Fortune magazine senior editor David Kirkpatrick is just out with an article on the future of Second Life, noting:
As if there isn't enough evidence of media convergence, Niall Kennedy reports that the latest high-definition TV's from Sony will allow you to subscribe to RSS feeds.
Whether the rules of any given social media space are written or unwritten, it is important for marketers and communicators entering these spaces to learn them.
Several years ago, I read an article (I can't remember if it was in Forbes or Fortune) that featured Jacques Nasser.
The beating Microsoft is taking in the blogosphere and elsewhere over a patent filing leads me to wonder whether this isn't an instance where some solid, formal communication might be in order.
Just as PayPerPost has revised its business practices by requiring its bloggers to disclose the fact that they're getting sponsorship money, another enterprise has unleashed a service that will make it drop-dead easy for anybody to start pitching bloggers without any such constraints.
Research firm Gartner has predicted that the growth of the blogosphere will peak at about 100 million by the mid-point of 2007.
I conducted a teleseminar on business blogging for the Public Relations Institute of Australia a few days ago.
I've been suggesting for a while to clients and workshop audiences that page views are increasingly irrelevant.
The Washington Post reports that Skype will introduce a plan that lets customers pay $30 per year for unlimited SkypeOut dialing to US and Canadian phone numbers.