Masterminding Content Management (Englisch)
- Neue Suche nach: Schneider, B.
- Neue Suche nach: Schneider, B.
In:
ECONTENT -WILTON-
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25
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31-43
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2002
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ISSN:
- Aufsatz (Zeitschrift) / Print
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Titel:Masterminding Content Management
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Beteiligte:Schneider, B. ( Autor:in )
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Erschienen in:ECONTENT -WILTON- ; 25 ; 31-43
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Verlag:
- Neue Suche nach: ONLINE INC.
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Erscheinungsdatum:01.01.2002
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Format / Umfang:13 pages
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ISSN:
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Medientyp:Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
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Format:Print
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Sprache:Englisch
- Neue Suche nach: 005.74
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DDC: 005.74 -
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Inhaltsverzeichnis – Band 25
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- 5
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Edit This - Playing with ElephantsManafy, Michelle et al. | 2002
- 5
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Edit This - Want to Be a Hack Superstar?Manafy, Michelle et al. | 2002
- 5
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Edit This - Peer-to-Peer without PeerManafy, Michelle et al. | 2002
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Edit This - Turning the PageManafy, Michelle et al. | 2002
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Edit This - Taking Content to the StreetManafy, Michelle et al. | 2002
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Departments - Editor's Note - A Pox on Premium ContentMickey, Bill et al. | 2002
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Letters to the Editor| 2002
- 6
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Departments - Editor's Note - Brother, Can You Spare a Dollar?Mickey, Bill et al. | 2002
- 6
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News - News Features - What Makes Google Run?Miller, Ron et al. | 2002
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Edit This - I, RobotManafy, Michelle et al. | 2002
- 6
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News - News Features - Digital Darwinism: Piracy Pushes ProgressLevack, Kinley et al. | 2002
- 6
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News - News Features - Bar-Hopping: Searching on the DesktopLevack, Kinley et al. | 2002
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News - Content News| 2002
- 6
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What Makes Google Run?Miller, R. et al. | 2002
- 6
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Bar-Hopping: Searching on the DesktopLevack, K. et al. | 2002
- 7
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News - News Features - SoftQuad, Corel, and the XML of Content's FutureBoeri, Robert J. et al. | 2002
- 7
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News - News Features - Arbortext Epic 4.3: More than Just a Point ReleaseBoeri, Robert J. et al. | 2002
- 7
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News - News Features - SOAP OperaMiller, Ron et al. | 2002
- 7
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Departments - Letters to the Editor| 2002
- 7
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The Worst of Times, The Best of TimesManafy, M. et al. | 2002
- 7
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Edit This - Finder's KeepersManafy, Michelle et al. | 2002
- 7
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News - Industry News| 2002
- 7
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Edit This - The Worst of Times, The Best of TimesManafy, Michelle et al. | 2002
- 7
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Arbortext Epic 4.3: More than Just a Point ReleaseBoeri, R. J. et al. | 2002
- 7
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Departments - Editor's Note - Ads? What Ads?Mickey, Bill et al. | 2002
- 8
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News - News Features - ScreamingMedia Powers Tribune's New Content Syndication NetworkTorres, Johanne et al. | 2002
- 8
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News - News Features - DRM Standards Pave the Way to Custom Content Delivery -Marcum, Melissa et al. | 2002
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News - News Features - Fluent Takes Content to New HeightsBannan, Karen J. et al. | 2002
- 8
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Digital Island versus Akamai: Both WinnersTorres, J. et al. | 2002
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News - Product News| 2002
- 8
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Vignette Puts the CM in WS-IMarcum, M. et al. | 2002
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Departments - Editor's Note - What Makes You So Special?Mickey, Bill et al. | 2002
- 8
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News - News Features - Vignette Puts the CM in WS-IMarcum, Melissa et al. | 2002
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News - News Features - Listen.com's Rhapsody Scores Deals with 3 Major LabelsTorres, Johanne et al. | 2002
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News - News Features - NYTimes.com Thinks Online Advertising Is Ready for Prime TimeMarcum, Melissa et al. | 2002
- 8
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Fluent Takes Content to New HeightsBannan, K. J. et al. | 2002
- 8
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Listen.com's Rhapsody Scores Deals with 3 Major LabelsTorres, J. et al. | 2002
- 8
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News - News Features - Digital Island versus Akamai: Both WinnersTorres, Johanne et al. | 2002
- 9
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News - News Features - AccuSoft Enters Collaboration Market with ReviewNowLevack, Kinley et al. | 2002
- 9
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Metrics - Content industry breakouts for the statistically inclined| 2002
- 9
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News - News Features - Simon & Schuster Opens Ebook StoreTorres, Johanne et al. | 2002
- 9
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News - News Features - Vivendi Buys Ten Percent of EchoStarTorres, Johanne et al. | 2002
- 9
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AccuSoft Enters Collaboration Market with ReviewNowLevack, K. et al. | 2002
- 9
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News - News Features - LexisNexis Adds Knight Ridder Digital's ContentTorres, Johanne et al. | 2002
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It Takes a Content Village-The EU Tackles eContentGautschi, H. et al. | 2002
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News - News Features - It Takes a Content Village -- The EU Tackles eContentGautschi, Heidi et al. | 2002
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Watch Out! EContent's contributing editors suggest some .orgs, code, and resources that -- While outside the scope of the ECONTENT 100 list -- Are well-worth taking a closer look at.Levack, Kinley et al. | 2002
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U.K. Library Gamble Pays OffLevack, K. et al. | 2002
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News - News Features - U.K. Library Gamble Pays OffLevack, Kinley et al. | 2002
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News - News Features - Project Oxygen: A Breath of Fresh Air for the InternetMiller, Ron et al. | 2002
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News - News & Product Briefs| 2002
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News - News Features - Sun Bursts onto the Authentication SceneMarcum, Melissa et al. | 2002
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News - Peopleware| 2002
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Documentum Delivers with Documentum 5 ECMManafy, M. et al. | 2002
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News - News Features - Documentum Delivers with Documentum 5 ECMManafy, Michelle et al. | 2002
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Inxight Makes Unstructured Data Manageable with SmartDiscovery 3.0Levack, K. et al. | 2002
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News - News Features - Inxight Makes Unstructured Data Manageable with SmartDiscovery 3.0Levack, Kinley et al. | 2002
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Departments - Metrics - Content industry breakouts for the statistically inclined| 2002
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An EContent Interview: Four Chief Executives and an AnalystManafy, M. et al. | 2002
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Departments - Gearing Up - Innovative gear for the content| 2002
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The Siren Song of Structure: Heeding the Call of Reusability - If, while envisioning a new CMS-empowered world, you experience a feeling like the cavalry has just arrived, it is with good reason. Powerful tools can help you "liberate" your ever-growing store of content from its original context and format. Wisely navigated, CMS can indeed enable the kind of reusability that gets you closer to the goal of true multichannel publishing.Byrne, Tony et al. | 2002
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Auto-Categorization: Coming to a Library or Intranet Near You - Automatic categorization -- It's coming, it could be big, and it could hurt. One thing, though, it's not actually automatic. In this article, Reamy offers answers to a few simple questions that need to be asked when exploring this new type of software: What is it? Why is it suddenly everywhere? What can it do? What can't it do? How should information professionals approach it? And is it dangerous?Reamy, Tom et al. | 2002
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Personalization and Portals... If You Build It (Right) They Will Come - There's more information available than ever, much of which will benefit employee performance. Unfortunately, the very information that's supposed to make us more efficient has instead become a thief, robbing us of our valuable time. Portals can serve as the enterprise tool that will help managers take that lost time back.Bannan, Karen J. et al. | 2002
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Auto-Categorization: Coming to a Library or Intranet Near YouReamy, T. et al. | 2002
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A Picture's Worth a Thousand Words: Sawyer Media Systems Puts a Value on Video for the EnterpriseManafy, M. et al. | 2002
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Departments - Gearing Up - Innovative gear for the content crowd| 2002
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A Picture's Worth a Thousand Words: Sawyer Media Systems Puts a Value on Video for the Enterprise - A self-dubbed "Luddite of sorts," at first glance, Forrest Sawyer seems an unlikely front man for a company bent on bringing video to the enterprise. However, the blending of digital technology and human experience set Sawyer Media apart from the content management pack. In a field crowded with solution providers working every angle of the content space, Sawyer Media has been quietly conceiving Enterprise Media Management.Manafy, Michelle et al. | 2002
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Gearing Up - Innovative gear for the content crowd| 2002
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People's Choice - We polled our subscribers and present the top three picks in 13 categories| 2002
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Personalization and Portals... If You Build It (Right) They Will ComeBannan, K. J. et al. | 2002
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P2P Is Dead, Long Live P2PMcGarvey, R. et al. | 2002
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Features - P2P Is Dead, Long Live P2P - Napster has been clobbered by the courts, and its cousins are finding it equally tough to continue on as legal assaults mounted by the record industry have exacted a bloody body count. But here's the chewy paradox: P2P definitely is not dead, and, apparently, neither is irony. P2P, in the form of more robust applications aside from simply file trading, is poised to become a vital technology in the enterprise.Mcgarvey, Robert et al. | 2002
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ECONTENT 100: the second annual ECONTENT 100 list of companies that matter most in the digital content industry| 2002
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Look into the Future of Content ManagementByrne, T. et al. | 2002
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Features - The Free Lunch Is Over: Online Content Subscriptions on the Rise - With ad revenues flying south for the recession -- Where they join the still-vacationing venture capital dollars -- Publishers have had no choice but to make the one-time pipe dreams of fee-based revenue strategies into a business reality. In the last six months alone, major brands have rolled out premium services. Meanwhile, sites with existing premium areas have radically refocused their efforts behind the sub-wall. Conventional wisdom, always fickle under the best of circumstances, has shifted suddenly, and new strategies have emerged.Smith, Steve et al. | 2002
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ECONTENT 100| 2002
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Refreshing Media Management: Coca-Cola Turns Archives Into AssetsDe Lancie, P. et al. | 2002
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Look into the Future of Content Management - Predictions of consolidation in the Content Management (CM) vendor arena have appeared in nearly every major industry prognosis over the past two years. Gartner Group, for example, recently reiterated its prediction that half the CM vendors in existence in mid-2001 would leave the marketplace by the end of 2002. But the reports of CM's death have been greatly exaggerated because despite these consolidation predictions, the number of CM vendors has continued to rise.Byrne, Tony et al. | 2002
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Refreshing Media Management: Coca-Cola Turns Archives Into Assets - With a newly implemented DAM system, Coca-Cola's Archive Department is bringing the firm's rich collection of graphics, video, audio, and text to company desktops worldwide, facilitating access to a valuable resource for ongoing promotional and informational initiatives.Lancie, Philip De et al. | 2002
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Features - Not Your Father's Web Site: Corporate Sites Emerge as New Content InnovatorsO'Leary, Mick et al. | 2002
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Mobile Media: The Future Is NowSauer, J. et al. | 2002
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Not Your Father's Web Site: Corporate Sites Emerge as New Content InnovatorsO Leary, M. et al. | 2002
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Mobile Media: The Future Is Now - The technology for creating streaming media for mobile devices is ready to fly now and some mobile video, audio, and animated content streaming is already possible. But who can watch? Cellular phone features have taken off in just the last few years -- With devices decreasing in size and increasing in functionality -- But almost no phones today have screens capable of displaying motion images. The good news is that they are on the way.Sauer, Jeff et al. | 2002
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Streaming Media Matures: The Search for Solutions Drives Developments - Streaming media may look like the coolest thing since the introduction of the Web browser, but it's still too early to say whether it will someday be viewed as a milestone on the level of email or the Web itself. As the technology matures, streaming vendors are excited about the benefits of rich media for corporate and institutional communications, but streaming has to prove itself based on what it actually contributes to the organizational goals of the enterprises that use it, or it could quickly become yesterday's news.Lancie, Philip De et al. | 2002
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The Many Faces of DRM: Delivering Secure Enterprise Content - Digital Rights Management (DRM) has been something of an enigma for the computer industry since it burst onto the scene in the late 1990s. Originally conceived as a way to lock the content away and prevent users from getting at it, more recently, providers like the four covered here, are now focused on making it easier to access material within a rights management framework.Miller, Ron et al. | 2002
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The Many Faces of DRM: Delivering Secure Enterprise ContentMiller, R. et al. | 2002
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Streaming Media Matures: The Search for Solutions Drives DevelopmentsDe Lancie, P. et al. | 2002
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Corporate Learning Gets DigitalPack, T. et al. | 2002
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XML Hits the Big Time -- Major Database Players Get into XML - Now that XML has moved beyond being the latest cool thing, and is in fact being widely adopted and deployed, some practical questions are being asked about it. But these questions are only starting to be answered. Perhaps the biggest question about XML is, "Now that I've got it, where am I supposed to keep it?" Some of the big database players think they've got the answer.Trippe, Bill et al. | 2002
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Changing Channels: The Importance of Identifying The Best Content Distribution Channels - New information technologies can come from nowhere and demolish brands and businesses that have been established for decades, even centuries. The moral: Choosing the right distribution channel is crucial to the success or failure of a content product. Should you deal with an infomediary, partner with a portal, or create your own pay-per-view or subscription-based service? Finding the answers to such questions depends to a great extent on the type of content you want to distribute. Here's a look at some possible answers for three specific content types: News, market research, and internal corporate information.Pack, Thomas et al. | 2002
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Changing Channels: The Importance of Identifying The Best Content Distribution ChannelsPack, T. et al. | 2002
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Less is More: ASCII Might Trump Rich Media in the World of Online AdvertisingCalishain, T. et al. | 2002
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Less is More: ASCII Might Trump Rich Media in the World of Online Advertising - From humble beginning, banners evolved rapidly. They tried to be sexy, weird, intriguing, or funny -- As long as they brought in the ad dollars. Such an escalation might go on forever, but some companies figured out a better way to provide site ads. Instead of getting bigger and louder, they got smaller and quieter.Calishain, Tara et al. | 2002
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The Disconnect ContinuesPack, T. et al. | 2002
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Taxonomy's Role in Content ManagementPack, T. et al. | 2002
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Features - Taxonomy's Role in Content Management - Taxonomy technology greatly assists the sharing of enterprise knowledge. But don't expect to sit back and watch it go. Experts agree that those searching for an out-of-the-box solution shouldn't hold their breath. Count on adding a little elbow grease, but the results will be worth it.Pack, Thomas et al. | 2002
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Drowning in a Sea of Information? Content Integration SurvivalOjala, M. et al. | 2002
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Game on: Spiderdance Powers NBC's Weakest LinkMcgarvey, R. et al. | 2002
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The Disconnect Continues - The relationships between people who buy digital content and those selling it are more acrimonious than ever. Still, many buyers remain optimistic that compromises can be reached. But first, they say, sellers must truly understand the econtent needs of today's enterprises. Unfortunately, enterprise information managers still find the content buying process frustrating with licensing, pricing, and integration the key concerns.Pack, Thomas et al. | 2002
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Features - The Salt Lake Scramble: Online Coverage of the Olympic Games - Like a relay runner left without a teammate to hand the baton, the Salt Lake Organizing Committee began a furious search for a technology partner to replace both Quokka and Logictier as the clock continued to count down. After holding preliminary talks with a number of high-profile prospects, viable options were beginning to dwindle. Finally, in June, just seven months before the games were to begin, SLOC struck a deal with Microsoft-MSNBC to host and produce the official sites for the 2002 Winter Olympic Games.Belle, Jeff et al. | 2002
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Features - Game on: Spiderdance Powers NBC's Weakest LinkMcgarvey, Robert et al. | 2002
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Drowning in a Sea of Information? Content Integration Survival - Today's information landscape reminds me of the line "Water, water, everywhere, nor any drop to drink." Today, we find ourselves adrift in a sea of information. This, the stuff of successful business, surrounds us, but integrating essential information and making it usable poses a formidable challenge. For better or worse, unlike the Ancient Mariner, who was "all alone," companies offering solutions to the information integration problem lay siege to the information professional. And sifting through the solutions can be as challenging as the problem itself.Ojala, Marydee et al. | 2002
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Revenge of the Librarians: Journal Prices Under Siege - In all, the electronic impact on libraries has been for the good. But there are unhappy whispers circulating between the periodical stacks. And if you listen closely, you can hear the beginning of a response to the so-called "journal-pricing crisis". A unique twist on the FTE model is underway in Iceland, where a nationwide consortium of libraries has approached the cost per use equation from an enlightened perspective.Belle, Jeff et al. | 2002
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eMPower-ing SOLINET: Southeastern Library's Portal TransformationBlock, D. G. et al. | 2002
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Revenge of the Librarians: Journal Prices Under SiegeBelle, J. et al. | 2002
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eMPower-ing SOLINET: Southeastern Library's Portal Transformation - Libraries and library networks have evolved to meet the growing demand for immediate access to information as well as to leverage the power of the Internet and digital content management to keep patrons and members better informed. In an effort to better meet the needs of its patrons, SOLINET performed a complete information overhaul to make the transition from Web site to information portal.Block, Debbie Galante et al. | 2002
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RSS: Lo-Fi Content SyndicationBannan, K. J. et al. | 2002
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Making Wireless Content Pay - There's a lot to dislike about wireless media -- Not the least of which are crummy green-screen graphics, plain text, and slow download times. But there's a key difference between Web and wireless that gets content providers excited: While Web users expect free content, wireless phone users know the meter is always on.Kuchinskas, Susan et al. | 2002
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Features - RSS: Lo-Fi Content SyndicationBannan, Karen J. et al. | 2002
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Making Wireless Content PayKuchinskas, S. et al. | 2002
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Keeping the World a Safer Place: Better Learning through Better Learning Content ManagementFritz, M. et al. | 2002
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Masterminding Content ManagementSchneider, B. et al. | 2002
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Masterminding Content Management - Content management systems are a critical piece of infrastructure in today's enterprise. As Web sites have grown in size and importance, so has CM. Many corporate Web sites suffer from problems, such as non-standard presentation, inconsistency of content, nonexistent editorial process, and content publication choke points. Without a CM system, handling -- Or better yet solving -- These seemingly disparate problems becomes a nightmare.Schneider, Bill et al. | 2002
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Putting Web Services Standards to Work - Web Services provide interoperability across differing systems on different machines and rietworks; they can also span a range of applications that have been developed over time. That means that the model is open to an ongoing role for legacy applications. But first you must sort through the alphabet soup to gauge the state of Web services and see what it has to offer the enterprise.Lancie, Philip De et al. | 2002
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Survey Says!Marino, S. et al. | 2002
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Features - Defeating the Downturn: Syndicators Turn to the Enterprise - The high-tech downturn forced companies to rethink their business models and in many cases do an about-face and abandon Web-based prospects for a more traditional client base -- The enterprise. The syndication market has seen its share of consolidation and closures, and many of the players are still playing thanks to a new emphasis on licensing technology and services to established (and safer) corporate clients.Pack, Thomas et al. | 2002
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The Three Rs of Site Success: Repeat Visits, Retention, and Revenues - The question for Web sites is no longer, "to charge or not to charge," but rather "how much can I charge for what?" Many sites that have found success charging for interactive content are doing so, in part, by leveraging the value of online community. Their success stories can be yours.Ambrozek, Jenny et al. | 2002
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Extracting Linguistic DNA: NStein Goes to Work for UPITrippe, B. et al. | 2002
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Putting Web Services Standards to WorkDe Lancie, P. et al. | 2002
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Survey Says! - Most site owners would love the opportunity to know what goes on inside the heads of their site users. For better or worse, however, technology has not yet provided us with that level of access to the mindset of site visitors. Enter the world of online surveys, which purport to provide feedback from users on the sites' content and effectiveness.Marino, Sylvia et al. | 2002
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Features - Extracting Linguistic DNA: NStein Goes to Work for UPI - While United Press International (UPI) and others news services have mechanisms for adding keywords and categorizing their content, UPI recognized a need to add more automation to the process. With the recent growth and improvement in tools for Computer-Aided Indexing (CAI), UPI undertook a process of looking at their needs and evaluating the many CAI tools out there. In the end, they chose technology from Montreal-based NStein Technologies.Trippe, Bill et al. | 2002
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Its All in What You Know -- Internet Information and Expert Referral Services - Web-based information exchange comes in many flavors and forms, from the ad hoc, unmediated sharing of expertise in chat rooms, email groups, and online forums to digital library reference services staffed by degreed professionals. In between lie an interesting assortment of so-called "expert services" that feature self-identified (and sometimes credentialed) authorities poised to tackle anything.Basch, Reva et al. | 2002
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Its All in What You Know-Internet Information and Expert Referral ServicesBasch, R. et al. | 2002
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Wireless Content: Path to Prosperity or the Poorhouse?Cohan, P. S. et al. | 2002
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Wireless Content: Path to Prosperity or the Poorhouse? - In the past, content purveyors could pursue two generic strategies: Sell subscriptions and-or sell advertising. However, the emergence of wireless networks and the popularity of various hand-held devices suggests a third way -- Delivering content to people on the move via wireless content.Cohan, Peter S. et al. | 2002
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What Consumers Tell Us About Paying for News OnlineDonatello, M. et al. | 2002
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Keeping a Civil Tongue: Web Lab's Plan to Extinguish Flame WarsSmith, S. et al. | 2002
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Features - Creating the Customer-Obsessed Web TeamManning, Jamie et al. | 2002
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Creating the Customer-Obsessed Web TeamManning, J. et al. | 2002
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What Consumers Tell Us About Paying for News Online - An excerpt from: The Free versus Paid DebateDonatello, Mike et al. | 2002
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Features - Training for Trouble: Accident Response Group Serves Video at Sandia - When you think of content management for video assets, you may not initially think of governmental applications. But as the events of last fall have reminded us, there is more to a secure society than simply commerce and media. A digitized knowledgebase can be a valuable tool in support of overall governmental training and response efforts. In the last few years, the capacity of networks to deal with video has improved, and content management for video has come of age.Lancie, Philip De et al. | 2002
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Web Content Extraction: A WhizBang! ApproachOjala, M. et al. | 2002
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Web Content Extraction: A WhizBang! Approach - The WhizBang! name choice may have verged on the accidental, but the product itself was no accident. The extraction technology that company founder Bob Sherwin considers so whizbang wonderful consists of a unique approach to scouring the Web for current, very specific forms of information.Ojala, Marydee et al. | 2002
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From Ancient Searcher to Amazon-aholic: Finding the Link Between Econtent and Ecommerce - Today's search engine software often employs techniques that were only a dream to online searchers from the early days. However, Web development continues to challenge the old-time online services and there is no question that top of the line ecommerce sites, like Amazon, have taught generations of Web users to expect a lot of TLC from a good search engine. So it is about time that traditional pure content sites might need to take a lesson from these young whippersnappers.Quint, Barbara et al. | 2002
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Review - Groove Workspace 2.0 Professional - Groove Workspace 2.0 Professional provides a rich set of tools to encourage online collaboration and at only (USD)99.00, this software should more than pay for itself in increased employee cooperation and productivity.Miller, Ron et al. | 2002
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Electronic Acrobatics: PDF Subscriptions Bolster RevenueBannan, K. J. et al. | 2002
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Groove Workspace 2.0 ProfessionalMiller, R. et al. | 2002
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Features - Electronic Acrobatics: PDF Subscriptions Bolster Revenue - There is a small but growing number of publications that are developing PDF versions of their products to bolster their subscriber base and revenue. In the past year alone, the New York Times, Popular Mechanics, trade magazine Electronic Buyers' News, and the Harvard Business Review have launched digital versions of their newspapers and magazines to augment their online and print versions. The reasons are as varied as the publishers themselves.Bannan, Karen J. et al. | 2002
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DisContent - Adding Value -- Looking at Literacy - Here's one great way to make econtent important: Add value in ways that can only be done online. As a reader and Internet user, I like to see innovative approaches and I have a specific challenge for econtent producers.Crawford, Walt et al. | 2002
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Roses Are Red and Subscriptions Are Green: AmericanGreetings.com Plays to Win the Conversion Game - AmericanGreetings.com's success is the sum total of careful business calculations, plus a century of card-making expertise, plus a seven-year journey through various Web content business models. AmericanGreetings.com started with the same fee-based model as its offline parent, American Greetings. The site responded to growing competition from free card venues by dropping much of its subscription wall in January 2000 and relying on ad sales. But times are changing.Smith, Steve et al. | 2002
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DisContent - Print.a.bil.ity - Some DISCONTENT columns cover oddities, exaggerate to make a point, or deal with issues I find amusing. This is a case where I find the behavior of content providers self-defeating in ways that make no sense at all.Crawford, Walt et al. | 2002
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Reviews - Macromedia Studio MX - With the release of the MX line, Macromedia has taken its premiere Web development tools to a new level. Sporting a completely redesigned interface and improved integration between the products, managers can dole out jobs to the right team members and easily integrate work into the final project.Miller, Ron et al. | 2002
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Behind the Firewall - Intranets and Extranets: Playing the Numbers - Over the last few months, a number of surveys on the intranet market have been released, which might be useful both to highlight the existence of such surveys, as well as to shed light on some of the results.White, Martin et al. | 2002
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Macromedia Studio MXMiller, R. et al. | 2002
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Roses Are Red and Subscriptions Are Green: AmericanGreetings.com Plays to Win the Conversion GameSmith, S. et al. | 2002
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Columns - DisContent - The Magazine Quandary - The quandary for econtent providers boils down to this: How can an online artifact establish the same relationships as a good magazine?Crawford, Walt et al. | 2002
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Columns - DisContent - Give Me a Break! - Once you've established that you can churn out worthwhile stuff, you need to stop. Why take a break? One word: Freshness.Crawford, Walt et al. | 2002
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The Magazine Quandary The Quandary for econtent providers boils down to this: How can an online artifact establish the same relationships as a good magazine?Crawford, W. et al. | 2002
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Reviews - Adobe FrameMaker 7.0 - FrameMaker 7.0 is right for you if you want to move to a structured authoring environment and you know your SGML or XML model will be an industry standard or stable. There will be some knowledge transfer from unstructured FrameMaker to structured FrameMaker, however, there will also be a learning curve.Boeri, Robert J. et al. | 2002
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Columns - DisContent - Watery Lessons in Partners and Audience - What do cruise ships and econtent have in common? Useful lessons for success or failure in a venture that depends on an audience and partners. You're smart people; you can draw your own parallels.Crawford, Walt et al. | 2002
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DisContent - Copyright Out of Whack II: Control Run Amok - Copyright in its constitutional form provides for a limited-term monopoly that balances the rights and needs of those who create original works, those who use those creations, and those who create new works based in part on what came before. But things have gotten out of whack -- And could easily get worse.Crawford, Walt et al. | 2002
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Watery Lessons in Partners and AudienceCrawford, W. et al. | 2002
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DisContent Electronic Access to Scientific Articles: Another PerspectiveCrawford, W. et al. | 2002
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Follow the Money - Online Advertising: The Big Slow Sell - In the advertising world, when the going gets tough, the tough start hyping. When agencies and publishers started seeing their revenues tank in early 2001, they responded with an unprecedented barrage of flashy new ad formats and research studies began trumpeting the undiscovered value of online promotion.Smith, Steve et al. | 2002
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DisContent Copyright Out of Whack II: Control Run AmokCrawford, W. et al. | 2002
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DisContent - Electronic Access to Scientific Articles: Another Perspective - Here I am again, the library person in a content-producer's land, annoying you with a different perspective.Crawford, Walt et al. | 2002
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Reviews - EContent Decision-Maker Review: Flash MX - A combination of easy-to-create animation, robust scripting, small file sizes, and 98% player penetration makes Flash the veritable standard for easy creation rich-media for Web distribution. And the new version, Flash MX, sports some exciting features that make understanding the possibilities with Flash all the more valuable for content distributors.Sauer, Jeff et al. | 2002
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Managing Content Management System SelectionWhite, M. et al. | 2002
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Adobe FrameMaker 7.0Boeri, R. J. et al. | 2002
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Behind the Firewall - Managing Content Management System Selection - Over the last year, my firm has assisted in the selection of many content management systems (CMS). Some companies already have a CMS for their Web site, others may have a document management system, the majority have no formal document or content management system. All are setting out on the path to procurement.White, Martin et al. | 2002
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Columns - DisContent - Turn On the Radio - I would argue that Web content sources failed badly on September 11 -- And that Web content sources succeeded brilliantly on September 11.Crawford, Walt et al. | 2002
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DisContent - Revenge of the Indies: Looking for the Next Netflix - Optimists such as I look for countertrends in content and distribution -- Ways that new technologies can work against the growing concentration of media ownership. Such ways do exist, with electronic distribution playing important roles.Crawford, Walt et al. | 2002
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Follow the Money - Making Context King...or...Can Relevance Engines Make Content Pay Off? - Content Is King! Yadda, yadda. But King Content must share his throne, at the very least with a Queen (ecommerce), but also with a young Prince called context.Smith, Steve et al. | 2002
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Behind the Firewall - Ten Steps Towards Intranet Success - The CEO of McQueen Consulting and I recently figured out that we have been exposed to well over two hundred intranets. Based on this collective experience, we have developed a set of success factors that may reduce the failure rate of intranets.White, Martin et al. | 2002
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Content by the Pound: Packaged and Priced to Sell Publishers are beginning to experiment more aggressively and creatively with selling their wares by the poundSmith, S. et al. | 2002
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Behind the Firewall Ten Steps Towards Intranet SuccessWhite, M. et al. | 2002
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EContent Decision-Maker Review: Arbortext Epic Editor 4.2Boeri, R. J. et al. | 2002
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A Trickle from Your TchotchkesSmith, S. et al. | 2002
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Turn On the RadioCrawford, W. et al. | 2002
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Follow the Money - Is Direct Marketing the Undiscovered Revenue Stream for Publishers? - You don't sell advertisers space anymore. You sell your audience. It seems like such a tiny shift in sensibility, perhaps even a painfully obvious one, but this new mantra among online publishers can make all the difference when it comes to conceptualizing your business model.Smith, Steve et al. | 2002
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Is Direct Marketing the Undiscovered Revenue Stream for Publishers?Smith, S. et al. | 2002
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Reviews - EContent Decision-Maker Review: Arbortext Epic Editor 4.2 - Epic Editor is Arbortext's central authoring application, part of a set of XML software for single-source, multichannel publishing. Native XML authoring systems like Epic Editor provide a way to create valid XML content directly. XML provides virtually unlimited opportunities to derive specialized versions of that content, including Web and wireless delivery, print, and CD.Boeri, Robert J. et al. | 2002
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Columns - Follow the Money - Content by the Pound: Packaged and Priced to Sell - Publishers are beginning to experiment more aggressively and creatively with selling their wares by the pound.Smith, Steve et al. | 2002
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Columns - Follow the Money - A Trickle from Your Tchotchkes - As other revenue streams dwindle for content publishers, many are revisiting the idea of selling branded merchandise via their sites, but this time they are going beyond slapping logos on coffee mugs and hoping for a sale.Smith, Steve et al. | 2002
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Follow the Money Making Context King...or...Can Relevance Engines Make Content Pay Off?Smith, S. et al. | 2002
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DisContent - Copyright Out of Whack, I: Perpetual Protection - Copyright in its constitutional form balances the rights and needs of those who create original works and those who create new works based in part on what came before. But things have gotten out of whack. The resulting problems may not affect some of you directly, but don't bet on it.Crawford, Walt et al. | 2002
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Follow the Money - Listening to Audible - Spoken word audio seller Audible.com knew from the start that users would have to pay to play, and so from the day it opened its Web doors in 1997, it has been charging for downloadable audio. While profits remain elusive, Audible is worth a listen.Smith, Steve et al. | 2002
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Columns - Behind the Firewall - Investing in Intranet Infrastructure - Many worry that spending on intranets and IT in general will decrease as costs are trimmed. In fact, intranet infrastructure investment is as important as always.White, Martin et al. | 2002
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The White Queen Strikes Again: An Ebook Update When you cope with online content about ebooks, you can believe six impossible things before breakfast, develop a healthy appetite for contradictory messages, or learn to read between the pixelsCrawford, W. et al. | 2002
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Essential Reading for Intranet ProfessionalsWhite, M. et al. | 2002
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Ektron's CMS200 provides very high value for its price, but should be considered primarily for small public sites (less than 500 pages) or low-traffic intranetsByrne, T. et al. | 2002
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Buying the Proper Search Solution for Your IntranetWhite, M. et al. | 2002
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Columns - Behind the Firewall - Buying the Proper Search Solution for Your Intranet - Intranets present some difficult challenges for the user. In an ideal world, the navigation should be so intuitive that only on rare occasions should it be necessary to use the search function. However, we do not live in an ideal world...White, Martin et al. | 2002
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DisContent - The White Queen Strikes Again: An Ebook Update - When you cope with online content about ebooks, you can believe six impossible things before breakfast, develop a healthy appetite for contradictory messages, or learn to read between the pixels.Crawford, Walt et al. | 2002
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Follow the Money Listening to AudibleSmith, S. et al. | 2002
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Behind the Firewall Defining Your Content Management StrategiesWhite, M. et al. | 2002
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Columns - Behind the Firewall - Information Architecture and Usability - I was a judge for the annual awards of the UK Directory Publishers Association. This process highlighted the fact usability testing is extremely important.White, Martin et al. | 2002
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Behind the Firewall - Content at What Cost? - Content owners have long dreamt of delivering content to every desktop in the organization and, with the widespread adoption of intranets, this seemed to be achievable. However, the dream is turning into a nightmare as the implications of the intranets' complex technical requirements begin to be appreciated.White, Martin et al. | 2002
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Investing in Intranet Infrastructure Many worry that spending on intranets and IT in general will decrease as costs are trimmed. In fact, intranet infrastructure investment is as important as alwaysWhite, M. et al. | 2002
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Columns - Behind the Firewall - Essential Reading for Intranet Professionals - There is not a single book on the shelf in my office with "intranet" in the title. However, there is a group of books that I refer to during consulting projects, or when preparing conference papers.White, Martin et al. | 2002
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Behind the Firewall - Defining Your Content Management Strategies - Vendors find that the time and effort that must be spent on intranet pre-sales activities is much higher than it is with Web sites. And they can ill afford to spend the time without a good probability of a sale.White, Martin et al. | 2002
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Behind the Firewall - Save Money Now! Read This Column - This month, we'll return to the topic of implementing a content management strategy and highlight three invaluable resources that will be of great assistance to you in achieving the best possible content management solution.White, Martin et al. | 2002
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Arbortext: Enabler of Multichannel Publishing - The problem is epidemic: A company has a document that began in a predictable format. But then the material has to be translated into many more formats: HTML, PageMaker or Quark, possibly RTF. That's when a company should put in a call to Arbortext.McGarvey, Robert et al. | 2002
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Arbortext: Enabler of Multichannel PublishingMcGarvey, R. et al. | 2002
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Behind the FirewallWhite, M. et al. | 2002
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TheStreet.com: Strategic ContentCohan, P. S. et al. | 2002
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Concentric Visions: Making It Easy to Customize Rich MediaBannan, K. J. et al. | 2002
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Profiles - Content à la Wmode: Serving Up Solutions for Wireless ContentMartin, Nicole et al. | 2002
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Content a la Wmode: Serving Up Solutions for Wireless ContentMartin, N. et al. | 2002
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Profiles - TheStreet.com: Strategic Content - TheStreet.com has changed its content strategy. When it opened for business, TheStreet.com gave away news and analysis to attract online advertising. As it became clear that advertising would not offset the costs of producing this content, TheStreet.com went in search of subscribers. Can it attract enough cash from content consumers to keep its lights on?Cohan, Peter S. et al. | 2002
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Profiles - Concentric Visions: Making It Easy to Customize Rich Media - Customization and rich media are two of the hottest buzzwords in Web development. However, combining customization with rich media isn't as easy as it sounds, but Concentric Visions is attempting to get these two powerful Web site forces to work together.Bannan, Karen J. et al. | 2002
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Information Insider Rich Media Knowledge Strategies: Why Aren't We Smiling?Boeri, R. J. et al. | 2002
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Profiles - PacketVideo: One Step Ahead of the Streaming Wireless Market - Soon to appear on a cell phone screen near you: Daffy Duck and Wile E. Coyote, in all their pay-per-view glory. Or perhaps you'd like to have video games delivered to it, instead? All this, and more, is the promise of streaming wireless multimedia as envisioned by the folks at PacketVideo Corp.Carr, Jim et al. | 2002
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Groove Networks: Matching Technology with Human NeedsPack, T. et al. | 2002
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Profiles - Groove Networks: - Matching Technology with Human Needs - "Our mission has two parts," says Groove's CEO Ray Ozzie, "to help businesses achieve a greater 'return on connection' from their relationships with customers, vendors and partners; and to help individuals strengthen online connections with the people with whom they interact."Pack, Thomas et al. | 2002
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Information Insider - Rich Media Knowledge Strategies: Why Aren't We Smiling? Although some buyers of IT solutions like the comfort of an established vendor like Microsoft, increasingly IT organizations want open solutions based on standards because it allows them to re-use and republish information as many ways as is useful. Therein lies a legitimate complaint with proprietary multimedia.Boeri, Robert J. et al. | 2002
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Behind the Firewall - CMS Implementation -- Project Management - In many organizations, the concept of what it takes to manage a project successfully -- Much less a full-scale CMS implementation -- Is not fully understood. Thus, I thought it might be useful to devote this column to setting out some of the basic principles of project management, using the implementation of a content management system as the context.White, Martin et al. | 2002
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PacketVideo: One Step Ahead of the Streaming Wireless MarketCarr, J. et al. | 2002
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Follow the Money - Making the List Management Business Work for You - Fears about online spam and privacy violations continue to keep many publishers from exploring this route. But as we demonstrated in last month's column, there are some simple ways to maintain your subscribers' privacy, get them to opt-in, and even provide a welcome service -- All while pulling in an appreciable revenue stream.Smith, Steve et al. | 2002
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Follow the Money - Welcome to Our Site... Now What Are You Worth? Sarah Chubb has a unique "problem"...the sort more Web executives would like to have. She is running out of ad inventory. And the solution is simple, but few Web sites have been willing or able to realize it: The Internet allows publishers to sell advertising against users, not just against content.Smith, Steve et al. | 2002
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Profiles - YellowBrix: Transforming Content Into Action - Every company has assets, but not every company fully understands the breadth and depth of those assets, or how to manage them, but YellowBrix is here to help.Misek, Marla et al. | 2002
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Akiva: Idea Management EnablerFritz, M. et al. | 2002
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AtomShockwave Corp.: Short Movie SupplierPack, T. et al. | 2002
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Speedera: Web Without the WaitDe Lancie, P. et al. | 2002
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Speedera: Web Without the Wait - There's no greater testament to the utility of the Internet than the fact that hundreds of millions of people worldwide are willing to wait for Web pages as they build incrementally on screen. But while users may put up with the "World Wide Wait," they definitely don't like it. That's where Content Delivery Networks come in.Lancie, Philip De et al. | 2002
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Profiles - Applied Semantics: Making Meaning Matter - Wading through pages of ill-narrowed search results is a common problem, one professional searchers have grudgingly learned to work around. It's also one many content management solutions providers like Applied are working to change.Misek, Marla et al. | 2002
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Profiles - OneSource: Value-Added Business Info - OneSource is a pure aggregator that produces no content itself. Its contribution is a powerful set of integration features that smoothly blend information on a specific company or industry from numerous separate sources.O'Leary, Mick et al. | 2002
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Profiles - AtomShockwave Corp.: Short Movie Supplier - While many Web sites founded on the digital distribution of entertainment content have failed to attract a large, steady audience, AtomFilms.com gets about two million unique visitors each month.Pack, Thomas et al. | 2002
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Follow the Money - GolfServ: Doing One Thing Very Well - With so much content floating about through so many channels all at once, it's awfully tough for any but the most specialized publishers of high-worth material to realize much more than a revenue trickle from redistribution schemes.Smith, Steve et al. | 2002
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WAM!Net: Private Pipes for Electronic Media - Security is just as important to a record executive as it is to a Navy commander. WAM!Net, a Wide-Area Media Network (hence, the name) passes muster with both.Bannan, Karen J. et al. | 2002
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Profiles - Akiva: Idea Management Enabler - Every great human invention, discovery, or social advance has started with a basic idea. And yet we continue to treat ideas as easy-come-easy-go disposable items not deserving the same sort of attention or respect we give other forms of intellectual property or knowledge -- Like documents, for example.Fritz, Mark et al. | 2002
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Profiles - eMeta Facilitates Information CommercePack, Thomas et al. | 2002
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Profiles - Documentum Completes CM Trifecta - There are about 1,300 organizations in various industries worldwide that rely on Documentum's technologies, consulting, and training services, which are designed to manage digital content and facilitate online transactions, partner and supplier relationships, and ebusiness interactions.Pack, Thomas et al. | 2002
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Applied Semantics: Making Meaning MatterMisek, M. et al. | 2002
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Follow the MoneySmith, S. et al. | 2002
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Kontiki: Shortcuts for Content's Trip to the EdgeTorres, J. et al. | 2002
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eMeta Facilitates Information CommercePack, T. et al. | 2002
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YellowBrix: Transforming Content into ActionMisek, M. et al. | 2002
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Documentum Completes CM TrifectaPack, T. et al. | 2002
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Profiles - Kontiki: Shortcuts for Content's Trip to the Edge - When electronic files get zapped from one location to another, you probably aren't thinking about the physical distance they must travel -- Or how that distance might affect the time it takes to get there. But if you work for CDN company Kontiki, this is all you think about.Torres, Johanne et al. | 2002
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OneSource: Value-Added Business InfoO Leary, M. et al. | 2002
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Profiles - Oracle Mobile: Addictive Wireless Content - If you are among the many who think the wireless data revolution has sputtered to an early halt, give a listen to Oracle Mobile CTO Jacob Christfort who has emerged as a kind of Pied Piper for mobile content. Christfort and Oracle Mobile envision a wireless world where each of us carries a mobile device and are never far from the content that matters to us.Mcgarvey, Robert J. et al. | 2002
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Profiles - Profitable Transactions: DeSilva & Phillips Defining the New InternetServa, Sandy et al. | 2002
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Profiles - Intraspect: Making KM Work the Way People Do - Intraspect wants to make knowledge management come naturally to "front office" people who may be more focused on their relationships with customers than on making the best use of technology. One way Intraspect does this is by making the most of email -- The Internet's most-used application -- And also the one most often overlooked by designers.Zetlin, Minda et al. | 2002
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Intraspect: Making KM Work the Way People DoZetlin, M. et al. | 2002
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Digital World Services: It's All About the ExperienceMcGarvey, R. et al. | 2002
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Profiles - FinancialContent: Credibility Is King - If you went to a site named Financialcontent.com, you'd probably expect to find, well, financial content. You'd be partially correct. FinancialConent does deal in financial information but its main objective is to distribute it through other Web sites.Ojala, Marydee et al. | 2002
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WAM!Net: Private Pipes for Electronic MediaBannan, K. J. et al. | 2002
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NewsStand: Enhancing the Way Publishers Publish and Readers ReadMisek, M. et al. | 2002
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Profiles - Craigslist: Virtual Community Maintains Human Touch - Craig Newmark's widely popular community site, craigslist, has gone the way of the fee. Yet Newmark had the foresight to run the new fee plans by his members first -- An idea that sparked useful and revealing comments from long-time visitors.Torres, Johanne et al. | 2002
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Profiles - TeleKnowledge: Making Content Pay - While much of the information found on the Internet is still free to its users, a business model centered around paying for premium content is gradually finding its place in a changing marketplace. TeleKnowledge, Inc. is working to help further this growing trend, via its monetization software solutions.Serva, Sandy et al. | 2002
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Profiles - Digital World Services: It's All About the Experience - It may have seemed in recent years that for every step forward, DRM took another backwards, but there is now ample reason for optimism.McGarvey, Robert et al. | 2002
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Profitable Transactions: DeSilva & Phillips Defining the New InternetServa, S. et al. | 2002
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Verity: True Value, Verity, Inc. developing portal infrastructure software to allow companies to effectively manage their knowledge and information resourcesSerra, S. et al. | 2002
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Profiles - iVillage: Investing in Community and Banking on Trust - Content on a Web site is most powerful when it hits the bullseye of visitors' interests. When those visitors share common values and concerns and are provided the means to interact online, they form communities that respond to the content and create their own original content.Figallo, Cliff et al. | 2002
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Profile - NewsStand: Enhancing the Way Publishers Publish and Readers Read - The proliferation of the Internet as a primary information and entertainment resource, combined with rising paper and distribution costs, have changed the publishing industry's operating model. NewsStand is working to help publishers deliver electronic publications that have the familiar flexibility and feel of their paper predecessors.Misek, Marla et al. | 2002
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TeleKnowledge: Making Content PayServa, S. et al. | 2002
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FinancialContent: Credibility Is KingOjala, M. et al. | 2002
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iVillage: Investing in Community and Banking on TrustFigallo, C. et al. | 2002
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Profiles - Verity: True Value - The word verity can be defined as something of inevitably true value. As its growing list of customers can attest, Verity, Inc. is making every effort to live up to its name by developing portal infrastructure software to allow companies to effectively manage their knowledge and information resources.Serva, Sandy et al. | 2002
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Craigslist: Virtual Community Maintains Human TouchTorres, J. et al. | 2002
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Profiles - Alacra: The Proof is in the Packaging - If information is a gift, then Alacra has positioned itself as the wrapping paper and big shiny bow that makes its receipt all the more gratifying. And what the company strives to deliver is a comprehensive package that helps customers aggregate online resources to find, analyze, and present business information.Misek, Marla et al. | 2002
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Index to Advertisers| 2002
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Company and People Index - Look here to see if you've been name checked| 2002
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Company Index| 2002
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Departments - Company and People Index - Look here to see if you've been name checked| 2002
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Departments - Index to Advertisers| 2002
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End of File - Welcome to Our Store; That'll Be (USD)19.95, Please - Everyone's heard the definition of a consultant: Someone who borrows your watch, tells you what time it is, charges you for the information, and probably keeps the watch as well. As a some-time consultant, I do occasionally marvel at all these watches in my office.Bates, Mary Ellen et al. | 2002
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Is It a Hal-9000 or a Walkman? I'm not going to predict which of the current generation of econtent providers will be going strong in five years. But I'do know that they'll be the ones that have worked their way into our daily habitsBates, M. E. et al. | 2002
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End of File Brother, Can You Spare $4.95?Bates, M. E. et al. | 2002
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Columns - End of File - Is It a Hal-9000 or a Walkman? - I'm not going to predict which of the current generation of econtent providers will be going strong in five years. But I do know that they'll be the ones that have worked their way into our daily habits.Bates, Mary Ellen et al. | 2002
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End of File - Looking in from Your Users' Eyes - As luck would have it, I've had the pleasure of dealing with the bureaucracy of Washington DC recently, and it wasn't pretty. I guess we just expect the government to view the Web like the rest of America does, as the information front line. But, the ineffectual gov Web presence really all boils down to myopia on the part of the information owners. And this made me think about those basic issues of user interfaces and looking at a site from the outside in.Bates, Mary Ellen et al. | 2002
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End of File Welcome to Our Store; That'll Be $19.95, PleaseBates, M. E. et al. | 2002
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End of File - Looking For Information in All The Wrong Places - My friend and I somehow survived at least 35 years before the advent of the Web. In a recent conversation, we got to wondering how the heck we found information before we could Google it.Bates, Mary Ellen et al. | 2002
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End of File - Going Where the (Info) Climate Suits My Clothes - A recent spate of digital devices turns us into data storage facilities -- Hard disks with legs. But we can't access and use this information ourselves; all we do is retain it for others to read. Seems kind of unfair, doesn't it?Bates, Mary Ellen et al. | 2002
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Columns - End of File - Steal This Article - Faced with a (USD)600 price tag for software, my first thought was "Geez, that's a piece of software asking to be sold on a warez site."Bates, Mary Ellen et al. | 2002
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Columns - End of File - What Infurmashion Liturasy Problem? - The amount of misapprehension about what is available on the Web -- Information illiteracy, if you will -- Is still astounding, particularly since it seems that everyone thinks they're an expert.Bates, Mary Ellen et al. | 2002
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End of File - Brother, Can You Spare (USD)4.95? - Contrary to the belief of pop-under advertising masterminds, I'm not going to buy that X-10 camera, no matter how many times I see the darned ad.Bates, Mary Ellen et al. | 2002
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End of File - Info Pros Take Over the Government - Right now, all FBI applicants must have good vision and hearing, no color blindness, a driver's license, and a college degree. How about requiring some basic understanding of information hygiene as well?Bates, Mary Ellen et al. | 2002
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Got the Time?Bates, M. E. et al. | 2002
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Looking in from Your Users' Eyes As luck would have it, I've had the pleasure of dealing with the bureaucracy of Washington DC recently, and it wasn't pretty. I guess we just expect the government to view the Web like the rest of America does, as the information front lineBates, M. E. et al. | 2002
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End of File - Will Research For Food - Remember when all those ask-an-expert sites started appearing on the Web? The Great Internet Shakeout caused most of these sites to shut down, consolidate, or focus on selling enterprise knowledge-sharing software. But as an independent info pro who charges for her services, I'm always amazed to see how cheaply some experts value their time.Bates, Mary Ellen et al. | 2002
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Columns - End of File - Got the Time? - Boolean logic is a splendid thing, but it's dumb as dirt when it comes to sussing out nuancesBates, Mary Ellen et al. | 2002
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What Infurmashion Liturasy Problem?Bates, M. E. et al. | 2002
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DisContent - The End of Free Content - "Valuable information has a price." As the year ends, I thought it might be appropriate to offer a few reasons that this assertion is unlikely to come to pass.Crawford, Walt et al. | 2002
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The End of Free Content: "Valuable information has a price." As the year ends, I thought it might be appropriate to offer a few reasons that this assertion is unlikely to come to passCrawford, W. et al. | 2002
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Behind the Firewall: CMS ReduxWhite, M. et al. | 2002
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Behind the Firewall - CMS Redux - I recently acted out the role of a prospective client, giving feedback to a very receptive group of CMS vendors about how well, and how badly, their message was getting across.White, Martin et al. | 2002
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Follow the Money - The Streams of 2003 - Despite a doggedly depressed ad market, there is a remarkable amount of creative thinking still going on in dotcomland.Smith, Steve et al. | 2002
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Follow the Money: The Streams of 2003Smith, S. et al. | 2002
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Information Insider - Content-centric XML: Where We've Been, Where We're Going in 2003 - The use of data-centric XML has taken the software world by storm but is only one of the originally intended uses of XML.Boeri, Robert J. et al. | 2002
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Content-centric XML: Where We've Been, Where We're Going in 2003Boeri, R. J. et al. | 2002
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End of File - "I'll Take 500 Bytes of Info, Please" - I wonder what impact the increasingly popular small mobile communication devices -- Like smart phones and PDAs -- Will have on our information expectations.Bates, Mary Ellen et al. | 2002
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"I'll Take 500 Bytes of Info, Please": I wonder what impact the increasingly popular small mobile communication devices-like smart phones and PDAs-will have on our information expectationsBates, M. E. et al. | 2002
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Columns - 44 Follow the Money - Content at Your Service - The Web is transforming the traditional publishing paradigm in a number of ways. Chief among them is the idea that online content has to become more service-oriented.Smith, Steve et al. | 2002