Recruitment site Jobster publishes a weekly jobs zeitgeist which shows the most popular job types, those that are growing the most and those which are falling in popularity the most. Simple but effective.
Video on phones
Visit the dentist
via Wired News which says research found at least nine skulls with 11 drill holes in a Pakistan graveyard. Doesn’t bear thinking about.
Firefox gains ground
e-week.com Firefox has now past 10% market share (source: Net Applications)
Paid content drops in UK
The AOP Census 2006 shows that for the first time in its four-year history the number of publishers charging for online content has dropped (from 63% in 2005 to 37% in 2006).
“How I Work”
Steve Rubel, inspired by a Forbes series called “How I Work“, decided to write his own. He says he “works Web 2.0 style” and tell you what programs he uses to achieve it.
Mag closes, but brand lives online
Hachette Filipacchi is closing its Ellgirl magazine, according to PaidContent.org, but is increasing the investment in the brand online and in wireless.
Advice for media companies in a Web 2.0 world
PriceWaterhouseCoopers has produced a report, via PaidContent.org, which provides advice to media companies and telcos on how to organise in a Web 2.0 environment. There is a link to download the report.
Google move beyond first base
John Battelle finds some evidence of Google’s plans with Google Base – new interfaces for specific purposes like this one for real estate.
Update: Steve Rubel finds the same for cars.
Most blogged…
The New York Times has redesigned and has included a new feature highlighting the most blogged stories alongside the most emailed and most searched.