These are the articles, blogs, and resources I found interesting and worthy of sharing for 30 May 2009 through 03 June 2009:
- WordPress 2.8 Beta Hands On Review | Weblog Tools Collection – If you haven’t tried the beta versions of WordPress 2.8 yet, here is a hands-on review that talks about the key features made available in this version of WordPress.
- White People Problems (LOL) – Difficult crossword puzzles, in-grown hairs, and declining stock portfolios — it’s hard out here for a caucasian.
- How to Quit Your Job with Style – Steven DeMaio – HarvardBusiness.org – Maybe it’s because I quit my job several months ago, but lately I’ve been connecting with a lot of other people who have just quit or are on the verge of it. Reasons for taking the plunge vary widely, of course. But oddly, approaches to announcing the decision don’t seem to be nearly as diverse. Many quitters more or less slink quietly out the door, without fully articulating why they’re leaving
- Ten Years After Napster, Musicians Are Still Getting Screwed – Ten years ago yesterday, Napster revolutionized commercial music by – we’re all grownups
- The Wild Wild West of Social Media | Blellow: A Productivity Microblog for Professionals – the idea that social media is a new frontier of sorts for many folks has really stuck in my head
- Who owns your Twitter account? – So here is a legal conundrum. You’ve been active on a number of social media websites, such as Twitter, FaceBook or Digg. You have amassed a number of friends and followers and built a certain amount of credibility. You leave your job – take a better position elsewhere, move to another city, get laid off or fired – doesn’t matter the reason.
Who owns your Twitter account? Your FaceBook account? Etc.
I thought it was a very straightforward question, too. If it’s in your name, it’s yours. If it’s in the company’s name, it’s the company’s. Period. Or maybe not period. Maybe question mark.
- Jeff Dunham, Puppet Master – TIME – For most people, being caught in an enclosed space with either a terrorist or a ventriloquist would qualify as a hostage situation. But Jeff Dunham, a ventriloquist, is perhaps the most popular stand-up comedian in the U.S. And he broke through by playing straight man to a terrorist — a fiberglass one.
- 100 Tips about All Adobe CS4 Applications | Layers Magazine – Here we are three years later with our Fourth Annual installment of one of our most popular features.
- Drifting Creatives | Designing Our Way Across the Country – We met a lot of cool people in downtown Texarkana, and some cool typography.
- Google Wave: Future Of Communication On Web | Internet Techies – Important Activities On Wave
* From the initial look, it seems that one can share images between his friends and perform real time communication for that as well. kind of real time comments.
* Playback any part of wave to see what was communicated at that time
* Waves can be embedded on blogs and websites and invite viewers to join your wave
* Just drag and drop file sharing which means no concept of attachments
* Language translation and spelling correction will be done on fly in Wave
* Developers can develop gadgets for Wave. It is going to be an open source platformScreenshot of Google Wave
- 20 Brilliantly Creative Bookcases – While it becomes easier to store digital media, it seems to become more interesting to store the real deal. Your book collection in particular says a lot about your personality, so why shouldn’t your book shelf do the same? We found 20 of the most brilliant bookcases for stylish readers.