|
Apple and Google had interlocking boards, Adobe was Apple's lifelong development partner and ally, and even Intel had come back from the Dark Side of Wintel to make the...
|
|
|
Publisher's Note: Asia Editor Scott Foster has again brought this continent, with its issues, challenges, and connections, directly into members' view with this latest...
|
|
|
A few weeks ago, in the onslaught of morning emails, I found a press release that, at first, was almost unbelievable. It had come from Matthew's new company, and that story...
|
|
|
There are plenty of historic reasons to restrain one's enthusiasm over so-called smartphones: they have been very expensive, and so, limited in appeal and sales; there are...
|
|
|
Although less popular today than a decade ago, there has long been a discussion of the so-called "Digital Divide" in U.S. and global populations. The idea, in its basic...
|
|
|
I had the opportunity to make a new friend last week – someone who had, it turned out, recently attended my annual predictions talk in Bellingham. He had spent the last 20...
|
|
|
In technology, the ancient regime was driven by Wintel (Windows and Intel), mostly: a famously paranoid Andy Grove, paired with Bill Gates, the most competitive strategist...
|
|
|
There are a lot of headlines out there this week that sound like this: "Will the iPad save print media?"
I have many friends in the media world, and the last few years...
|
|
|
What if they gave a war, and nobody came? It's an old joke. But what if the next war were so different from the last that it was over before the victims even knew a war had...
|
|
|
Phillip Scanlan has moved forward into the position of Consulate General of Australia in New York. In that office, he hosted MP Chris Bowen for a discussion, before his non...
|
|