@mattmcalister
- just added video assets, homepage lineup, editor's picks and more new features to the @openplatform Content API: http://bit.ly/cWvBi7 4 hrs ago
- celebrating our youngest's 1st bday. the baby years are finally coming to a close for us all. very happy. 5 days ago
- Time's Top 50: 'as other British newspapers go behind paywalls, the Guardian opens up its content for developers' http://is.gd/eDIUy 6 days ago
- inspiring essay on purpose in business by Gary Hamel http://instapaper.com/zkmpos51n 1 week ago
- gave my blog a refresh while fixing security holes. now need a good picture for the header. http://www.mattmcalister.com/blog/ 1 week ago
- congrats, Don! “@donlbe: just joined @typekit.” 1 week ago
- tweaked my twitter lists a bit to see how paper.li will react. this is becoming a good read now http://paper.li/mattmcalister/noticers 1 week ago
- good fun yesterday w guardian tech team at Bletchley Park and then Inception. thanks @leftback! 1 week ago
- turning diminishing returns into increasing returns and other great insights by @jhagel on new ways of working http://bit.ly/azZ8yU 2 weeks ago
- the web is more like an awkward teenager with cuter younger sibblings than something fading into oblivion: http://bit.ly/aMLHBy 2 weeks ago
- More updates...
Powered by Twitter Tools
-
Recent Posts
- Captivating Arcade Fire video shows what HTML5 can do
- Understanding your behaviors to prioritize your inbox
- Paper.li: Guardian Technology – now available as a newspaper, online!
- Video highlights from Activate 2010
- How to hail a London cabbie using Twitter
- Republishing articles from ProPublica
- Behind the scenes of the Open Platform’s evolution
- Socially linked data
- Positioning real-time web platforms
- The thinking behind the Activate Summit event
Recent Comments
- Matt McAlister on How to hail a London cabbie using Twitter
- Robert Andrews on How to hail a London cabbie using Twitter
- Content is Not — and Should Not Be — Free on Decentralizing journalism and everything
- Jeremy Zawodny on Behind the scenes of the Open Platform’s evolution
- Vincenz on The problem with being popular
Category Archives: history
Getting back to basics
There was something really depressing about Web 2.0 Expo that I can’t quite put my finger on. Though when I woke up Monday morning after a weekend of working on my house it started to become more clear. On Friday … Continue reading
Posted in creativity, culture, history, internet, trends
Tagged coffee food, dialo, garbage removal, joists, losing the plot, monday morning, scalability, sheetrock, tired legs, workspace
1 Comment
Media As A Service
Much like print and tv are becoming marketing vehicles to drive people online, the domain name for an online media service is becoming sort of an abstract utility or maybe just a brand address for media services rather than the … Continue reading
Posted in advertising, attention, feedburner, history, ideas, innovation, journalism, management, marketing, media, models, peer production, process, publishing, rightmedia, rss, strategy, trends, webservices
Tagged casual web, collaborative media, content space, digital universe, distribution technologies, expressions of interest, javascript libraries, many different ways, right place at the right time, yahoo pipes
3 Comments
The breakthrough that is MyBlogLog
There’s something very uncomfortable about seeing your face appear on another web site while you’re visiting it. That’s exactly why I think MyBlogLog is going to be a really big deal. I’m looking forward to seeing what happens now that … Continue reading
Posted in attention, behavior, email, future, history, identity, innovation, meme, mybloglog, socialmedia, socialnetworks, startup, yahoo
Tagged communication breakthrough, evolution of the internet, explicit expression, generational gaps, hockey stick, new paradigm, overnight success, paul saffo, personal expression, social networking sites
9 Comments
Decision-making through stories rather than data
John Hagel’s post the other day included a great little nugget: “If executives need lots of data before they feel comfortable making a decision, chances are they will not act until it is way too late. Don’t get me wrong, … Continue reading
Posted in history, john hagel, management
Tagged analysis paralysis, business historians, business rewards, john hagel, operational efficiencies, page model, profit centers, questions internet, quiet giant, web page advertising
Comments Off