In case you haven’t had time to keep up with Read Write Web, here are some of the recent articles I’ve written over there, which you might enjoy. Short summaries with direct links to the articles are provided below:

email_symbolFive Methodologies to Deal with Email Overload: These days, it seems everyone has an opinion about how to deal with information overload, especially when it comes to email management. There are numerous methodologies, best practices, tips, and tutorials available, but are any of them really effective? We’ll explore that question as we delve into the top five email management methodologies. Keep Reading

The Internet Will End in 30 Years!: Have you heard the latest doomsday scenario? In thirty years, the internet will stop working! Apparently, a bug similar to the millennium bug will affect Unix-based systems, like those that run the tubes, in the year 2038. The bug, being dubbed the "2038 bug," arises because Unix-based systems store the time as a signed 32-bit integer, in seconds, from midnight on January 1 1970. And the latest time that can be represented in that format, by the Posix standard, is 3:14 AM on January 19, 2038. After that, times will wrap around and be represented as a negative number…Keep Reading

socialnetworks Social Networks Will Be Tomorrow’s iTunes: We all know by now that social networks aren’t a passing fad. They’re no longer used solely by early adopters, young adults, or tech enthusiasts – social networks are now mainstream. However, a recent UK study conducted by media research company, Entertainment Media Research, reports some figures that point toward the fact that social networks could do even more. In fact, social networks have the potential to be the content distribution platforms of tomorrow. See you later iTunes, I’m gonna sync with MySpace now…Keep Reading

The Conversation Has Left the Blogosphere: We’ve seen a lot of new aggregation services and lifestreaming applications come into play recently, and we’ve questioned whether they’re adding to the conversation or just adding to our information overload. (See our coverage on FriendFeed, for example). And today, MyBlogLog even added even more lifestreams to subscribe to. The truth of the matter is, like it or not, the conversations that once existed solely in the blogosphere have now moved on. People still comment, but in a lot of cases, those comments aren’t on found on the blog itself. So the question is, has the conversation become diluted among all the different services and applications? Or is it just adding layers to the original topic? And most importantly, how can you keep up? Keep Reading

visual The Best Tools for Visualization: Visualization is a technique to graphically represent sets of data. When data is large or abstract, visualization can help make the data easier to read or understand. There are visualization tools for search, music, networks, online communities, and almost anything else you can think of. Whether you want a desktop application or a web-based tool, there are many specific tools are available on the web that let you visualize all kinds of data. Here are some of the best…Keep Reading

Goodbye, Enterprise – Hello, Socialprise: Here’s another word to add to your lexicon: "Socialprise." It’s meaning is somewhat obvious: social tools + enterprise = "socialprise."  It’s a new term, but one we hope sticks around, since it’s currently representative of one of the biggest shifts in business today. We covered some socialprise tools before, in discussing Worklight, Google Sites, and HiveLive, but here’s a new avenue for social tools in the workplace: Social CRM. A company called InsideView is bringing the social web to CRM, and they’re not the only one to do so…Keep Reading

book Steve Jobs Was Only Half-Right: People Do Read – Even Kids – They Just Do It Online: When Amazon introduced their e-book reader, the Kindle, Steve Jobs made a strong proclamation regarding the book industry that received a lot of attention: "It doesn’t matter how good or bad the product is, the fact is that people don’t read anymore… The whole conception is flawed at the top because people don’t read anymore." As it turns out, he was only half-right. People read, even those in the younger generation, they just prefer to do it online…Keep Reading

HiveLive Partners With Marketer, Responsys: It’s More Enterprise 2.0: HiveLive, a B2B social software platform provider, brings the social web to businesses by providing them with customizable tools like user profiles, blogs, discussion forums, wikis, and RSS which they can skin, edit, and secure easily, and without any coding. The platform is based on a building block called a "Hive," whcihc can be configured to support a range of community activities, like concept brainstorms, product feedback, design reviews, voting centers, and much more…Keep Reading

mobile Mobile Web Use Growing Faster than Ever: Wireless devices are everywhere these days. Wi-Fi hotspots are are popping up in more places and aircards protrude from the laptops of the mobile workforce. Computing is changing, too. Cloud computing will move applications and storage away from the desktop to remote servers. If anything, this drive to push data off the PC and onto the web has been in some part driven by the increasing mobility of internet users. Mobile access to the web is pushing internet adoption rates up while also providing more people the opportunity to work away from a stationary PC. So who is going mobile? Some new studies from PEW Internet & American Life Project and iPass shed some light on this topic…Keep Reading

Goodbye, P2P! P4P is Coming: P2P, or peer-to-peer, is the protocol currently used by many file sharing networks for moving large files over the internet. Now, a new protocol, P4P – aka Proactive network Provider Participation for P2P – is being introduced by Verizon. P4P’s goal is to reduce backbone traffic and lower network operation costs. Will P4P bring us the bandwidth we’ve been waiting for? Keep Reading

ms_vs_google Office Live Workspace vs Google Docs: Feature-by-Feature Comparison: Today, Microsoft announced that the Office Live Workspace beta is publicly available for everyone to access. The site, a free web-based extension of Microsoft Office, lets you access your documents online and share your work with others. Some say that the service’s launch is a direct response to Google’s entry into the web office space with their Google Docs online service. If that’s so, then the question now is: did Microsoft just trump Google Docs? Or does Google Docs still rule online office suites? Keep Reading

4 Comments to “My Articles on Read Write Web”

  1. I just stopped by your blog and thought I would say hello. I like your site design. Looking forward to reading more down the road.

    Robert Michel

  2. DC Crowley says:

    I am doing a lot of thinking about the direction I want to take next. ‘The what you are doing and how’ is very inspiring? RWW landed an ace with you on the team.

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