An interesting, brief article about the Washington Post's dev. team.
I've found TimeSpace too confusing the few times I've tried it, but it's a neat idea. Megan Taylor explains more.
The Washington Post will follow you around the web, looking over your shoulder and telling you what they think. Creepy or cool?
"And yet “The Robert Wone Stabbing” is an amateurish stumble, an obvious mismatch of medium and message, a squandering of scarce newsroom resources that delivers very little benefit to the community and creates zero business value." - ouch. And yet we hav
Doug writes: "The publishing industry seems to think it is going to force people to do its bidding. No longer. They are like water and will seek their own level. Very little of what we do is so essential to running their lives that they could not survive
The Washington Post on Wednesday is unveiling a new mobile version of its Web site as it seeks to catch up to the competition in the mobile arena and exploit a rare area of promise for newspapers.
Dying is easy. Comedy is hard. Milbank and Cillizza should be ashamed of their performances in this shoddy production.
"The Washington Post will launch a new $1.99 iPhone app today providing access to the site's mobile content online and offline for one year."
"The Washington Post has an iPad app, and it's much better than the iPhone program I panned in March.
That's good, inasmuch as I work here and want my employer to do well.
But the Post app -- coming months after the iPad debuts of such other newspapers
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