Archive for October, 2006

The NEW Web: An Unconference

October 29, 2006

The NEW Web: An Unconference
When: Saturday, November 4, from 9 to 5 Where: Talley Student Center on the NC State Campus Cost: Free to attend What to bring: Laptops with wireless if you have them, lunch money, an open mind Who can attend: Everyone!
STC Carolina and NC State STC Student Chapter [...]

2006 Henderson Lecture: Dr. David Weinberger

October 26, 2006

What: “Everything is Miscellaneous,” the UNC/SILS 2006 Henderson Lecture Who: Dr. David Weinberger When: 2 p.m., Thursday, December 7, 2006 Where: Murphey Hall Auditorium (room 116), UNC-Chapel Hill. A reception will follow.
Abstract Ever since Aristotle, we have organized knowledge according to some basic principles. By odd coincidence - that is, by [...]

Behavioral Science Associates is seeking a User Interface Manager.

October 9, 2006

The successful candidate will work in a dynamic and fast growing environment creating the next generation self-service solutions for leading communications service providers. Our client has an integrated suite of hosted speech recognition and data applications that allow their clients to achieve new levels of service effectiveness and their customers to have satisfying user experiences.
Summary
As [...]

It’s Time the Right Rail Advertising Bubble Bursts

October 6, 2006

by Rebekah Sedaca.
–originally published at Capstrat
Way back when the Web first started and before the corporate advertisers caught on to the whole information superhighway concept, Web designers and developers had all of this screen real estate in which we could display functionality, design, content, and information. Literally, we had a plethora of real estate in [...]

Re: mySpace.com/soc395m

October 5, 2006

By Lee Cherry
There has been an interesting chain of events happening behind the use of MySpace as an educational teaching tool by one of the professors here at NC State University - MySpace coursework under microscope. It appears, yet again, a new form of technology has far outpaced the policy and administration of technology in [...]