Posts Tagged ‘Co Author’
This spring at the U of M’s MinneWebCon I heard Doc Searls (a co-author of The Cluetrain Manifesto ) talk about efforts to shift from a mindset of vendors managing customer relationships toward one of customers managing vendor relationships. It is a radical shift in thinking for a culture that has grown around a hierarchical structure where capital markets are built on the backs of an entire class of workers whose labor is highly managed and prescribed. The interactive revolution is challen
Technophobia: Therapists, Technology, and Websites
Monday, August 10th, 2009
This is a guest post by Chandrama Anderson , MFT, technical editor of “Webmastering for Dummies . . . ,” co-author of the Stanford Professional Education Workbook, “Building an eCommerce Website,” located in Palo Alto, specializing in Grief and Loss, Couples Therapy, and creator of Personality Mapping. “ Technophobia is the fear or dislike of advanced technology or complex devices, especially computers.[1] The term is generally used in the sense of an irrational fear, but others contend fear
Why should you choose Creative Commons over Copyright?
Wednesday, July 29th, 2009
A Creative Commons licensed photograph If you are a loyal reader of this blog you know that two of the major contributor of this blog greatly disagree with each other over the issue of legitimacy of Intellectual property rights. I for one am against intellectual property rights, and I have tried my share to convince my co-author towards my viewpoint. I believe that upto some extent I have managed to convince her, except for I guess patent laws for innovation in Pharmaceutical industry. But
PR 2.0 for Non-Profits
Friday, July 3rd, 2009
I met Lee Miller, an expert on influencing, social networking on Facebook. Lee teaches Influencing and Negotiating at Columbia University and Seton Hall Business School. He is also the author of UP: Influence Power and the U Perspective – The Art of Getting What You Want featured on Fox and Friends and the co-author of A Woman’s Guide To Successful Negotiating (McGraw Hill) selected by Atlanta Woman magazine as one of the fifty best books for professional women and a featured book on
