print in comment and analysis
Leader: Are download services the new free ISPs?
Leader There were opportunities for those with expertise elsewhere, in this case print media, to use their marketing nous to nab consumers who could by that stage use one of several hundred companies for simple, dial-up internet access. [23 Jul 2004]
Analysis: Politicians botching tech laws
Comment But the fine print of their bill says anyone who makes huge categories of software--including web browsers, instant-messaging clients and email utilities--publicly available must include the warning or go to prison for up to six months. [12 May 2004]
After these messages: 'Show me the money!'
Comment So instead Cluley ensured everybody in shot during the interview was wearing a T-shirt with 'SOPHOS' in large print - clearly visible to anybody watching the interview - even from a distance. For 'one night only' Tony Hallett hands over control of... [30 Apr 2004]
Peter Cochrane's Uncommon Sense: All the world in your shirt pocket
Comment On several occasions in print and during presentations I have made the observation that soon we will be able to carry all the music we have ever heard contained on a single shirt pocket size device. Sometimes I have extended and elaborated by... [26 Feb 2004]
Tony Hallett's After These Messages: "I'm a celebrity CIO"
Comment I want to turn to print. Who would you trust more: the CEO of a company selling a product or the CIO of a company using that product? Tony Hallett thinks he knows what you'd answer. Who said this column was only about TV and web-based advertising? [06 Feb 2004]
Leader: Broadband debate will shift
Leader What it isn't is the top-down model of information dissemination most broadcast and print media purvey. The debate over broadband can now be separated into two camps. The first is still all about availability, access - call it what you will. [06 Feb 2004]
Apple bytes: The Mac at 20
Comment Less celebrated but more insightful were the print ads Apple also ran, in which it advocated the computer 'for the rest of us'. Is Apple still relevant? Of course it is. Steve Jobs was 2003's top silicon.com Agenda Setter and the Macintosh has had... [23 Jan 2004]
The Bloor Perspective: Wi-Finding, dirty money and techs in the City
Comment Search a website before leaving the office and do the same as you do when you access online map sites - print it off. If we are to believe the hype, wireless hotspots will be everywhere. They're not all here today but promised in the near future. [09 Jan 2004]
Leader: Biometrics will march onwards
Leader But we all have the option of changing jobs - just as we all have the option of moving from that fancy gym that requires a facial scan or the call centre that starts to identify customers by analysing their voice 'print'. [06 Jan 2004]
Leader: Don't let 'clicks' cloud online advertising
Leader Clever, well-designed and well-placed online ads can have just as much effect as traditional print-based campaigns but companies need to think about it as part of their overall, integrated branding strategy and come up with innovative and... [24 Nov 2003]
Who signed that contract? Inking supplier agreements
Comment Read boilerplate contracts carefully- small print can be extremely dangerous. Karen Jones, solicitor at law firm Matthew Arnold & Baldwin, mines her 18 years at the frontline of dealing with IT contracts to provide some key advice. [12 Nov 2003]
Analysis: Industry upbeat about Novell-SuSE deal
Comment SuSE Linux will become a more compelling product for server companies to sell with the addition of Novell's software stack - seasoned products for email, file storage, print services, website hosting, for example - said Gartner analyst John Enck. [06 Nov 2003]
The Weekly Round-Up: 31.10.03
Round-Up Still on the Microsoft-Apple theme, a worker at the Microsoft in-house print shop in Redmond was counting the cost of his pro-Mac blogging activity this week. Michael Hanscom placed a photo of a lorry-load of brand new G5 Power Macs being delivered... [31 Oct 2003]
Leader: Corporate software pirates: Guilty as charged?
Leader "But I didn't read the small print on my licence. But the licences are so complicated. I bought it off this website, and it said it was genuine. My dog ate my licence. The investigators who track down companies in breach of software licences have... [22 Oct 2003]
Through the fog... mobile tariffs
Comment Even the latest supposed 'no nonsense' tariffs can look pretty complex if you read the fine print. Mobile operators love juicy business accounts where end users aren't always worrying about how much each service is costing. [14 Aug 2003]
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