Daily Me - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Daily Me is a term popularized by MIT Media Lab founder Nicholas Negroponte to describe a virtual daily newspaper customized for an individual's tastes.
Farhad Manjoo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Daily Me. New York Times ^ Hesse, Monica (April 27, 2008). Truth: Can You Handle It? Washington Post ^ Manjoo, Farhad (2008). True enough: learning to live in a post-fact society.
DailyMe's Blog
Today we are unveiling our latest release of DailyMe, featuring better personalization technology, a new community area and our much awaited behavioral recommendation engine, ...
John the Intern's Turn - the Unofficial Blog of DailyMe
The official "unofficial" blog of DailyMe as seen through the eyes of beloved DailyMe Intern, John. DailyMe combines personalized news, editorialized news and community rated news ...
DailyMe | Facebook
Welcome to the official Facebook Page of DailyMe. Get exclusive content and interact with DailyMe right from Facebook. Join Facebook to create your own Page or to start connecting ...
Eduardo's Blog - the Official Blog of DailyMe
The official blog of DailyMe where we post about new features, corporate updates and everything our audience needs to know. DailyMe combines personalized news, editorialized news ...
DailyMe Inc | Gather
I started DailyMe with Eduardo, our Founder and CEO, back in the day when we shared an 8x8 office rented in the middle of an ISP administrative office, 1 d
dailyme.tv - Press 25 - Einfach.Mobil.TV.
dailyme.tv ist die einfachste Art mobiles TV in Videoqualität zu erleben. Mit dailyme.tv erfolgreiche TV-Formate und beliebte Videocasts tagesaktuell und in bester Qualität auf ...
DailyMe Notes | Facebook
Welcome to the official Facebook Page of DailyMe. Get exclusive content and interact with DailyMe right from Facebook. Join Facebook to create your own Page or to start connecting ...
The Daily Me | American Journalism Review
The Daily Me . Customized online news services allow readers to receive news content tailored to their interests. But do readers risk missing important developments that don't fit ...