November, 2008

article thumbnail

Links for 2008-11-26 [del.icio.us]

Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog

Amazon.com Tries User-Generated Public Relations - Bits Blog - NYTimes.com. A Web 1.0 pioneer which continues to get the good 2.0 stuff. Crowdsourcing is almost always cheaper and more scalable than traditional methods of production, just harder to seen. zembly. A "Wikipedia for social apps—a wiki for live, editable code beyond trivial widgets" it looks like a pretty compelling way to build SNS apps.

Social 75
article thumbnail

Google Personalized Results

SoCal CTO

Google now shows me an option to push things in my search results to the top. It's an interesting choice. Doesn't it seem like it's inviting problems. Basically the only people who will spend time on this is people trying to improve their search rankings. The rest of us signal with lots of other things like links, bookmarking, etc. Not sure I buy this approach from Google.

60
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Code Normal Forms

The Programmer's Paradox

The unknown quality of code is a simple, yet highly influential problem with existing software. If you have a millions of lines of code, is it fine or does it need serious work? Is it well-written, or is it a huge mess? An objective way to determine the current state of a large code base is necessary. In the past, we've often relied on subjective opinions, but programmers are notoriously jealous of each other's work.

article thumbnail

Trip to Rotterdam, The Netherlands, to Present at the Dutch Innovation Platform

elsua: The Knowledge Management Blog

Here we go once more! On the road again! This time around on the last business trip from this year. Where to? Rotterdam, The Netherlands. What for? Customer meetings to discuss social software and also presenting at the Dutch Innovation Platform on one of my favourite topics to date.

article thumbnail

Prevent Data Breaches With Zero-Trust Enterprise Password Management

Keeper Security is transforming cybersecurity for people and organizations around the world. Keeper’s affordable and easy-to-use solutions are built on a foundation of zero-trust and zero-knowledge security to protect every user on every device. Our next-generation privileged access management solution deploys in minutes and seamlessly integrates with any tech stack to prevent breaches, reduce help desk costs and ensure compliance.

article thumbnail

The PMO Divide

The Agile Manager

This content is derived from a webinar I presented earlier this month titled The Agile PMO: Real-Time Metrics and Visibility. This is the first of a multi-part series. We’ve all seen it: the project that reports “green” status on its stop-and- go light report for months suddenly goes red in the late stages of development. This is nothing new to IT, as projects suddenly crater all the time.

More Trending

article thumbnail

Links for 2008-11-25 [del.icio.us]

Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog

The hidden cost of Google Apps - Nov. 19, 2008. A decent overview of what the pros and cons are of moving to office productivity apps in the cloud. We use Google Apps for most of what we do now unless it needs exotic formatting. Article cites biggest downsides as identity (account) confusion and user learning curve. The latter is overblown as far as I can tell.

Cloud 75
article thumbnail

Structure, Action, and Results

Code Simplicity

There’s a very popular model for designing software that we’ve all heard of if we’re web developers, and probably most desktop developers have heard of too: our old friend MVC. This works well because it reflects the basic nature of a computer program: a series of actions taken on a structure of data to produce a result. Programs also take input, and so you could possibly argue that input was a fourth part of a program, but usually I just think of a computer program as the firs

MVC 40
article thumbnail

Links for 2008-11-24 [del.icio.us]

Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog

Netbook - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Now we are seeing a wave of personal computer devices designed specifically for cloud computing. The Asus EEE and Dell Mini 9 and others are selling extremely well and are often out of stock. They use Ubuntu or Windows XP and yes, they are yet another device that Web app creators have to optimize for. Millennials Reshaping Work With Social Computing Says Report | SocialComputingMagazine.com.

Social 75
article thumbnail

Links for 2008-11-20 [del.icio.us]

Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog

Daring Fireball: Google Mobile Uses Private iPhone APIs. Fascinating analysis of how the new Google Mobile voice command uses undocumented iPhone APIs. It seems like unfair advantage and Google is getting special treatment on the platform. Definitely makes Android seem friendlier for and fairer for app devs, who create most of the value on a platform anyway.

Mobile 75
article thumbnail

15 Modern Use Cases for Enterprise Business Intelligence

Large enterprises face unique challenges in optimizing their Business Intelligence (BI) output due to the sheer scale and complexity of their operations. Unlike smaller organizations, where basic BI features and simple dashboards might suffice, enterprises must manage vast amounts of data from diverse sources. What are the top modern BI use cases for enterprise businesses to help you get a leg up on the competition?

article thumbnail

Oh, No!!! Have I Become a Mac Fanboy?

elsua: The Knowledge Management Blog

This is a blog post describing what happens when you go to the candy store, errr, I mean, the Apple Store, and you don't come back empty-handed. Oh well. Better luck next time, I suppose. Or, better not!! W00t!

Tools 40
article thumbnail

Giving up on Work e-mail - Status Report on Week 40 (How to Get Rid of e-mail)

elsua: The Knowledge Management Blog

Getting slowly back into the swing of things, here we go with another blog post focusing on the usual weekly progress report on giving up on e-mail, referencing an interview conducted in Spanish, as well as some changes that will be taking place here in this blog as well very soon. Regular blogging activities will resume accordingly, too!

Report 40
article thumbnail

Evento Blog 2008 - Highlights (Cough, Cough)

elsua: The Knowledge Management Blog

As I have mentioned in yesterday's blog post , I was planning to put together a number of different entries with the highlights from the superb EventoBlog 2008 that I attended in Seville, over the weekend, to then let you folks know some more of what the experience was like, my impressions, what I learned, some of the folks I have met, the ou.

Hotels 40
article thumbnail

Giving up on Work e-mail - Status Report on Week 39 (Calendaring Mess!)

elsua: The Knowledge Management Blog

After a wonderful week on holidays and after having attended the mind-blowing EventoBlog 2008 in Seville this part weekend, here I am, once again, on to my regular blogging activities and this time around picking things up with the weekly progress report on my giving up on e-mail, which for week 39 was rather interesting, since one of the highest number of incoming e-mails was eventually provoked by myself!

Report 40
article thumbnail

Prepare Now: 2025s Must-Know Trends For Product And Data Leaders

Speaker: Jay Allardyce, Deepak Vittal, and Terrence Sheflin

As we look ahead to 2025, business intelligence and data analytics are set to play pivotal roles in shaping success. Organizations are already starting to face a host of transformative trends as the year comes to a close, including the integration of AI in data analytics, an increased emphasis on real-time data insights, and the growing importance of user experience in BI solutions.

article thumbnail

Design Patterns - The Cult to Blame ?

Ruminations of a Programmer

I always thought GOF Design Patterns book achieved it's objective to make us better C++/Java programmers. It taught us how to design polymorphic class hierarchies alongside encouraging delegation over inheritance. In an object oriented language like Java or C++, which does not offer first class higher order functions or closures, the GOF patterns taught us how to implement patterns like Command, Strategy and State through properly encapsulated class structures that would decouple the theme from

article thumbnail

How to Survive and Thrive in Business Today with Web 2.0 - Part 1

Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog

Two of the big themes clearly evident at this week's Web 2.0 Summit is 1) how to effect change successfully today and 2) how to deliver genuine, meaningful value in today's marketplace. The current economic climate combined with this week's seminal change in the current political administration has begun positioning organizations to think about how to not only survive the business environment and apparent recession today, but how to fundamentally transform what they're doing for

How To 40
article thumbnail

How to Survive and Thrive in Business Today with Web 2.0 - Part 1

Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog

Two of the big themes clearly evident at this week's Web 2.0 Summit is 1) how to effect change successfully today and 2) how to deliver genuine, meaningful value in today's marketplace. The current economic climate combined with this week's seminal change in the current political administration has begun positioning organizations to think about how to not only survive the business environment and apparent recession today, but how to fundamentally transform what they're doing for

How To 40
article thumbnail

How to Survive and Thrive in Business Today with Web 2.0 - Part 1

Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog

Two of the big themes clearly evident at this week's Web 2.0 Summit is 1) how to effect change successfully today and 2) how to deliver genuine, meaningful value in today's marketplace. The current economic climate combined with this week's seminal change in the current political administration has begun positioning organizations to think about how to not only survive the business environment and apparent recession today, but how to fundamentally transform what they're doing for

How To 40
article thumbnail

2024 Salary Guide

Procom’s 2024 Salary Guide provides critical insights into the latest hiring trends, in-demand IT roles, and competitive pay rates across Canada and the U.S. It highlights key market dynamics such as the growing demand for remote work, skills-based hiring, and flexible staffing solutions. With detailed pay rate data for top IT positions like Cybersecurity Consultants, Cloud Engineers, and Salesforce Developers, this guide is an essential resource for companies looking to stay competitive in toda

article thumbnail

A Smart Planet - Why Think?

elsua: The Knowledge Management Blog

What do you think would take for our planet to smarten up against the number of growing dramatic changes we are going through at the moment? I am sure you would be able to come up with a few, but here is one that I feel we should not lose focus on. Right on the money! (Well, not that kind of money!

article thumbnail

The Sweettt Podcast - Episode 8 - Inside and Outside the Firewall - Part 1 of August 22nd Discussion

elsua: The Knowledge Management Blog

After a short break due to holidays, various business trips and the usual catch up, The Sweettt Show is back! Here is a post detailing our (Matt Simpon, my co-host and yours truly!) next podcasting episode where we explore the world of Enterprise social software behind the corporate firewall. Benefits, caveats, experiences, stories, etc. etc.

article thumbnail

Giving up on Work e-mail - Status Report on Week 38 (The Enterprise Soft Spot)

elsua: The Knowledge Management Blog

Here we go, back at it, once again. Here is the weekly progress report from my giving up on e-mail at work, reflecting on an interesting article published by Robert Scoble not long ago, and also with a reflection on something I mentioned as well while I was at the Web 2.0 Expo in Berlin. Keyword = change!

Report 40
article thumbnail

On Holidays!

elsua: The Knowledge Management Blog

Yes, just that! As simple as it can get. On holidays!

40
article thumbnail

Launching LLM-Based Products: From Concept to Cash in 90 Days

Speaker: Christophe Louvion, Chief Product & Technology Officer of NRC Health and Tony Karrer, CTO at Aggregage

Christophe Louvion, Chief Product & Technology Officer of NRC Health, is here to take us through how he guided his company's recent experience of getting from concept to launch and sales of products within 90 days. In this exclusive webinar, Christophe will cover key aspects of his journey, including: LLM Development & Quick Wins 🤖 Understand how LLMs differ from traditional software, identifying opportunities for rapid development and deployment.