Posted on
June 9th, 2012 by
David
Those who lived through the late 1960s laugh at the absurdity of protest today. Protests since the late 1990s, like when protests erupted against NAFTA or the World Trade Organization, have become highly choreographed events that usually involve getting permits, inviting the media and the like. They are also remarkably ineffective. The fact that Occupy Wall Street does not actually feature tents and human chains physically blocking access to the critical financial buildings there illustrates the differences between protest then and protest now. Protesters of days of yore fought for Freedom of Speech and Freedom of Assembly (Constitutionally-protected rights) using means that were frequently illegal (trespassing). Today’s protestors seem very pale by comparison. Read more »
Posted on
June 9th, 2012 by
David
Every city has something unique to offer its residents or visitors, but nothing truly defines a location as its small businesses – especially restaurants – do. So, to get the real flavor of a city’s unique benefits, it helps to have a site where small businesses may promote their deals and customers may be exposed to all that locale has to offer. That is the concept behind the LivingSocial website. Read more »
Posted on
June 8th, 2012 by
David
Today, there are few technology-related aspects of life that are as important as having a reliable Internet connection. Most people can easily live without advanced television features or even the telephone capabilities of their smartphone, but finding oneself trapped without a reliable connection to the Internet is enough to make you pull out your hair. One of the essential tools for virtually any business or home, then, is a good router. The ADSL2+ Four Port Ethernet Switch Router is a worthwhile router for home or business use. Read more »
Posted on
June 7th, 2012 by
David
One of the most important aspects of a sales-driven business is the ability to reach out to your customers. Having an interface for customers and vendors is especially important on Internet sales sites, notably online sites that are essentially a platform for vendors who are not directly connected to the site, like eBay and Amazon Stores. For the art sales website Etsy, the community aspect is exceptionally important. Artists and those who buy art tend to naturally form communities to discuss art – both the creation and acquisition of art. That makes Vanessa Bertozzi’s role at Etsy a very important one. Read more »
Posted on
June 7th, 2012 by
David
One of the common misconceptions many people have when they hear the advertising about smartphones is that “4G” refers to the speed of data transfers across a network. “4G” does not actually mean something like “four gigabytes per second” or anything of the sort. Instead, “4G” is a simple term referring to the fourth generation of standards that guide transfers over wireless cellular networks. But even as 4G networks are the key selling point to current hardware like the Samsung Infuse 4G or the Sony Xperia 4G, if Broadcom has its way, 4G will soon be passé. Broadcom has innovated the fifth generation of cellular wireless standards. Read more »
Posted on
June 5th, 2012 by
David
When an executive in a prominent company retires, dies or is otherwise no longer able to perform their duties, there are often strict rules which govern how they will be replaced. In most big businesses and stockholder-held companies, senior management officers must be approved at an annual meeting of the Board of Directors. However, the workload that an executive officer had does not simply disappear with the individual leaving the position. As a result, many corporations employ an interim executive until the approval process for the position may be completed. Frequently, the interim executive is approved and comes to fill the position that they accepted on a temporary basis. That means that Jessie Becker could be the next Chief Marketing Officer of Netflix! Read more »
Posted on
June 5th, 2012 by
David
Right now, the United States economy is at an intriguing place that it has never been at before. As the country continues to emerge from its recession, the housing market remains understandably depressed (understandable because financial issues in the housing market precipitated much of the current economic malaise). While a shaky economy and even more problematic housing market are nothing new, this is the first time since the Internet became a household tool that these conditions have existed. This means unprecedented opportunities for fast access to information about real estate. Rather than searching the totality of the Internet or allying yourself with one realtor, you might want to check out Zillow. Read more »
Posted on
June 4th, 2012 by
David
Virtually every business journal has weighed in on the decline in Facebook’s stock. After years of playing coy about it, Facebook had its initial public offering in May at $38 per share. When the stock fell below $30 on May 29, every pundit in the business world weighed in on the decline. The prevailing wisdom was that Facebook’s stock was overvalued and investors did not have a good-faith belief in the long-term profitability of the company. That makes perfect sense from a business perspective. The problem, however, with that view, is that it completely neglects the consumer perspective and there is an excellent chance that the consumer perspective is what is affecting Facebook’s stock. Read more »
Posted on
June 3rd, 2012 by
David
Different corporate philosophies lead companies in different directions when it comes to growth. In the tech sector, research and development has often been an important component of growth. Even with cutting-edge tech companies, though, rather than invest in R&D, sometimes a bigger company will simply buy a successfully-developed product from the smaller company that innovated it. Some of the companies that are cash-heavy, but development-light, have taken to buying up entire companies. That is the tactic Groupon has been using and for the past four months, it has been rather aggressively buying up smaller businesses. Read more »
Posted on
June 3rd, 2012 by
David
One of the nice things about having so many forms of audio and visual media in a standard-style format is that eventually, someone comes along and creates a single device that reads many different media. Compact discs, DVDs, and Blu-Ray discs are all essentially the same size and shape, but run on very different hardware. Purely digital media files only need the proper CODECs to render them, regardless of whether they are audio or visual files. The future of the home entertainment system is starting to look far less bulky. Instead of having several independent devices, you might be able to convert everything to a single media player, like the TVIX HD M-7000. Read more »