I grew up in California and Surrey, England. I started college at U.C. Berkeley, and transferred to Claremont McKenna, a tiny college located near Los Angeles, after my freshman year. I majored in economics. I went straight from college to law school at Stanford in 1992, and graduated in 1995.
Senior technology writer
bcaulfield@forbes.net
Stephen L. Baker is a senior writer at BusinessWeek, covering technology. Previously he was a Paris correspondent. Baker joined BusinessWeek in March, 1987, as manager of the Mexico City bureau, where he was responsible for covering Mexico and Latin America. He was named Pittsburgh bureau manager in 1992. Before BusinessWeek, Baker was a reporter for the El Paso Herald-Post. Prior to that, he was chief economic reporter for The Daily Journal in Caracas, Venezuela. Baker holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Wisconsin and a master’s from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
Om Malik, Founder and Senior Writer. Before launching his own publishing venture, Om was a senior writer for Business 2.0 magazine covering telecom and broadband stories. For more info on Om, see the Om Malik extended bio.
tech writer, web 2.0
This guy writes about the Web 2.0 space and new, cutting-edge web apps. I’m not sure how widely read he is, but he’s a good conduit for us, I believe.
editor-in-chief
Probably too macro for us to target, but he could get involved if we take off. This is one off the two guys that interviewd the Zoho CEO a couple of months back on video
Robert Scoble (born January 18, 1965) is an American blogger, technical evangelist, and author. Scoble is best known for his popular blog, Scobleizer, which came to prominence during his tenure as a technical evangelist at Microsoft. He is married to Maryam Ghaemmaghami Scoble. He has two sons, Patrick, from a previous marriage, and Milan. He currently works for Fast Company as a video blogger. He is also the co-author of Naked Conversations: How Blogs are Changing the Way Businesses Talk with Customers with Shel Israel.
http://webworkerdaily.com (a GigaOm network compamy)
Jenneth wrote about killer applications for the Blackberry, and included Jott as one of them. Do we still have plans for Jott integration?
Take note: academic note-taking and annotation behavior Cunningham, S.J.; Knowles, C. Digital Libraries, 2005. JCDL apos;05. Proceedings of the 5th ACM/IEEE-CS Joint Conference on Volume , Issue , 7-11 June 2005 Page(s):374 – 374 Digital Object Identifier 10.1145/1065385.1065477 Summary:Note taking is a technique for capturing information about an event or an experience in a form that has meaning to the note taker. This paper examines note taking in academic conferences, as a first step to designing tools to share notes (where personal notes/annotations can be useful to others). Three data gathering techniques were employed: participant observation (40 hours at four conferences), 20 semi-structured interviews, and analysis of 8 sets of paper and electronic notes
Random blogger – had a post up about wanting to see an Evernote iPhone app, so I contacted her
agd.tanya@gmail.com
http://tatianamik.wordpress.com/about/
“The media used in taking notes varied widely, from scrap paper to conference programmes to conference proceedings, and electronically from PDAs and cellphones to laptops. The flexibility of paper is currently not matched in any digital note-taking devices, particularly in supporting jotting down figures or taking notes that do not march linearly down the page. A categorization of notes by purpose or motivation revealed a diversity of behavior. Relatively few notes simply summarized a talk or paper, unless the attendee’s attention was wandering – in which case summarizing helped the attendee to focus. Instead, notes included intellection reactions (such as ideas for further research), reminders intended for the attendee or others (such as notes to forward a paper to a colleague), or completely off-topic (doodles, calculation of conference expenses, and ‘paper conversations’ with other attendees).”
orliy1@gmail.com
Orli publishes the blog go2web2.0 (blog.go2web20.net).
Orli had a problem with twitter which caused her to delete her Twitter account. This is the type of person who would get value out of The Time Log.
I emailed Orli and invited her to check out The Time Log on 6/16/2008.
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