In the streets of Cairo, a local wedding photographer shows the people behind the riots. This guy should definitively turn to photo journalism.

More images by Timothy Kaldas on the protests in Cairo.
Flickr having a look at the riots in Egypt.
Wer von uns hatte nicht schon eine Produktidee und träumte davon, diese auf den Markt zu bringen? Die Jungs von Studio Neat erzählen in diesem Artikel wie sie in fünf Monaten ohne vorherige Erfahrung ihr Produkt “from idea to market” gebracht haben. Spannende Lektüre, auch wenn man (wie ich) keinen Glif besitzt.
Zur statistischen Signifikanz der Daten meint Dan Zarrella in seinem Artikel:
The infographic below represents some of the data I’ve analyzed and published on my blog over the last year. It seeks to answer some of the most important questions about Facebook marketing with real science.
…was auch immer das genau heissen mag. Sollten die Daten Hand und Fuss haben, sind seine Erkenntnisse aber durchaus interessant:
Besides telling me a lot of stuff I already knew, this is actually a nice idea by Paul Armstrong:
People often ask me how I would save the publishing and news industries. I always say the same thing – create a relationship with me. Forget an app that gives me the news, instead make an app that is an alarm clock that, when I wake up, gives me a copy of a newspaper – say, “I” or Paper.li – which is relevant to me and will work on the underground or places with no reception. Add in a shopping list of things I need to buy when I’m around town.
Put another way, be a life resource, not a news one. I want, nay, I need both. I suspect the first to harness social loyalty (ie. the check-in mixed with the ‘Like’ and Groupon or a combination thereof) will be the winner. (via this article)
…Tages Anzeiger? NZZ? Blick? Anyone?
P.S.: Nope, I’m not in the daily news business and actually we (people and fashion magazines) still do quite well on paper. ;)