According to a recent survey in North America by Osterman Research, 52% of respondents said half their work email was sent internally.
Lean across the desk? Nope, send an email, instead. The reliance on the medium and the speed with which we've come to rely on email is truly amazing. So the fax is relegated for contracts and other documents that need signatures, but for how long? You can already digitally sign email, although the process is complicated and expensive...for the moment.
Until recently Wi-Fi has meant enabling PDAs and laptops to go wirefree. That's all changing with the new breed of home entertainment centres that are using wireless' ability to shift bits without wires to the maximum.
It's official. From October all unsolicited email in the EU is illegal. No, really, it's true. Well, kind of. In reality legitimate companies need to give the customer an option to subscribe and also be clear about what they're going to receive.
According to a recent US survey of home users, nearly 40% are interested in having anti-spam software or services to protect their inbox. It's not difficult to empathise with this view and not surprising that AOL and MSN have both recently offered new anti-spam tools.
The research also threw up some other interesting titbits...entrepreneurs and visionary ISPs take note:
Good news for the mobile phone industry, it looks like mobile phone masts aren't destroying our grey matter, at least according to this article in Silicon.com.
Maybe it's just the other person shouting that makes the side of my head heat up when I'm on my mobile.
Chinwag has been asked to help with the Comic Relief 'Viral Challenge', a great competition for the great and the good of the new media world to put their wits to the test on behalf of a good cause. The shortlisted entries will appear on Comic Relief's Red Nose Day website in the next few days.
It's tricky being a publisher, particularly if you're an online specialist. In between worrying about advertising and sponsorship revenues, it's time to fit in another headache. Defamation. Libel.
An Australian court ruling reported in the Media Guardian and elsewhere, could change the face of publishing on the Web.
If this were a TV show, it'd be called something like 'When Direct Marketers Go Bad'. I'm talking about a website called No More AOL CDs, which I got told about this morning (thanks, Olly).
The latest edition of Iconocast, the San Francisco-based trendwatching newsletter asks whether marketing effectiveness, regardless of media, is dropping. Common sense dictates that with the plethora of media opportunities available, we're all being exposed by so many marketing messages that it's not surprising we're ignoring more and more of them.