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Webdesign »

New York Times Chairman Arthur Sulzberger Jr. appears close to announcing that the paper will begin charging for access to its website, according to people familiar with internal deliberations. After a year of sometimes fraught debate inside the paper, the choice for some time has been between a Wall Street Journal-type pay wall and the metered system adopted by the Financial Times, in which read

 


New York Times Finally Decides To Add Online Paywall, Announcement In Weeks
The 'metered' model allows a visitor to come to the site and get a certain amount of articles for free. After the visitor uses up his allotment, then he's asked to pay for more access.

Rumors »

The content of Fingerworks.com has been removed this week after remaining online for nearly 5 years after the acquisition of the company by Apple. The removal seems to correspond with the impending announcement of an Apple tablet later this month. One possible explanation is that Apple will finally be implementing many of the same advanced multi-touch keyboard gestures that were originally pionee

 


Webdesign »

What do you think? When you look at your blog’s design, does it reflect the priority you want to give to commenting vs re-tweeting and sharing or have the big buttons muscled in and taken over?

 


Webdesign »

Moving beyond clickstream analysis is critical to win at web analytics. Competitive Intelligence, User Testing, Landing Page Optimization and Statistical analysis are your ally.

 


Webdesign »

AdSense publishers in North America and Europe can now allow ads from Google-certified ad networks to appear on their pages. These ads will compete with AdWords ads, and will help publishers earn the most from every ad impression by increasing competition. At the same time, publishers will have full control over which ads and ad networks can appear on their pages.

 


Editorials »

Watching the trends in technology news publications is a lot like watching the seasons. It's fairly predictable, and has its ebb and flow. The more sites and stories you read, the greater the value, and the more "liquid" the pace seems to be, as spikes and valleys are smoothed. But no more evident is the acceleration clear from one week to the next as the week of CES, the Consumer Electronics Sho

 


Hardware »

Neowin has a quick video and some screenshots that show the Pegatron slate running Windows 7. Video available.

 


Manufacturers »



Microsoft's demonstration Wednesday of "Slate PCs" made by HP, Pegatron, and Archos is by no means its first attempt to help develop such a form factor. The Slate PC seems to be identical to a Tablet with only the name changed. In fact, the Tablet PC has long been a pet project for Microsoft founder Bill Gates, who showed the first Tablet PC prototype in 2000 at the now-defunct Comdex trade show