to Web 'Cloaking' A benign cloaking service from Dipsie aims to make Web sites more visible to search engines. The application also recommends keywords and compound phrases to be used in bidding for advertising on Google AdWords and Yahoo Search Marketing. |
InternetNews November 21, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
Microsoft Launches Free Hosted E-Mail Windows Live Custom Domains, lets domain name owners access MSN services without the need for a Passport, Microsoft's star-crossed authentication system. |
BusinessWeek November 28, 2005 Andrew Park |
So You Want To Be An Internet Star There's no mystery about why podcasting is hot. The technology allows anyone to produce a radio-style program that an audience can find, download, and listen to anytime. |
Entrepreneur December 2005 Melissa Campanelli |
Got Their Goat? Your website might be annoying customers. Here's how to change that. |
Entrepreneur December 2005 Melissa Campanelli |
Get Your Clicks Click fraud may be a larger problem than you think. Learn how to it before it drains your ad budget. |
InternetNews November 18, 2005 Sean Michael Kerner |
SourceForge.net Gets a Facelift SourceForge has freshened up its look and improved usability as part of a new site design rolled out this week. |
Search Engine Watch November 17, 2005 Heather Lloyd-Martin |
Search Engine Ad Reps: Friend or Foe? Search engines employ advertising representatives to help search marketers, but sometimes relations between ad reps and search marketers can be difficult or even downright adversarial. |
<Older 731-740 Newer> Return to current articles. |