article thumbnail

Use TechSoup's Content for Free!

Tech Soup

It was founded in 2001 by Harvard law professor and activist Lawrence Lessig. Any organization or individual can publish just about any copyrighted content under a Creative Commons license, whether that content is a book, an audio file, a video clip, software, or any other creative work. That includes your organization. Image 1 : C! /

article thumbnail

Nonprofits Live: Online Collaboration on October 25

Tech Soup

Pierre Khawand has more than twenty years of experience in the software industry. He founded People OntheGo in 2001 to enable business professionals to communicate and collaborate more effectively using leading edge technologies. Ken serves on the Circle of Stewards for The Bay Area Society for Organizational Learning.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

One Nonprofit’s Road to Microsoft Windows Happiness

Tech Soup

this mostly translated into: painfully long start up times (followed by another eyeball-gougingly long delay before staff could even start working), networking and incompatibility issues with smartphones and new software installations with a dollop of potential virus and malware threats layered on top. For HOPE, Inc., For HOPE, Inc.,

article thumbnail

First Screenshot of New Office for Mac Interface

Tech Soup

The Formatting Palette, which was introduced in Office 2001 for Mac, had over the course of a decade been stretched beyond its originally intended purposes. Tags: Office & Productivity Software. And as we looked ahead toward the next decade, we knew it was time to take the venerable Office for Mac user interface to the next level.

article thumbnail

Nonprofit Technology News for September 2013

Tech Soup

Apparently it all started in 2001 with the IBM Watchpad. This new application will replace expensive screen reader software that has trouble with some websites. Security device. Find more on this in ZDnet’s “ The smartwatch worth waiting for.” ” Their history of smartwatches is also good.