Old Articles: <Older 881-890 Newer> |
|
InternetNews October 26, 2006 Sean Michael Kerner |
W3C Looks to GRDDL For Semantic Web Sense With the help of the in-development W3C GRDDL specification, the Semantic Web takes a step closer to becoming an implementable reality. |
Entrepreneur November 2006 Melissa Campanelli |
That's Rich Wow customers by adding rich media elements to your website. |
Entrepreneur November 2006 Catherine Seda |
Vanity Fair One more way to market your site. |
Macworld October 17, 2006 Tom Negrino |
Contribute 4.0 Contribute 4 is especially useful if you're looking to add blogging to your site as a major feature. However, the lack of Office integration is irritating. |
AFP eWire October 16, 2006 |
New Canadian Online Guide Helps Charity Become Bilingual A new online guide can help charities develop and improve strategies for offering bilingual services, and while the resource is aimed at Canada's two official languages, it is general enough that it can be integrated for any language. |
InternetNews October 5, 2006 Andy Patrizio |
After The Buzz, Ajax Goes To Work Ajax is an example of the whole being greater than the sum of its parts. And the big developers have all caught the Ajax religion. |
Search Engine Watch October 4, 2006 Rae Hoffman |
Rebranding Ask.com, Part Two Ask.com's Senior User Experience Analyst Michael Ferguson continues his discussion of the company's rebranding, offering tips and suggestions for anyone considering updating or modifying a web site. |
Search Engine Watch October 3, 2006 Rae Hoffman |
Rebranding Ask.com How do you engineer a major overhaul to your web site to increase traffic and user satisfaction? Ask.com's Senior User Experience Analyst describes the company's careful yet bold approach to its recent redesign in this wide-ranging interview. |
BusinessWeek October 9, 2006 Justin Hibbard |
How Yahoo! Gave Itself A Face-Lift Its redesigned home page is based on data from users' clicks, not its hunches. |
InternetNews October 2, 2006 Nicholas Carlson |
Netflix Offers $1M For Innovation Netflix today announced the Netflix Prize, an award of $1 million dollars to the first person to improve Netflix's movie recommendation system's accuracy by at least 10 percent. |
<Older 881-890 Newer> Return to current articles. |