Skip to Content


Public news / April 2007 / SMPR

SMPR

Are the old fashioned press releases still useful or not? An interview with Joe Beaulaurier of PRWeb.

permanent link 12 apr at 14:12 by Alex

There are 2 guest comments so far.

commentat 15:58 on 12 April 2007, Jim wrote:

This is one of the more perceptive and useful pieces on the influence of New Media on the Old that I've read in a while. If you're involved in public communications at all (and everyone on the Web is, after a fashion) it deserves a read. (Plus, it has the merit of brevity.)

commentat 23:34 on 13 April 2007, Ty wrote:

After receiving press releases for a while now subscribed to anything that comes under the radar of "web design". I've really not seen anything of context for months. You're better off viewing the Css galleries, just for example.

Certain people religiously release little tidbits. If you are looking for cutting edge news, you'll likely find the news leaked elsewhere. Stop with the SEO posts man, please.

Add a comment:

(required, non-public)

  |  Chars left: 1000

Keep the comment relevant, constructive and be polite.
A valid email address or URL to your site must be provided, or the comment might get deleted. Content seemed inappropriate or offensive may be edited and/or deleted. Avoid explicit language and words such as "sucks" and "ripoff". For more in-depth discussions use our forum. Email addresses are never displayed. Line breaks and paragraphs are automatically converted - no need to use <p> or <br/>. Quotes & apostrophes are automatically converted to smart punctuation. Be careful when copying and pasting portions of entries or other comments. The following inline HTML elements may be used: <strong><em><pre><q><blockquote><code>. All other code will get removed before posting. Don't forget to close your tags.


Search the archive

Stylegala news archive

Public news archive

News contributors


Features

Stylegala BookStore
The Stylegala BookStore has a massive archive of great books for you as a professional..
Bullet madness
Bullet madness is a list of 200 bullets, arrows and icons uploaded by our users.
CSS Reference
An alphabetical list over the most common CSS1 and CSS2 syntax and properties.

Sponsors

Logo design for $149

Advertise here