Archive for June, 2008
The BBC have a nice piece of citizen journalism up today which covers the Harrier crash in the midlands. The Story contains a video as it’s lead which has been submitted by a witness on the scene.
The actual piece of journalism itself is not by the citizen but an BBC journalist. The article as a […]
TED: Reactive To Engagement
TED is a great website everything about it is well planned out and well executed. They won 3 Webby Awards this year for best navigation/structure, best visual design - function and for their Podcasts.
You can see why their wins were richly deserved when you have a good look at their site. Everything is geared towards […]
YouTube is one of the most popular websites in the world (currently 3rd on Alexa. I would say it is the most popular content source on the web) but I don’t think people take enough notice of what they are really now starting to achieve. It’s incredible! The level of AET is way beyond […]
Websites In Your Pocket
I first got a mobile phone when I was in my first year of A-Levels, this was in 1999. I remember the phone, it was a Siemens which nobody else at school had this made it quite an attraction when I first got it.
I could access wap sites on it when I was at work […]
Reading: Groundswell
I received my copy of Groundswell today. The book is written by Charlene Li and Josh Bernoff from Forrester Research who define ‘the groundswell’ as a social structure in which technology puts power into the hands of individuals and communities, not institutions.
It’s a book by two Forrester analysts with practical, data-based strategies for companies that […]
My del.icio.us Links
Twitter Updates
- New blog post: Google on Google Chrome http://tinyurl.com/5f7g7c 3 days ago
- Went to the premier of Hancock. 2 stars 2008-06-18
- I installed del.icio.us on firefox 3 2008-06-18
- I installed snap shots on my blog 2008-06-17
- New blog post: Pilot ejects from Harrier crash. User submits video of it. http://tinyurl.com/65ocbq 2008-06-16
- More updates...
Posting tweet...







