Notes on being an amateur sysadmin - one of the unpaid army of crazed enthusiasts who spend a small piece of their lives keeping the world's small networks of PCs and their users in shape.
Joel Spolsky, eloquent proponent of Microsoft's 'rich client' vision of computing, has reluctantly changed his mind.
A Government department pulled hundreds of people together by understanding their needs and helping them get to know each other. What mattered: photos of people's faces. What didn't matter: the technology.
If you're running a business without dedicated IT staffers, your IT systems support will come via another small business person who drives out to you.
If your organisation is sending out email, accept the reality that your recipients are reading it with one finger over the delete key, and 50 other messages in their inbox.
Latest items:
Requirements are real work, episode 3217
Adam Bosworth on the (un)wired home
Run through all we've got.
Web content management's dirtiest secret is that most organisations not only don't need most CMS bells and whistles, but should actively avoid them.
Ovum's Alan Pelz-Sharpe wonders: just how fancy does your Web content management system really need to be?
One book cuts to the heart of the requirements management problem and asks: are your brave enough to do it?
Hidden menus are like hidden road signs: they force you to stop when you'd rather keep going. We examine the weaknesses of pop-up, pull-down and cascading menus.
Business managers can make online projects by accepting the responsibility for their design - or court disaster by letting technologists shape them.
Reputation management has emerged as a core competency at many of the best-known Web sites. Every few months, another tool emerges to separate the good from the indifferent and the bad.
David Siegel led, championed, inspired the Web design industry. Then he found out that users didn't like pretty pages. So he changed his ways.

Shorewalker.com collects together articles and comments about Web site management and strategy. Most began as newspaper articles, written by David Walker for his fortnightly IT column in the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age. More about Shorewalker.com.
You can use David Walker as a consultant to ensure your site reaches its goals.