Monday Links
Posted on April 20, 2009
Filed Under Uncategorized |
- Time Warner Cable reads the writing on the wall and shelves any plans for metered broadband billing. The thing about a plan that consumers plainly see stinks at the get go rarely gets better with age and metered broadband is just that kind of idea. It’s terrible for consumers and good for Time Warner Cable alone. Good riddance.
- Genetically engineered virus that self assemble into rechargeable batteries.
- Business opportunities in the newspaper industry. All in all this is a good idea but the one component that really caught my eye was micropayments because that is a cornerstone for a new venture that a bunch of big shot newspaper and cable insiders are putting together.
- National Geographic’s Infinite Photograph feature is wicked cool (but I think it makes Firefox go nuts after a while).
- Manipulating the Time 100 list.
- Safety exposes us to risk… could not agree more.
- Enterprise 2.0 and the trough of disillusionment.
- Zero Hedge… the amount of data this guy absorbs and plays back in consolidated form is frightening.
- Google doesn’t talk well with Commodore 64s and why Google Health will ultimately fail.
- The Owen & Payne accounting firm… see how much the Federal deficit you owe.

