This is an email I designed to market the Chicago Tribune’s Football App for the iPhone and Android enabled phones. Let me know what you think of the design as I am always looking to improve my skills.
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21Jan
Tags: android, chicago bears, chicago tribune football app, iphone, mike paradiso
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25Jun
Saw this while browsing today and thought I would share this really cool app for the G1 and HTC Magic phones. Layar, the world's first augmented reality browser
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09Jun
I found this fascinating quote today:
5. “Mac, Windows, or Linux? Does it really make a difference?” – An argument so old its original form was probably first written down in hieroglyphs, I know, but I don’t know a single geek it wouldn’t work on—myself included.Top 10 Ways to Provoke a Geek Argument, Jun 2009
You should read the whole article.
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06Jun
Heading to WordCamp Chicago in about 8 hours…better get some sleep!
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21May
So I am back from Mexico and what a way to refresh my brain than watching this video I saw on somewhatfrank.com.
Check it out.
Entreprenuers can change the worldTags: grasshopper.com, somewhatfrank.com
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22Apr
I stumbled upon a post on my iGoogle page at Somewhat Frank about the SXSW Film Festival feature WE LIVE IN PUBLIC. If you get a chance check out the trailer here. It is a scary and intriguing reality of what may happen to the world as we use the internet to communicate our lives to the rest of society.
Tags: somewhat frank, sxsw
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31Mar
Another Google venture sure to make money… My guess is that they will only invest in companies that they see as being innovative and unique in its marketplace. Who else thinks Google is the equivalent of God on Earth?
Read more at Ars Technica.
Tags: Ars Technica, google, Google Ventures
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24Mar
geek-shique
Tags: steve case
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24Mar
Tags: microsoft, sustainability
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05Feb
So a random thought popped in to my head while I was trying to fall asleep. Here it is…to communicate to anyone outside our immediate surroundings we used to write letters, then as technology evolved we used telephones to effectively communicate without writing anything down on paper. Then email came into the world and we started to use this as an effective, or non effective way, as some people may see it, of communicating. Most major companies adopted it as the way to communicate with one another, albeit unfortunate or fortunately however you deem fit, and a way to ensure a paper trail would be intact for future reference to information. Cellular phones with SMS capabilities (texting, in english, for you non-technophiles) entered the mainstream and we were all skeptical that this would take off as a form of communicating…we all thought how could texting replace the spoken word? Why would we use a phone to write errrrr… type to communicate to someone? It is a phone and its supposed to be used to talk, as in actually speak into it and say words to someone on the other end. But we all know texting and emailing from our portable devices has become a way of our lives and we see it as a bit of the norm now. What I am trying to articulate is what happened to calling someone for a quick “hello” or “how are you?”
Tags: cellular, communication, phone, text, texting