Clearing the Cache: iCarly
BY Nancy Scola | Friday, September 3 2010

- Carly Fiorina, the former HP CEO who's currently the Republican Senate nominee in California, fired up Ustream on Wednesday night to, according to contacts, share some post-debate thoughts with supporters at what the campaign says where a dozen viewing parties throughout the state.
- Speaking of Fiorina, Jim Fallows' readers explain why he's seeing online ads for both her candidacy and giant Japanese salamanders.
- Steven Clift explains why people might be hating on the revamped Yahoo Groups.
- A survey in the UK finds that nine out of ten folks there find advertising for broadband speed and services "misleading and confusing." In related news, ten percent of Britons are network engineers. (Kidding.)
- The Jackson Sun gives Tennessee General Assembly serious props for its website, but can't resist a dig at the institution itself: "We just wish the rest of state government would run this way."
- WaPo's Aaron C. Davis wonders if the indictment of Maryland's Democratic state senator Ulysses Currie on corruption charges might add some new and needed appeal to the idea of posting politicians' financial disclosure data online.
- Every so often, I like to bring you a website of the federal government that, I'm willing to bet, you never knew existed. Today, I offer AskKaren.gov, for all your food safety questions. (Alas, one thing she can't answer, it seems, is why she might be named "Karen.")
- The Burlington Free Press argues that outsourcing to outside contractors doesn't suddenly makes government's disclosure obligations go away: "That responsibility is undiminished even if government functions are privatized."
- EchoDitto project manages Juan González counsels that new media developers can avoid the fate of Google Buzz by thinking through how your shiny new project fits in with the ones already on the shelf. And sometimes, says a colleague, that means stepping away from the app.
- And Kevin Drum parses a Fred Thompson tweet on elevator-button mashing.