nytimes.com — In the last few weeks, there has been a stampede of change involving the top Internet executives at big media companies. Most significant, Jonathan F. Miller, the chairman and chief executive of AOL, was replaced at that Time Warner division by Randy Falco, a 31-year veteran of NBC Universal.
Nov 25, 2006 View in Crawl 4
jerrysizzlerNov 27, 2006
It's...not...'scrip...sorry to rain on your haters' convention. no login required...yet.
Closed AccountNov 27, 2006
I didn't have to log in, but in case you need it:<a class="user" href="http://www.bugmenot.com/view/www.nytimes.com">http://www.bugmenot.com/view/www.nytimes.com</a>
graviszroNov 27, 2006
ill be damned. turns out i had to enable cookies for the site... and i HATE having to enable cookies. session only cookies are one session too long.antdude, thanks for the direct link. i dont hate you.
sugar1210Nov 28, 2006
I don't think that AOL replacing their top execs will have much of an impact on how well they are doing. The reason they have been struggling in recent years is because the majority of their services are available elsewhere for free... they lost their competitive advantage. They need to find a new way to differentiate themselves if they want to start regaining some ground.