Posts by neville:

No messing about in China

China executes bank employees in fraud crackdown. Pretty extreme. There would definitely never have been an Enron or Worldcom fraud in China. CNN | China executes bank staff for fraud (Via Dvorak Uncensored.) Speaking about China, Loïc le Meur has some good tips on working around the Chinese restrictions/censorship on internet access if you want […]

RSS complements email marketing

There’s been quite a bit of discussion recently on RSS taking over the job that email traditionally has done in marketing. Rick Bruner made a good case last month for why you shouldn’t just switch to RSS with One (Percent) Reason Why Not to Switch From Email to RSS. His post generated some good comments. […]

Blogrolling fatal error

I’ve been using Blogrolling for the past month as the aggregator for my blog links. Great service, no complaints. Today, though, I noticed that my blogroll wasn’t showing up in my blog, in the left column. Going to the Blogrolling website and trying to log in produced this fatal error message: Using a service like […]

More fuel for RSS and marketing debate

More articles and comments continue to appear about RSS and whether or when it could replace email as a primary marketing communication channel. I’ve also posted about this subject recently as I believe it’s a topic that is of distinct interest to all communicators, not only those concerned with email and marketing. Robin Good published […]

European business school blog as part of curriculum

A superb example of how a blog can have great value in an educational environment. The Euromed Business School in Marseilles, France, launched a blog last month as an intregral element of its knowledge management curriculum: This blog has a double purpose. It aims to contribute to the discussion and development of the academic field […]

Create your own RSS webfeed

While RSS is still on my mind today, following my post a few hours ago about RSS and marketing, let me tell you about a free program that will enable you to create your own RSS webfeeds if you wanted to try out RSS yourself. Try out in the sense of creating as opposed to […]

PR policy for Microsoft blogger

Robert Scoble is undoubtedly the most high-profile and best-known Microsoft employee blogger – if not the best-known business-technology blogger, period – certainly in business and technology blogging circles and in the media. Robert’s blog Scobleizer and his link blog Scoble present reliable and trusted sources of rich information about what’s going on at Microsoft as well as […]

Things happening 19 Sept

Sunday morning, scanning my RSS webfeeds, some interesting things going on that caught my attention: Jan Baan, a name synonymous with one of the great ERP success stories of the 1990s (and one of the greatest business controversies in The Netherlands at the time of that success story’s demise in the early 00s), is back […]

Unreliable Blogrolling

Something’s clearly wrong at Blogrolling. Following my post on Friday re my blogroll not appearing on this blog, it’s doing the same again today. Trying to connect to the Blogrolling website just now produces a ‘connection refused’ error message. This is such a shame as it’s a very good service. But I’ve seen increasing numbers […]

Firefox passes 1m downloads

From Spread Firefox: In just under 100 hours, we have smashed through our one million download campaign – with 6 days still to go! This is the fastest adoption rate we have ever experienced, higher than every previous Firefox release. This refers to one million copies of Firefox 1.0 Preview Release downloaded between its release […]

Amazon’s cool A9 search engine

This looks very, very nice – the new A9 search engine from Amazon. Wow! Features galore to customize how it looks and feels and how it searches. It’s closely connected with Amazon, so if you already have an account with Amazon, you can log in and personalize your A9. Description from A9: A9.com is a […]