06.30.2011

06.30.2011

Google’s NEW Makeover!



Google+ is out…and they while they’re at it ..
they seem to have also done a little nip and tuck.. better late than never!

06.30.2011

10 Rules to Reverse the Email Spiral

1. Respect Recipients’ Time

This is the fundamental rule. As the message sender, the onus is on YOU to minimize the time your email will take to process. Even if it means taking more time at your end before sending.

 

2. Short or Slow is not Rude

Let’s mutually agree to cut each other some slack. Given the email load we’re all facing, it’s OK if replies take a while coming and if they don’t give detailed responses to all your questions. No one wants to come over as brusque, so please don’t take it personally. We just want our lives back!

 

3. Celebrate Clarity

Start with a subject line that clearly labels the topic, and maybe includes a status category [Info], [Action], [Time Sens] [Low Priority]. Use crisp, muddle-free sentences. If the email has to be longer than five sentences, make sure the first provides the basic reason for writing. Avoid strange fonts and colors.

 

4. Quash Open-Ended Questions

It is asking a lot to send someone an email with four long paragraphs of turgid text followed by “Thoughts?”. Even well-intended-but-open questions like “How can I help?” may not be that helpful. Email generosity requires simplifying, easy-to-answer questions. “Can I help best by a) calling b) visiting or c) staying right out of it?!”

 

5. Slash Surplus cc’s

cc’s are like mating bunnies. For every recipient you add, you are dramatically multiplying total response time. Not to be done lightly! When there are multiple recipients, please don’t default to ‘Reply All’. Maybe you only need to cc a couple of people on the original thread. Or none.

 

6. Tighten the Thread

Some emails depend for their meaning on context. Which means it’s usually right to include the thread being responded to. But it’s rare that a thread should extend to more than 3 emails. Before sending, cut what’s not relevant. Or consider making a phone call instead.

 

7. Attack Attachments

Don’t use graphics files as logos or signatures that appear as attachments. Time is wasted trying to see if there’s something to open. Even worse is sending text as an attachment when it could have been included in the body of the email.

 

8. Give these Gifts: EOM NNTR

If your email message can be expressed in half a dozen words, just put it in the subject line, followed by EOM (= End of Message). This saves the recipient having to actually open the message. Ending a note with “No need to respond” or NNTR, is a wonderful act of generosity. Many acronyms confuse as much as help, but these two are golden and deserve wide adoption.

 

9. Cut Contentless Responses

You don’t need to reply to every email, especially not those that are themselves clear responses. An email saying “Thanks for your note. I’m in.” does not need you to reply “Great.” That just cost someone another 30 seconds.

 

10. Disconnect!

If we all agreed to spend less time doing email, we’d all get less email! Consider calendaring half-days at work where you can’t go online. Or a commitment to email-free weekends. Or an ‘auto-response’ that references this charter. And don’t forget to smell the roses.

visit emailcharter.org

via swissmissvisit emailcharter.org

 

01.25.2011

Amazon Simple Email Service Amazon SES

Amazon Simple Email Service Amazon SES.

Amazon Simple Email Service (Amazon SES) is a highly scalable and cost-effective bulk and transactional email-sending service for businesses and developers. Amazon SES eliminates the complexity and expense of building an in-house email solution or licensing, installing, and operating a third-party email service. The service integrates with other AWS services, making it easy to send emails from applications being hosted on services such as Amazon EC2. With Amazon SES there is no long-term commitment, minimum spend or negotiation required – businesses can utilize a free usage tier and after that enjoy low fees for the number of emails sent plus data transfer fees.

01.10.2011

2011 may mark the beginning of a golden era for entrepreneurs | VentureBeat

As we wrap up 2010, things might seem bleak. The common wisdom says that the chickens have all come home to roost from a disastrous series of economic decisions including outsourcing the manufacture of America’s physical goods. The pundits say the American dream is dead and this next decade will see the further decline and fall of the West and in particular of the United States.

Personally, I think there’s a chance that the common wisdom is very, very wrong – and that the second decade of the 21st century may turn out to be the West’s – and in particular the United States’ – finest hour.

I believe that we will look back at this decade as the beginning of an economic revolution as important as the scientific revolution in the 16th century and the industrial revolution in the 18th century. We’re standing at the beginning of the entrepreneurial revolution….

read more >

http://venturebeat.com/2010/12/31/2011-may-mark-the-beginning-of-a-golden-era-for-entrepreneurs/

12.16.2010

Big Day For Facebook: New Pages, Memories, And Downtime

Facebook’s having a pretty interesting day. This morning the site pushed out a nifty new registration widget for third party sites. In the last few hours it’s also pushed out a revamped version of its Pages, which brings the UI more in line with its updated profiles design, which launched earlier this month. And there are multiple reports on Twitter about a new “Memories” feature that lets you scan through your entire history on the site.

Unfortunately, you can’t see any of these right now, because Facebook — and the myriad Like buttons scattered across the web — are all down hard. Update: It’s back up for me as of 1:45 PM PST.

Given its massive distribution and the fact that it services as the primary login system for many sites, any downtime for Facebook is a big deal. We’ll update once the site comes back up — looks like it’s been down for around 15 minutes so far. For the time being though, let’s recap the features that Facebook rolled out (apparently a bit too quickly).

The new Facebook Pages look a lot like Facebook Place pages and the updated user profiles. Application tabs have been moved from a nav bar resting on top of the Wall to the left side-bar, just beneath the Page’s main image. Pages can also now feature lists of Facebook users, the same way you can feature your friends on your Facebook profile. There’s also a new button that lets page administrator ‘Login as Page’, which lets you receive notifications for just your page, and not your personal account.

Facebook Memories is still a bit mysterious because it was only showing up for a few minutes at a time, according to numerous tweets on the feature. The Next Web nabbed a shot of the navigation bar for Memories (seen below) but it doesn’t do much to show what the feature actually looks like.

via Big Day For Facebook: New Pages, Memories, And Downtime.

11.02.2010

Facebook Predicts When You’re Likely To Get Dumped

http://gizmodo.com/5679129/facebook-helps-predict-when-youre-likely-to-get-dumped

 

Facebook status updates can be creepy and revealing, but they can also help predict when you’re likely to find yourself dumped. Naturally, there’s good news and bad news to be found in the data….

10.14.2010

What’s a Tweet Worth?

http://adage.com/digitalnext/article?article_id=146451

What’s a tweet worth? For San Francisco-based ticket sales startup Eventbrite, that’s about 43 cents.

There’s a lot of research floating around on the value of a social connection, but Eventbrite, an online ticket-sales startup, released a report showing just how valuable social sharing can be when it comes to selling tickets to events.

Some findings: A link shared on Twitter nets the company 43 cents in additional ticket revenue. An event shared on e-mail through its “e-mail friends” feature turns into into $2.34 in ticket sales for the company, LinkedIn equals 90 cents. But what’s the most valuable share of all?

Turns out it’s Facebook. Eventbrite nets an additional $2.52 in sales when a user shares that they plan to attend an event on their wall.

read more..

10.07.2010

Flash vs. HTML5: Adobe Weighs In

http://mashable.com/2010/09/17/flash-vs-html5-adobe-interview/

10.07.2010

What Facebook’s Changes Mean For Your Business

Since launching in February 2004, Facebook has focused on building its foundation — the underlying social platform, the third-party development platform, a monetization strategy built around advertising and payments and, most important, a management team to scale all of the above.

read more >

09.13.2010

MiFi : Personal Wifi Network On The Go!

any get this yet?

- ulimited bandwidth
- no contract
- $40/month

Its TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE!
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/02/technology/personaltech/02pogue.html?src=me&ref=technology

 

09.10.2010

Apple FINALLY sees the light!!!!!

http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2010/09/09statement.html

09.01.2010

Google Offers Respite From Inbox Overload

Google Offers Respite From Inbox Overload – NYTimes.com

August 30, 2010, 11:40 pm

Google Offers Respite From Inbox Overload

http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/08/30/google-offers-respite-from-inbox-overload/?ref=technology

If you hate your inbox, if the very thought of it makes you fretful and nauseated, you’re not alone. Plenty of people who use e-mail on a daily basis feel the same.

Now Google is trying to come to the rescue with a new Gmail feature announced Tuesday called Priority Inbox, which monitors your messages and tries to organize your inbox based on a number of criteria, like how often you correspond with a particular sender.

Google explains that the first thing Priority Inbox does is split your inbox into three sections: “important and unread,” “starred” and “everything else.”

“Important” messages are judged to be the most significant, and sit at the top of your Gmail window. Next is the “starred” area, the messages you say are important. Finally, “everything else” includes those messages that can probably be dealt with later, or completely ignored — the ones that aren’t quite spam, but don’t need to clutter up your screen or your brain right now.

Keith Coleman, Google’s product management director, told me in an interview that Google has been working to solve the e-mail overload problem for the better part of a decade.

08.27.2010

Mac : Disable Annoying Horizontal Mouse Scrolling

This has been killing me for days..especially when i’m designing…

Open a command line window using the Terminal app (in your Applications/Utilities folder):

Paste the following command, and hit Return:

defaults write com.apple.driver.AppleBluetoothMultitouch.mouse MouseHorizontalScroll -bool NO

Go to the Bluetooth Preferences panel in System Preferences, turn off your mouse with its power switch (watch in the pref panel that it has disconnected), and then re-power it, and your mouse should reconnect.

08.23.2010

Mobile Conference…

Wish i could go…hopefully it will be streamed somewhere…
http://www.fitc.ca/

08.19.2010

publishing from WP->FB using WPBOOK plugin

pain in the ass to setup…but finally got it.
* not for the weak.

08.18.2010

Your Brain on Computers – Studying the Brain Off the Grid, Professors Find Clarity – NYTimes.com

Five scientists spent a week in the wilderness to understand how
heavy use of technology changes how we think and behave.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/16/technology/16brain.html

08.01.2010

archives

all here..