30 March, 2012 by BT Featured Staff Comments Off
Become Your Own Techmeme: Curating Big Data in the Cloud
1 February, 2012 by BT Featured Staff Comments Off
HootSuite Now Ties in Digg, InboxQ and Trendspottr
1 February, 2012 by BT Featured Staff Comments Off
HootSuite Now Ties in Digg, InboxQ and Trendspottr
20 December, 2011 by digimarket.net News And Resource Directory- Latest Links Comments Off
I’m Jealous of WordPress for Android 2.0
WordPress has released version 2.0 of its Android app for mobile blogging, and as a WordPress for iOS user, I am jealous. The new app launches with a screen that covers just about every first action a mobile blogger needs.
20 December, 2011 by BT Featured Staff Comments Off
I’m Jealous of WordPress for Android 2.0
WordPress has released version 2.0 of its Android app for mobile blogging, and as a WordPress for iOS user, I am jealous. The new app launches with a screen that covers just about every first action a mobile blogger needs.
18 December, 2011 by BT Featured Staff Comments Off
Top 10 Feed & RSS Technologies of 2011
News and activity feeds are more alive today than ever before, even as engagement with their simplest format, Really Simple Syndication (RSS), appears to be waning. What were the Top 10 Most Awesome RSS & Feed Products of 2011? We offer our list below. Though some of these weren't born in the past year, all of them have made a big impact and are thoroughly awesome.
18 December, 2011 by BT Featured Staff Comments Off
Top 10 Feed & RSS Technologies of 2011
News and activity feeds are more alive today than ever before, even as engagement with their simplest format, Really Simple Syndication (RSS), appears to be waning. What were the Top 10 Most Awesome RSS & Feed Products of 2011? We offer our list below. Though some of these weren't born in the past year, all of them have made a big impact and are thoroughly awesome.
31 October, 2011 by digimarket.net News And Resource Directory- Latest Links Comments Off
Contently Provides An Open Marketplace for Writers and Publishers To Connect
31 October, 2011 by BT Featured Staff Comments Off
Contently Provides An Open Marketplace for Writers and Publishers To Connect
12 September, 2011 by BT Featured Staff Comments Off
Ooyala Now Allows Publishers To Sell And Rent Premium Video On Facebook

Video publishing platform Ooyala is adding a social component to its videos today with the launch of Ooyala Social, a new HD-quality Social TV experience that brings video sharing and and viewing to Facebook.
20 April, 2009 by James McBride
The New OpenX Ad Market
Image via CrunchBaseOpenX the large neutral online ad server for website publishers, recently announced OpenX Market, an independent marketplace which allows publishers the ability to directly connect with advertisers in order to sell their ad inventory. Similarly, the service also helps advertisers (either directly or through ad agencies) access targeted ad inventory.
Publishers using the system can define minimum prices for their ad impressions and the OpenX Market then runs a real-time auction among advertisers for each impression. If the winning bid from the auction is higher than the publisher-set minimum price, the higher paying ad is served and the publisher makes more money. If the winning bid is less, the publisher’s original ad runs.
Advertisers have access to OpenX’s large pool of over 150,000 publisher websites and OpenX publishers as well as non-OpenX publishers are invited to participate in the market. Advertisers can also set targeting parameters on ad space, including user frequency, contextual categories, and technical/browser settings. Also, version 2.8 of the OpenX Ad Server directly integrates with OpenX Market letting publishers running the ad server easily participate in the Market via a plugin.
Check out addition information on OpenX at TechCrunch.
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10 February, 2009 by admin
Micropayments For Digital Products?
Back when the Internet was young there were all sorts of schemes to monetize content and sell digital goods. One of the most talked about was the concept of micro-payments, where users would be charged incrementally based on how much content they consumed.
The idea never really caught on. And ever since, micro-payments have remained on the back burner for a host of reasons, including lame technology, lack of interest from big media and the difficulty convincing consumers to pay for info in a “nickel and dime” fashion.
But content has a long history of being paid for by end-users (magazines, books, etc.). And in today’s challenging ad environment, coupled with the realization that almost all media is (or will soon be) digital and interactive, publishers are again looking at micro-payments as a way to shore up diminishing bottom lines.
SILICON ALLEY INSIDER had an interesting piece yesterday on a number of media veterans who’ve come around to the conclusion that some type micro-payment solution has to be included in the mix—as well as a number of other observers who think it will never happen.
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- Micropayments, Reimagined (fimoculous.com)
- Blogonomics: The End of Micropublishing? (portfolio.com)
- Scrape, Scrape, Scrape, Let’s All Scrape Our Way to Profit! (centernetworks.com)
- Paying for News (portfolio.com)
- Please pay us for our news – please? (mathewingram.com)
- Walter Isaacson Is Dead Wrong About The Future Of Newspapers (stoweboyd.com)
- How Micropayments Can Work (newspaperdeathwatch.com)
- Should the New York Times Charge For its Website? [Newspapers] (gawker.com)



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