From David Ogilvy's Ogilvy on Advertising (a book that is also mentioned elsewhere on this blog): "The consumer is not a moron, she is your wife." (via)
Plasq has produced a powerful piece of software for sharing screenshots from your Mac; Skitch. If you're a subscriber of my Flickr photos, you'll know that I post a few screenshots among my photos, but often it is quite frankly a tedious process, especially if you ...
Not sure if I like the term, but Slidecasting sure does look promising. I have been missing this feature so many times! (via: Ross)
About a month ago we launched the danish primeministers blog. I had no idea the danish press would think of it as such a big story as they did. It got frontpage media coverage for serveral days and danish newspaper Nyhedsavisen wrote about five articles about it. The ...
Tomorrow I go on vacation. I am going to Norway. Around 10 days in a far out cabin by myself. Without electricity or wifi, but with a handful of books and a whole lot of silence. Exciting. I thought I'd share which books I'm taking with me, primarily because I need some pointers on which ones to start with. I am pretty sure I'm not going to finish them all, but I have to at least read around a thousand pages. I can't see why not.
Two of my favorite british bloggers Johnnie Moore and Dave Snowden recently blogged about Deloitte's Little Blue Book. A book given to US employees, containing so-called Deloitte values and beliefs. Pretty interesting (and tragicomical) seeing organizations in the 21st century making ...
Times are really exciting at the moment. Not just because of the fact vacation is evidently soon, but also because Connecta is currently at an important turning point. It has now been about two years since Hans Henrik and I started solving tasks for various clients. We have ...
My blogging activities have now been resumed after a one-year hiatus. This time I'll try doing it in English, with the hope of a much broader readership. "Heute denken, morgen fertig" is a quote by the german artist Martin Kippenberger. A quote that very well describes my attitude towards practice ...
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