About
RAKESH AGRAWAL
I am Senior Director of Product at Audible.
I have been designing and marketing Internet services since 1993. I have worked at Tellme, AOL Search, uReach Technologies, washingtonpost.com and startribune.com.
On Twitter
Tweets by rakeshlobsterContact
-
Recent Posts
- Rakesh’s travel secrets for the holidays, 2024 edition
- Airbnb’s changes don’t go far enough
- Rakesh’s travel secrets for the holidays, 2023 edition
- Thoughts on living and dying
- A finance guide for millionaires and billionaires
- Rakesh’s travel secrets for your holiday travel
- Lobsterclass – free classes on product management
- Getting down to numbers: quantitative research
- Pricing the COVID-19 vaccine
- Favorite things, day 1: podcasts
Top Posts
- Rakesh's travel secrets for the holidays, 2024 edition
- Airbnb's changes don't go far enough
- Rakesh's travel secrets for the holidays, 2023 edition
- Thoughts on living and dying
- Rakesh Agrawal disambiguation
- A finance guide for millionaires and billionaires
- Rakesh’s travel secrets for your holiday travel
- Lobsterclass - free classes on product management
- Getting down to numbers: quantitative research
- Pricing the COVID-19 vaccine
January 2026 M T W T F S S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Meta
Pages
Category Archives: newspapers
Occasional reader – Airport security, future of journalism, working with Yahoo!
Some interesting reads from the past couple of weeks: The Airport Security Follies (New York Times blog) – Pilot Patrick Smith takes a look at the idiocy of our airport screening processes. Smith argues (and I fully agree) that airport … Continue reading
Posted in airlines, journalism, media, newspapers, reader, social networking, travel, web 2, web 2.0, weekly reader, yahoo
Comments Off on Occasional reader – Airport security, future of journalism, working with Yahoo!
The Post packs in the Pulitzers
The Washington Post racked up some very impressive results today, winning six Pulitzer prizes, a record for The Post. The winning stories included an expose on miserable conditions at Walter Reed, coverage of the Virginia Tech shootings and reporting on … Continue reading
Posted in journalism, media, newspapers
3 Comments
Nats + flickr + PicLens = wow!
Check out the great pictures on flickr from opening night at the Nats’ new stadium. This crowdsourced collection is much more captivating than the skeletal slideshow at washingtonpost.com. For best effect, install the PicLens Firefox extension. See also: Flickr vs. … Continue reading
Posted in flickr, journalism, media, newspapers, photography
Comments Off on Nats + flickr + PicLens = wow!
Ho`omaika`i Honolulu Advertiser
The Honolulu Advertiser has done an absolutely terrific job with its saturation coverage of the abrupt shutdown of Aloha Airlines. The coverage is exactly what local papers should be doing on big local stories. In addition to in-depth news stories, … Continue reading
Posted in journalism, media, newspapers, travel
Comments Off on Ho`omaika`i Honolulu Advertiser
Occasional reader – Hulu, Tellme, slum tourism, layoffs
Some interesting reads from the past couple of weeks: Hulu: Great Product, Still Screwed (Silicon Alley Insider) – The much-hyped video site from NBC and News Corp. is now out of beta. Hulu offers free access to full episodes from … Continue reading
Posted in journalism, media, newspapers, reader, travel, video, weekly reader
Comments Off on Occasional reader – Hulu, Tellme, slum tourism, layoffs
Trying new ways to cover fires
Crises force people to think differently. Faced with a rapidly moving story, media outlets in Southern California have done an outstanding job in adopting Web 2.0 tools to keep readers informed during the tragedy. SignOnSanDiego, the Web site of the … Continue reading
Posted in geotagging, journalism, maps, media, newspapers, web 2, web 2.0
2 Comments
Forgetting our freedoms
Very few occupations are constitutionally protected. Journalism is one of them. The first amendment says: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the … Continue reading
Posted in fun, journalism, media, newspapers, random
Comments Off on Forgetting our freedoms
What’s the most screwed up media business?
Among television, movies, newspapers and music, which industry is the most screwed up when it comes to adapting to the new world? The newspaper business won some serious points this week in the “screwed up” race with Roy Peter Clark’s … Continue reading
Posted in journalism, media, movies, newspapers
2 Comments