Remove Article Remove Design Remove HTML Remove Media
article thumbnail

Mark Suster’s Advice To Emerging Entrepreneurs – “Do Not Do, As I Have Done”

InfoChachkie

free weekly Infochachkie articles! ” Clearly, the right time to trumpet your product is when it can live up to the media hype. Learn HTML. By focusing on what he would do differently now, he was able to humbly convey a number of impactful lessons to a captivated audience of budding entrepreneurs. ” 5. .”

article thumbnail

How brain-amputated developers created the social media plague

SoCal Delicious

Sebastian’s Pamphlets If you’ve read my articles somewhere on the Internet, expect something different here. It’s Ok to grab the page title and a summary from a META element like “description&# (or up to 250 characters from an article’s first paragraph) to craft links, for example - but not more!

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Assignmint: Freelance Work Available | Founder Interview, The Future of Journalism & The LA Startup Scene

Tech Zulu Event

For all those who want to talk about the fragmentation of media and the models for journalism is in trouble; it’s actually not. I spent more time organizing my tax forms, keeping them safe, getting invoices together, getting invoice templates, then getting them out there and tracking down my payment for writing the article.

Journal 90
article thumbnail

The first 6 steps to homegrowing basic startup analytics | Futuristic Play by @Andrew_Chen

SoCal Delicious

Analysis on viral marketing, user experience, game design, and online ads. Design-wise, here are some things to consider: What’s your “event&# hierarchy and what level of granularity do you want? Typically I would start out with a series of pretty plain HTML pages using tables that just print out SQL queries.

Startup 29
article thumbnail

What the Past Can Tell Us About the Future of Social Networking

Both Sides of the Table

By the mid-nineties we had the World Wide Web, which gave us a standard way to publish web pages using HTML. MySpace was: scantily dressed, teenaged, middle-America, design chaos and on ad steroids. On NY Times I’m getting recommended articles by friends and I didn’t explicitly turn this feature on.