• Kanoodle Adds Paid Listings to RSS
    Kanoodle said yesterday that it struck a distribution deal with news aggregator Feedster to sprinkle paid listings in Feedster's feeds of search results.
  • Bikes Bring Internet to Indian Villagers
    For 12-year-old Anju Sharma, hope for a better life arrives in her poor farming village three days a week on a bicycle rickshaw that carries a computer with a high-speed, wireless Internet connection.
  • Campaign URLs: What's the Right Address?
    What's the best way to manage campaign-URL use in broad-based communications to drive maximum brand recall, traffic, and transactions? Though it's critical to develop the right media strategy across all communication forms, what's the best URL form to drive traffic?
  • Mobile Marketing's Red Hot Summer
    From new .MP domain names to wearable devices and astro forecasts, mobile's heating up.
  • Warner's Tryst With Bloggers Hits Sour Note
    Warner Brothers Records pulled out all the stops recently to promote a rock band, the Secret Machines, on the Internet. But there is one stop that might have been better left unpulled.
  • Entertainment World Wary of Microsoft
    CinemaNow Inc., the Internet-based movie service, is a rarity in Hollywood - a company that eagerly embraces Microsoft Corp. technology and relies on it exclusively to transmit, protect and display the movies it rents to customers. Then again, Microsoft is a major investor in the company, which is also owned by independent studio Lions Gate.
  • How che3p Vi3gra is Killing e-publishing
    My name is Paul Carr and I am the editor-in-chief of an email newsletter. No, spare me your well-intentioned pity. I'm all too aware that - like head chefs for McDonald's and senior sales directors for Tena Lady - I'm cursed with having a reasonably cool job title in a terribly embarrassing market sector.
  • Livewire: All-You-Can-Eat Headlines Served Online
    News publishers are experimenting with the simple wonders of Internet headline syndication, taking advantage of a technology trick long popular among online news junkies.
  • An Imperfect Spy Act
    Consumers hate spyware programs that slow their PCs and endanger personal data. So why are Congressional efforts to block the malicious software so unpopular?
  • Rock the Vote Goes IM
    MTV's nonpartisan partner, Rock the Vote, is turning to instant messaging to further its role as a player in this fall's presidential election. All year, Rock the Vote has been trumpeting its goal to get 20 million 18- to 24-year-olds to the polls. Along the way, it has unveiled initiatives like Rock the Mobile Vote, using mobile phones and text messaging to spread the word to young would-be voters about political issues, voter registration and the importance of voting.
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