Study: Online men are ‘influencers,’ while women are ‘community builders’
Aol and Nielsen identified several trends about the ways men and women interact online. Can you identify with their findings?
Aol and Nielsen identified several trends about the ways men and women interact online. Can you identify with their findings?
April Fools’ Day is just the first of the month. Apparently, no one told these guys.
The results of a recent survey on U.K. Facebook consumption—assembled into an infographic—offer some surprising insights.
Did it bungle its response to the tracking uproar? Who cares—the great white iPhone is finally here! Ahoy, Mobyle Dick!
Want a compelling story for your blog? Don’t count out unskilled writers—employ them! Here are three tips for working with non-writers.
This is what your peers were reading. What did you miss?
Never let a media circus go to waste. Here’s some public relations advice gleaned from the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton.
A service that suggests available domain names, a tool to make maps—MAPS!—a minimalist way to bring the fun back to your Twitter stream, and more.
No. 4 is advertising, according to The Daily Beast, which ranked the majors by number of job opportunities in the field versus pay. What do you think?
Three benefits, four tips, and one indispensible chart about Twitter chats.
Who would be affected the most if Facebook went kaput? No, not teenage girls. Men between the ages of 18 to 34.
‘Rather than run to the PR department’ when the media started reporting on iPhone tracking data, Jobs wanted to get to the bottom of it, he said.
It’s called LetsLunch, and the service recommends other professionals with whom you should share a midday meal.
This isn’t the wackiest story to emerge from Obama’s certificate of live birth—not by a long shot—but it is awfully strange.
A quick roundup on topics you may have missed, but should keep an eye on. OK, two you should know about; the third is dessert.