Personal information management - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A personal information manager (often referred to as a PIM tool or, more simply, a PIM) is a type of application software that functions as a personal organizer.
Want Me, Want Me - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
... Want Me, Want Me was a song she had already planned for her next album, but she really liked it so she decided to release it as a single. [1] Song information
Information Wants to be Valuable
Information Wants to be Valuable: A Report from the First O'Reilly Perl Conference. by Keith W. Porterfield. The Twilight Zone. Presented for your consideration: a grim scenario of ...
Information Wants to Be Free? - ClickZ
In my last column, I proposed that everyone should pay for sending email. That is, whenever you send an email -- whether you are at work, at home, or at school -- you or your ...
Meatball Wiki: InformationWantsToBeFree
From http://www.anu.edu.au/people/Roger.Clarke/II/IWtbF.html. In fall 1984, at the first Hackers' Conference, I said in one discussion session: "On the one hand information wants ...
Information Wants to be Found - Search Engine Watch (SEW)
A modern paradox: As information becomes more abundant and easier to access, it's often more difficult to find what we're really looking for. That needn't be the case, writes ...
Information wants to be rude - Los Angeles Times
Cyberspace, to its early denizens, was supposed to be a prelapsarian world, free from the taint of commerce and other vices of "meatspace" (as the material world is known), full of ...
Information wants to be free
Information wants to be free -- because it is now so easy to copy and distribute casually -- and information wants to be expensive -- because in an Information Age, nothing is so ...
Information Wants to be Liquid
The Liquid Information project wants to tear down the web and rebuild it in the image of Wikipedia: a free-for-all where readers are writers and no word is sacrosanct. Are they mad
Free = Worthless: Information Can't Be Free | Internet Marketing ...
Oh, the humanity. I owe Chris Anderson an apology for this one. After rereading it this morning, I was horrified. Did I really write this? Don't get me wrong: I do NOT think 'free ...