Dan Bricklin on Rocketboom

I don’t remember seeing this on Memeorandum either. Dan Bricklin on Rocketboom. Fun! You don’t know who Dan Bricklin is? Maybe you should search to find out! He also podcasted the Mass Tech Leadership Council meeting. On there is the guy who started Wikipedia. Don’t know what that is either? It’s time you found out. Ahh, I’m getting smarter again. Just by reading RSS feeds.

  • http://www.bruceelgort.com/ Bruce Elgort

    Rocket Boom – one can only take so much of this…..

  • http://www.bruceelgort.com Bruce Elgort

    Rocket Boom – one can only take so much of this…..

  • met

    Was that THE origami in the video ?

  • met

    Was that THE origami in the video ?

  • met

    oops, wrong place, wrong post.

  • met

    oops, wrong place, wrong post.

  • http://www.upi.com/Hi-Tech/view.php?StoryID=20060306-100550-8028r Ted Smith

    Networking: E-mail as slow as snail mail?
    CHICAGO, March 6 (UPI) — You send a crucial e-mail on a Monday morning, but it doesn’t arrive in the client’s mailbox, across town, until Thursday afternoon. You lose a pending deal. Exasperating? Yes, but increasingly, as a result of the profound demands placed on e-mail network servers, including spam, spyware and viruses, legitimate e-mail messages that should take seconds to get to the intended recipient may take days, experts tell United Press International’s Networking. E-mail delivery, it seems, is now sometimes as slow as the U.S. Postal Service.

    Last week the technology developer MX ToolBox Inc. launched the first ever e-mail performance index, the first index to rate the health and performance of thousands of e-mail systems across the globe, at http://www.mxtoolbox.com/MXWATCH.aspx By Gene Koprowski

  • http://www.upi.com/Hi-Tech/view.php?StoryID=20060306-100550-8028r Ted Smith

    Networking: E-mail as slow as snail mail?
    CHICAGO, March 6 (UPI) — You send a crucial e-mail on a Monday morning, but it doesn’t arrive in the client’s mailbox, across town, until Thursday afternoon. You lose a pending deal. Exasperating? Yes, but increasingly, as a result of the profound demands placed on e-mail network servers, including spam, spyware and viruses, legitimate e-mail messages that should take seconds to get to the intended recipient may take days, experts tell United Press International’s Networking. E-mail delivery, it seems, is now sometimes as slow as the U.S. Postal Service.

    Last week the technology developer MX ToolBox Inc. launched the first ever e-mail performance index, the first index to rate the health and performance of thousands of e-mail systems across the globe, at http://www.mxtoolbox.com/MXWATCH.aspx By Gene Koprowski