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A webapp that compares and ranks the various applications running inside of Facebook.
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But where I think it gets interesting is examining the effects of advertising and consumer culture on your personal hierarchy of needs.
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From looking at these charts, is there a long-tail of news coverage?
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The comma is, after all, a small sign that flashes PAUSE. It tells the reader to slow down, think a bit, and then move on. We don’t have time for that. No pauses allowed.
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Hot for teacher?
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The book outlines 9 major themes of the topics that people talk about, write about, and care about.
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an infographical depiction of all intimate relationship in 23 years Gregory M. Dizzia was engaged in. relationships are analyzed along several factors.
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Features your social site should have…
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I left the 110-minute session thinking that far from being worn down by the past few years, Bush seems empowered. His self-confidence is the most remarkable feature of his presidency.
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The most interesting action is in sociology. In other words, how does technology change our culture and how we interact with media, the web and each other – and to what end?
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Web 2.0 flips the information delivery model upside down–it’s now about global access, and information at your fingertips, aggregated from sources that you don’t even necessarily know about.
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We asked Mark Potts, the co-founder of startup company Backfence, to try to set the record straight about why the series of Backfence hyper-local community sites recently closed up shop.
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Responding to an American video game that features a tank attack on an Iranian nuclear facility, an Islamic student group offers gamers a chance to rescue two scientists kidnapped by U.S. troops.
Tags: ajax, api, Backfence, Google, Gregory M. Dizzia, Islamic Republic of Iran, Leverage Software, Mark Potts, meets information infrastructure, mp3, Newsweek, Potts Shares Lessons Learned, Robert Samuelson, social site, United States