Posted on
February 24th, 2012 by
David
Even during the current worldwide economic instability, most everyone would like to be able to donate to charity and help out others. But just as educated consumers consider the corporate philosophies of big businesses, it is also wise to educate yourself about charities to which you donate. While a charity will always try to put the most positive spin on themselves in order to solicit donations, objective criteria should be used to determine whether a charity is worthy of your donation or not. For that, there is Charity Navigator.
Charity Navigator is an Internet site that provides information on charities, much the same way Open Secrets provides information on political donations. Evaluating objectively using records supplied to the government for tax/accounting purposes, Charity Navigator uses a series of consistent criteria to evaluate the health of a charity. This allows you to both compare charities and view charities that come close to an ideal using Charity Navigator.
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Posted on
February 22nd, 2012 by
David
Demand Media had a pretty rough 2011, though its Fourth Quarter earnings were actually better than expected. A provider of videos, blogs, and other media over the Internet, Demand Media has been working to transform the way people use the Internet for education and entertainment. While the company has been growing, Demand Media’s Board has been buying back its stock and the company is not quite where the executives and analysts thought it would be. Dave Panos is the man who will change the direction of Demand Media!
Dave Panos is the Chief Strategy Officer of Demand Media and his plans for the company are ambitious. Because Demand Media is known for delivering original Internet video content the company is in competition with many distribution channels, like YouTube. Panos organized a strategic partnership with competitor CoverItLive. By pairing Demand Media and CoverItLive, Panos helped increase the video base of Demand Media dramatically, which allows Demand Media to reach a much wider audience. Having the vision to partner with potentially vulnerable competitors is part of what makes Panos a truly great Chief Strategy Officer.
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Posted on
February 22nd, 2012 by
David
The Internet has given rise to many phenomena in American culture. Arguably the most significant lasting social change of the Internet comes in the form of people making statements. In the inorganic medium of the Internet, anyone can rant about anything anytime they want to. Between Tweets on Twitter, Facebook status updates and any number of message boards on any of a million websites, for the first time in the history of humanity, anyone with a computer and an Internet connection can feel like they have a voice that is being heard.
Not everything said on the Internet is a gem of human wisdom.
Just as in real life, where once you say something you cannot take it back, Internet users – thanks to things like the Facebook Timeline – are discovering that what they say lingers online, even for years. But with all of the people posting very publicly about everything in the world, the Internet is now giving users the equivalent of leaving the room where you can hang out with a bunch of friends you actually like! These new, limited, social networks, have the potential to restore actual family and friend interactions amid all of the noise of more popular Internet social networks.
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Posted on
February 22nd, 2012 by
David
In the midst of the worldwide recession, as companies like Facebook prepare to make billions of dollars overnight, there are still some websites devoted to giving on the Internet. The giving sites are attempts to remind people who have Internet access that they live in a land of (comparative) plenty and that no matter how bad your problems are, there is someone, somewhere in the world, who has it much worse than you do. You have the ability to help others at minimal cost to you. That is the philosophy behind Philanthroper.com, which is arguably the coolest giving site on the Internet!
Philanthroper.com is a website that challenges visitors to donate to worthy nonprofits – 501(c)3 groups – each and every day (if at all possible). The site has a very simple design and exists, not to make money for itself, but to raise money for charities most people have never heard of. In order to encourage donations on a regular basis, Philanthroper.com only allows donations from $1 – $10. The site’s founder hope that by limiting the amount of the donations, you will be encouraged to come back each day because giving was not that difficult the day before! On the other end of the equation, founder Mark Wilson hopes to conclusively illustrate that many people doing a little bit each day adds up to a lot. By having many people pooling a fraction of their resources, they may still do a great deal of good.
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Posted on
February 20th, 2012 by
David
The Internet truly has made the world smaller in many ways. With communications over the Internet happening virtually instantaneously, the people of the world are more interconnected than ever. This interconnection between geographically and culturally different people is especially evident on Internet social networks. Just because the connectivity between people exists in the Internet does not necessarily mean that it is well-understood. To understand the real impact of online activity, one needs impressive analytical tools like those offered by Gnip. Gnip needs Chris Moody.
Chris Moody joined Gnip in the middle of 2011. Hired by CEO Jud Valeski, Moody assumed the dual roles of President of Gnip and Chief Operating Officer. In the two executive positions, Moody essentially runs day-to-day operations of Gnip. Chris Moody is directly responsible for the company’s development and while Valeski and the Board of Directors determine the overall direction of Gnip, it is Moody who is responsible for managing the company to get it there!
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Posted on
February 19th, 2012 by
David
Have you ever watched a television show and thought an actor or actress looked familiar, but could not quite place them? Have you ever watched an amazing movie and instantly wanted to watch everything else that director had ever filmed? Have you ever needed to settle a bet involving the identity of an obscure character actor? On the Internet, there is a single source for answers to all questions involving television and movies and that is the Internet Movie Database.
The Internet Movie Database (IMDb) is the world’s most comprehensive site for all things pertaining to film, television and (increasingly) video games, at least as it pertains to work done by legitimate actors, directors, producers and writers. The IMDb is a powerful tool that contains both the latest legitimate news about all things in the filmed arts as well as massive archives of the body of work of everyone who has ever worked in film in the United States, Canada, and United Kingdom. The IMDb has extensive reservoirs of information for Japanese, Chinese and Indian works as well.
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Posted on
February 18th, 2012 by
David
As the Internet has evolved, one of the ongoing challenges users have had is with the speed at which they are able to send and receive data. Internet transfer speeds have increased, usually to keep up with the growing file sizes of new programs and applications. Just as the first modems would take days to transmit and receive over the phone lines the complicated files you use today, greater bandwidth for data transfers provided by fiber optic cabling will someday be entirely obsolete. Many scientists and engineers are deep at work on creating faster, more efficient means of data transfers.
Researchers from the California Institute of Technology, Florida International University, CERN, and the Universities of Michigan and Victoria, among other partners, have set the newest record in data transfer speeds. In a controlled experiment, the researchers have effectively achieved a data transfer speed of 186 gigabits per second.
While this news is setting the geek world ablaze, you may wonder what it means to you. The most prominent example the scientists are using to express what this transfer rate means is that a network with a 186 Gbps transfer rate would be able to exchange the equivalent amount of data as one hundred thousand Blu-Ray discs. Still not impressed? Consider the 4G networks for smartphones that have been highly-touted this year. To be considered a 4G network, the network must run at 100Mbps to 1 Gbps. That means that the experiment performed at the Seattle conference was 186 times as fast as the standard 4G smartphone network. The service you get at peak times on your 4G network . . . the technology developed by the research team is 1860 times as fast as that!
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Posted on
February 18th, 2012 by
David
Let’s face it, lawyers are expensive and you don’t have the resources of a major corporation to take on companies or people who may have wronged you. The Internet, as a wealth of information, has all of the tools you might need to determine what the law says and even what major rulings mean. However, anyone who has ever tried to sue a corporation knows: there is a big difference between what the law says and an actionable case. But because fishing to find out if you have a case might well cost you hundreds of dollars in lawyer fees, it helps to be able to go to a lawyer with a case that you know is actionable. For that, there is JustAnswer Legal.
JustAnswer Legal is a website where lawyers are standing by prepared to answer any legal question you pose to them. If you have a legal theory, there are literally dozens of lawyers – specializing in different branches of law from criminal to real estate law – standing by at any moment prepared to answer any question you might ask.
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Posted on
February 17th, 2012 by
David
With technologies changing very fast, popular companies absolutely need the best possible advertising to survive. In fact, the corporate strategy that a company devises to survive changes or remain dominant in a given field may be useless if they are not able to properly express that strategy to their customer base. With the move toward digital media (downloads) over physical media (DVD, Blu-Ray discs), companies like Netflix have been struggling to adapt. Or, rather, Netflix would be struggling were it not for the effective efforts of Leslie Kilgore!
Leslie Kilgore is the Chief Marketing Officer of Netflix and she has served the company since 2000. Kilgore is credited with much of the success of Netflix in terms of winning over the American people on the concept of a mail-delivery DVD service. As Chief Marketing Officer, Kilgore was responsible for the advertising campaigns that launched Netflix into the collective consciousness and made Netflix into a serious competitor to traditional video rental chains, like Blockbuster Video. Through her tireless efforts, Netflix surpassed Blockbuster as the primary video rental service in the United States!
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Posted on
February 15th, 2012 by
David
Internet humor is, arguably, an acquired taste and it is certainly dominated by youth! Because young people tend to be fickle, staying with something only so long as it is trendy, many Internet humor sites and Internet humor phenomena are not enduring. They rise up, the novelty of their form of humor captivates an audience and then the audience dissipates and the contributors go on to the next big thing. One of the real exceptions to that cycle came from the creative mind of Sherrod DeGrippo.
Sherrod DeGrippo is the creator of Encyclopaedia Dramatica and, before you go looking for it, don’t bother; Encyclopaedia Dramatica is no longer on the Internet. The site closed down in 2011, but what makes Sherrod DeGrippo so impressive is that she almost singlehandedly held together the perverse, edgy and often disturbing Encyclopaedia Dramatica for seven years. That makes Encyclopaedia Dramatica one of the biggest successes in Internet free speech and Internet humor yet.
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