One CMS for intranet and website?
Should you pick a single CMS for both your intranet and website, or should you keep the two separate and select two different platforms? It’s a timeless and legitimate question with no obvious wrong or right answer.
Should you pick a single CMS for both your intranet and website, or should you keep the two separate and select two different platforms? It’s a timeless and legitimate question with no obvious wrong or right answer.
Online privacy is not just for wonks any more. Lots of people say its important to them — especially when researchers come asking.
The European Union wants to replace a mishmash of national laws on data protection with one bloc-wide reform, updating laws put in place long before Facebook and other social networking sites even existed.
People working in the web industries want to know what’s ahead.
Maximize use of open social software, imitate what works for Facebook, and other expert advice from top social media maven.
The official release of jQuery Mobile 1.0 was recently announced, and this tutorial will provide you with an overview of how this popular framework can assist you in your cross-platform and web based app development!
Given the fact that lots of people spend significant time in traveling, there will be rapid growth of social media sites being accessed from mobile devices. Here, we talk about other predictions for Facebook, Google+, and other social media platforms
Sure, teenagers spend a lot of time on YouTube, but did you know that three-quarters of business executives watch work-related online videos weekly? Or that 73% of U.S. companies now use social media for marketing (though the figure varies widely based on size of company)?
The Internet is everywhere. On your computer at home or work, in kiosks on the streets or on your mobile phones.
The OpenSocial approach to defining social software standards has the backing of Jive, IBM, and others–and the scorn of upstarts like Yammer.
As occupy, socent and the socmed savvy socialists sharpen their pitchforks and coil up the rope, I rest secure in the knowledge that here, in a friend’s house on the coast north of Byron Bay, it’s too windy for the blazing fires of indignation to stay alight for long.
According to a time use survey compiled by comScore Media Metric, the average American spends 33.9 hours on the Internet every week. Depending on age and other demographics, this number can double! And for those lucky individuals whose occupations rely primarily on computers: the Internet commands their lives and they are never not connected.