Posts Tagged ‘Video’
Chris Anderson & Guy Kawaski Discuss Freemium Business Model
Chris Anderson & Guy Kawasaki debate and talk about the ‘freemium’ business model.
Read MoreManaging Online Criticism
Watch a short interview by Jeremiah Owyang with community manager Connie Bensen during which Connie provides some tips on handling online criticism.
Read MoreKevin Spacey Explains Twitter To David Letterman With Little Success
This demonstrates just how far Twitter has become part of the fabric of American life and, in part, explains Twitter’s growth. When you have Kevin Spacey and David Letterman chatting about it on TV, a LOT of people take notice.
Read MoreSteve Rubel Interviews Mike Slaby, Former CTO Of The Obama Campaign
This is a fantastic interview Steve Rubel recently conducted with Mike Slaby, the Barack Obama campaign’s CTO; some great insight.
Read MoreBlois Olson On PR 2.0 – PR Rockstar Interview With Airk Hanson
Tunheim Parterns’ Blois Olson is interviewed by Arik Hanson about PR 2.0 for his PR Rockstar series.
Read MoreHow The Brain Creates Meaning
Information designer Tom Wujec talks through three areas of the brain that help us understand words, images, feelings, connections.
Read MoreESPN Launches YouTube Channel, Prohibits Embedding
Is the desire by professional sports leagues to tightly control their content working against their own best interests? Is it even possible?
Read MoreSocial Media, Neuroscience & The Trust Molecule
The more you demonstrate your trust in people, the more people trust you…and the more generous they become.
Read MoreBabes On Skates: Evian's TV Ad Campaign Minus The Television
During a week in which Michael Jackson’s death dominated not just the news, but also online video viewing, Evian’s deliberate attempt at creating a viral video has succeeded to the tune of 3.8 million views.
Read MoreThe One Big Thing: Google Chrome OS
The One Big Thing you need to know this week is that Google is aiming straight at the heart of Microsoft with the announcement that they plan to develop their own, open source, operating system ostensibly to be run on netbooks, called Google Chrome OS.
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