[2005-11-30] Nick Wilson Sells Threadwatch
Nick Wilson has sold Threadwatch to Aaron Wall of SEO Book.
[2005-11-30] Measuring and Improving the Performance of a Website
Traditional business managers and economic strategists have always had at their disposal a variety of methods for measuring and evaluating the degree of success of business objectives.
[2005-11-29] Measuring and Tracking RSS
Measuring and tracking RSS while a fairly simple concept, is really anything but. Unlike websites, RSS have the added caveat of potential syndication, making accurate tracking a challenge to anyone but the extremely tech savvy.
[2005-11-26] Nielsen Reports RSS Users Visit News Sites More
Over on the CyberJournalist site they are reporting on a new report from Nielsen/NetRatings that says that RSS users are significantly more engaged ...
[2005-11-24] FeedBurner Reports: Feed for Thought
FeedBurner is kicking-off a series of Technorati-like special reports this week called "Feed for Thought" that will cover the state of the "feedosphere":
[2005-11-20] No Internet Bubble?
Another Internet Bubble? Not according to John Battelle writing in The New York Times Friday.
[2005-11-16] Blogging about innovation
If you have a spare $1,895 sitting around, you might want to consider spending November 30 and December 1 in New York at Fortune magazine's Innovation Forum.
[2005-11-14] 7 Customer Acquisition Schemes Your Competitor is Hiding From You
Customer Acquisition is beyond doubt the number one priority for all serious business owners.
[2005-11-14] Study: 4.8M Listened to Podcasts
Bridge Ratings has found that 4.8 million persons have at some time during 2005 downloaded a podcast, up from 820,000 in 2004.
[2005-11-11] I Hate the Term "User Generated Content"
Heh, I was reading Mary Hodder's post about the correct term to call people who generate content and thinking back to why I hate the term "user generated content."...
[2005-11-02] Defending Microsoft's Live.com
Joel Spolsky gives us hell for Live.com. Tags us with "Marimba effect." I don't think it was clear. This was the beginning of a major rudder turn on Microsoft.

