New fireworks with China’s internet population
New fireworks with China’s internet population.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
New fireworks with China’s internet population.
There is a new entry in Beijing’s 2008 Olympic Games: the internet.
A recent article about hip librarians (and a visit from Gary Price) sent me back to ResourceShelf.com.
MP3s, dishwashers, can openers, and Twitter are examples of "good enough" technologies.
This presentation contains charts on trends in home broadband adoption, focusing on the 2005 to 2007 timeframe.
From blogs on world health care to public radio’s The World, there were many interpretations of last week’s report on China’s internet population.
A recent Minnesota Public Radio show on social networking sites and teens should be of special interest to parents, educators, researchers and anyone interested in the way digital communication is shaping the lives of young people.
The Federal Trade Commission’s Spam Summit was an occasion to celebrate the (limited) success of the CAN-SPAM Act and to discuss the latest criminal threats online.
If today’s essay on China piques your interest, check out some other dispatches from Deborah Fallows.
The typical citizen response to discovering that their computer is part of a botnet: “I thought it was running slow recently.”