April 2008’s Most-Popular links from my link library list: Special section traffic, innovation, front- vs. back-end dev, twitter journalism

I know I haven’t been writing much here in the past few weeks. Hey, that’s why RSS feeds rock — you don’t have to visit a site that isn’t updated just to see it isn’t updated. I hope you’re reading this in your RSS reader. If not, and if you are one of those clicks repeatedly to lots of sites just to see what’s new, I’ve got a song for you…. it goes a little something like this: “Get an arrr-esss-esss reader, baby, get an arrr-esss-esss reader baby, get that reader today.”

That said, this is what people were clicking on off my reading list from April 2008.

  1. 8 reasons why your new special section is doomed to underwhelming traffic
  2. How Strategic Imagination Happens - Harvard Business Online’s Umair Haque: This guy, Umair Haque, has consistently smart-smart-smart insight into the way the internet economy works, and where it’s going.
  3. But who owns Javascript? (front-end vs. back-end development): “In my experience, most in-house web teams basically employ two types of people: designers and developers. Sure, some people call them different things, and there are definitely exceptions, but generally speaking, we’re split into these two camps. For the most part, our technical responsibilities are split up as such: “designers” do the client-side things (HTML, CSS, Javascript, Flash, etc.), and “developers” do the server-side things (PHP, Python, Ruby, Java, .NET, etc.). Somewhere along the line, we decided the gap between front-end and back-end would be a good place to divide up our responsibilities. But is it?”
  4. How We Use Twitter for Journalism - ReadWriteWeb
  5. The Long Tail: Of Fly Eyes And Newspaper Revenues

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