Topic: James Fallows
"Newspapers never made money on 'news.' Serious reporting, say from Afghanistan, has simply never paid its way. " That's what Google's chief economist, Hal Varian, told James Fallows in an interview for a great recent piece Fallows did on the future ...
Author James Fallows has a long Atlantic feature story on why he believes Google (GOOG) is sincere in wanting to save journalism from its business models. "We have no horse in that race or particular model in mind," Krishna Bharat, one of ...
James Fallows recently returned to the U.S. after three years in China. Further, Fallows is all in favor of China continuing its rapid economic development - this helps nudge China to take a more benign, business-minded approach to the world. Fallows also ...
James Fallows recently returned to the U.S. after three years in China. Further, Fallows is all in favor of China continuing its rapid economic development - this helps nudge China to take a more benign, business-minded approach to the world. Fallows also ...
James Fallows has a detailed comparison of the Nook and Kindle. One interesting angle mentioned by Fallows is that Google (GOOG) books is making its existing online (out of copyright) books available in ePub format, thus increasing the content available for Nook ...
The Olympics are 24 days away, but for the locals the games have already begun.. We're told that on 1 July, some 300,000 heavily polluting trucks, most of which roll into the city at night, were banned from Beijing.. Beijing ...
The WSJ's Rick Carew reports today that the Chinese government might prevent the latest proposed injection of Chinese capital into a troubled U.S. institution. For a good backgrounder on where the Chinese government is coming from, it's worth checking ...
The butler is dead, the name has been tweaked, but executives at Ask. Just this week, the portal Lycos announced that it had chosen Ask. com to replace Microsoft for its natural search listings and Google for sponsored listings. Once the perennial ...
The butler is dead, the name has been tweaked, but executives at Ask. Just this week, the portal Lycos announced that it had chosen Ask. com to replace Microsoft for its natural search listings and Google for sponsored listings. Once the perennial ...