We become effective publishers when we carefully package and layer our information.
by Jon Udell
| @judell
| 4 November 2010
Headlines matter. They're always visible to a scan or a search, while other information -- like decks and leads -- are active in far fewer contexts.
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Apple's iOS 4.2 approaches, OpenOffice loses contributors, IE's share drops slowly, and here come the Chrome netbooks
by James Turner
| @blackbearnh
| 3 November 2010
This week, Apple readies iOS 4.2, OpenOffice loses 33 contributors, competitors chip away at IE's browser share, and soon you'll have a Chrome option for netbooks.
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Apple deprecates, Microsoft assassinates, Adobe infiltrates, and Linux obfuscates.
by James Turner
| @blackbearnh
| 27 October 2010
Heading up developer news this week: Is XP really dead this time? Linux release notes are an exercise in futility. Apple pulls the rug out from two development environments on the Mac. And Adobe gives tablet programmers more options.
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The benefits of information principles are revealed through education, so let's start with digital natives.
by Jon Udell
| @judell
| 26 October 2010
An efficient model of collective information management relies on principles like pub/sub, indirection and syndication. Translating these principles beyond computational thinkers is the tricky part. To pull it off we need to educate the kids we assume to be digital natives.
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Ozzie architects a departure, Apple earnings and rumors, the BSA meddles, and C++ is 25.
by James Turner
| @blackbearnh
| 20 October 2010
This week, Microsoft loses their chief architect, Apple continues to own the news cycle, the BSA tries to put the kibosh on open standards, and a well-known language reaches a milestone.
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Oracle's not-so-open Java, suing to prevent getting sued, iOS 4.2 approaches, and why you shouldn't taunt the Black Hats.
by James Turner
| @blackbearnh
| 13 October 2010
This week, we look at IBM's decision to ditch Harmony for OpenJDK, more lawsuit madness in the land of telecomm, a new iOS beta from Apple, and what happened when Washington, DC tried to get some free penetration testing.
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