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Mark Gibbs shares Web site tips and provides advice on getting the most out of your apps.

Free e-mail newsletter for Web applications news and resources from Network World.
Making gifting easier
01/07/09
Here we are once again, in the season of giving and getting and so our thoughts turn to visions of sugar plum fairies and e-commerce.
Yammer, Twitter with muscles and brains
12/17/08
If there's one type of service that the Web really makes effective, it's collaboration systems. The combination of (theoretically) ubiquitous access with multiple additional communications channels (SMS, IM, etc.) makes the potential for integrating workgroups enormous.
A free Web chat service
12/15/08
If you are lucky there will come a point when you need to engage with your Web site's audience in a more real time manner. This could be for social purposes or, in a commercial setting, doing something like answering customer service queries.
An easy way to start and run a forum
12/10/08
There are many reasons to start a forum. You might, for example, want to engage the attendees of a planned meeting to set the agenda or use a forum to support a project. Whatever the purpose there's a lot of platforms for forums and one that I like because it is so easy to use is Lefora.
Databases disguised as lists
12/08/08
There are a number of things that make us human - things like the need for company, our aggression, and our drive to build things. Along with those attributes comes another: The need to keep lists. Of all of modern man's drives, list keeping is one of the most powerful.
Web video delivery with The FeedRoom
12/03/08
Now that the Internet has become "beefy" enough to support the delivery of "serious" video content - that is, content that is at a high enough frame rate and resolution to actually look good - there are an increasing number of Web video service companies competing in the enterprise business market.
Political activism for all
12/01/08
In these politically charged times the Web has become as important as television or the newspapers in shaping opinion as well as delivering facts, rumors, and, it must be admitted, disinformation (although the Web isn't unique amongst media channels in that regard).
Now the video camera lies
11/24/08
The adage that the "camera never lies" is now well-known to be pure fiction and indeed anyone who knows anything about the art of photography will be fully aware that the camera has almost never told the truth!
The future of behavioral marketing
11/19/08
I've known Jim Sterne for about 500 years (that's Internet years) and he's one of the smartest, most insightful gurus on the topic of online metrics and marketing. At our last lunch a few weeks ago, these lunches are infrequent as Jim spends most of his life on an aircraft (his air miles would probably allow for a two week stay on the International Space Station), we got to talking about the future of behavioral marketing and I persuaded him, via a head lock, to put his 50,000 foot view (much like his normal travel view) on paper. Er, in bits. Whatever. Here's his take:
Instant URL instrumentation
11/17/08
Instrumenting your Web content so you can determine what people are responding to is a big undertaking. And if you are in, say, the marketing department and you want to send out a newsletter and get some kind of real idea about whether your readers "click through" you may find that the Web guys can't move fast enough because of their workload.
The quest for the perfect Content Management System
11/12/08
As the Web has grown, the problem of content management seems to have absorbed more time and energy than even the effort required to create actual content. As a consequence the quest for the perfect Content Management System (CMS) has become high on the list of many corporations.
What's on the mind of Twitter users?
11/10/08
I'm still fascinated by the ecosystem that surrounds Twitter - a constellation of services often referred to as the "Twitterverse."
Stickam and the new face of broadcasting
11/05/08
Of the many things that the 'Net has transformed, the world of broadcasting is the one most profoundly affected. Driven by the rise of blogging, the migration of television to the Internet, and the explosion of YouTube, the control of what constitutes broadcasting has moved from the tender care of big media to the egalitarian chaos of the public.
RoboForm impresses as a Web password manager for Windows
11/03/08
I have more than 300 accounts on online services. Some I use frequently, such as my hosting service provider account or Gmail, while many more I use rarely, if at all. The problem is where to keep all of this critical private information much of which I'm likely to forget. Many years ago I discovered what I think is one of the best and most useful utilities for managing passwords: Siber Systems' RoboForm.
TimeBridge is way cool scheduling
10/29/08
I've written about scheduling services several times in this newsletter and in my Network World Gearhead column and, guess what - In this issue I have another entrant into the scheduling market: TimeBridge. What impressed me is that TimeBridge definitely takes the crown of "most polished" in its category.
Social networkers Flock to new version
10/27/08
I first wrote about the Flock browser in the Network World Web Applications Alert newsletter in April last year and the company has just released Version 2.0, that adds to its list of impressive features.
New York Times gives away their data with an API
10/22/08
It's one thing to give away your product, but quite another to give it away with the full knowledge that someone else might use it in a way or for a reason that you haven't thought of. That rather goes against the grain of old school marketers.
Xoopit makes Gmail even better
10/20/08
I had originally outsourced my e-mail service because the mail service that came with my Web hosting account had no spam filtering. This arrangement worked well enough, but then along came Google's Gmail.
Issue 1,000! Social networking becomes the Web
10/15/08
Welcome to the 1,000th issue of the Web Applications Alert newsletter! It's amazing to think how far we've come with Web stuff in the almost 10 years that have elapsed since this newsletter started.
Greasemonkey and meta-analysis
10/13/08
If you've not come across Greasemonkey before and you're at all geeky you need to check it out. Greasemonkey is a Firefox browser add-on that allows you to use scripting in JavaScript to modify and manipulate the contents of Web pages.
Surf Canyon improves search...really
10/08/08
Just when you might have foolishly thought that the world of online searching couldn't produce yet another enhancement along comes Surf Canyon. Need I mention that that this software is in [drum roll please], beta?
Invite with Phonevite
10/06/08
The idea that most people are on e-mail and that they actually read their e-mail and, given those predicates, are organized enough to schedule something based on a message is still, sadly, fiction.
IE under other browsers!
10/01/08
Very often when you're testing Web content you'll want to test what a page looks like and how it works under multiple browsers. If you, like me, prefer Firefox, then launching and switching to Internet Explorer is a total pain.
TripIt: Your personal travel assistant
09/29/08
I am not a happy traveler. I have friends who treat travel as a great adventure and love every minute of their experiences, but not I. For me travel is a means to an end, something to be endured. There was a time - back in the 1980's - when travel was still reasonably civilized but now we have to tolerate endless queues, get crappy in-flight service (certain airlines now plan to even charge for pillows!), and if we're really lucky, have the TSA treat us like criminals, confiscate our laptops on a whim, and demand that we surrender our shampoo.
Crowdsourcing spin detection
09/24/08
Over the course of this seemingly endless, Bataan Death March-esque, election season even the most innocent and trusting members of the public have come to notice the deliberate and outrageous spin doctoring both parties are engaged in (though from my viewpoint the Republicans seem to be doing more of it and better than the Democrats).

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Mark Gibbs is a consultant, author, journalist, columnist and blogger.

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