
Will Schwalbe left his job as senior vice president and editor in chief of a book publishing company to do a New Media startup. He also speaks frequently about email and information overload. Previously, he was a journalist, writing articles for such publications as The New York Times, the South China Morning Post, Insight for Asian Investors, Ms. Magazine, and Business Traveller Asia. His website is www.thinkbeforeyousend.com."
• When should you email, and when should you call, fax, or just show up?• What is the crucial–and most often overlooked–line in an email?• What is the best strategy when you send (in anger or error) a potentially career-ending electronic bombshell?Enter Send. Whether you email just a little or never stop, here, at last, is an authoritative and delightful audiobook that shows how
by David Shipley
by David Shipley
Where are we as people going and how are we going to get there? Scientifically speaking we are doomed. It may take a million, a billion, or even several billion years but eventually the collection of knowledge and all the great things that people have been doing since they showed up on earth will be gone.Does it have to be that way? The characters in this book may hav
by David Shipley
Where are we as people going and how are we going to get there? Scientifically speaking we are doomed. It may take a million, a billion, or even several billion years but eventually the collection of knowledge and all the great things that people have been doing since they showed up on earth will be gone.Does it have to be that way? The characters in this book may hav
by David Shipley
Dinosaurs had an unbelievably long run. More importantly, there has been no indication that dinosaurs were in trouble when a meteor the size of Mt. Everest decided to hit just off the coast of what is now the Yucatan Peninsula. This book does not examine why the dinosaurs were successful except in the relationship of what humans do. The book looks at various area such as nature, industrialization,
by David Shipley
As a child, David’s father told him fantastical stories about his wartime adventures. How he’d learned to ski in the Bavarian alps; how he’d avoided certain capture and possible death by posing as an aristocratic German officer; how he’d fallen head over heels in love with a German “fräulein”. He thought they were just entertaining bedtime stories, only finding out after his father's death that th