Gawker aims to ‘prove’ blogmedia
Gawker, the new ‘blog publishing’ venture has launched. Looks pretty good. Nice writing style. Quick and dirty. There’s a write-up over at Marketingfix (see link below). But I checked out the bottom of the page where I found a link to Sitemeter. This reveals that on the day of its launch Gawker got a total of 6,304 (Wednesday), the average visit lasting just over a minute and a half, while
Friendster.com arrives to take on Ryze
Matt Jones says lots of people at the BBC are signing up. Nick Denton also likes it.
The
Simply having a wonderful e-Christmas time Freeview to no view Openworld: a very small earthquake 2G’s company, 3G’s expensive The 100m pound, publicly-funded start-up
Government content deal shows BBC the way
What this means in practise is that MSN has deep-linked inside existing government sites to add another Public Services channel to its site. Although eGov implies this is an exclusive deal, I don’t think it will be, as other commercial operates come begging for government content. This is all part of the government’s open ‘gateway’ project to work with public and private partners. This basically means that government will start
Signs point to tech and media recovery
This cautious optimism appears to be reflected in the tech sector, such as at ContractorUK which recently ran an article headlined “Ten pointers to an IT jobs market recovery”. Me? I think it’s all rubbish. The housing market – especiailly in the UK – has gone mad, and interest rates will have to go up. People will slam the brakes on their spending. Advertising will flatline again, and it’ll be
Ringtones and logos to die?
Somehow I think Strand is under-estimating the influences of fashion on the mobile market. Without the vast teenage population on mobile phones that Europe has, they may not have picked up on the buzz that courses through the teenage psyche when you have the latest ringtone from the Sugerbabes on your phone.