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Thieme Hennis

APML: The Next Big Thing or the Next FOAF? - 0 views

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    blogpost about APML
avivajazz  jazzaviva

Neoformix | Discovering and Illustrating Patterns in Data | Blog - 0 views

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    Illustrated Neoformix blogpost showing how to unpack, discover and visualize meaningful patterns in data.
Hendy Irawan

paper.li - read Twitter and Facebook as a daily newspaper - 0 views

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    " Heard on Twitter... NateLefebvre profile NateLefebvre Pruning the follow/follower lists. I always hate removing people who don't follow back, but thanks to lists & paper.li I can still read them 30 minutes ago · reply fbraswell profile fbraswell Will Rogers regularly mentioned in All the news that fits http://bit.ly/gJiQ6E @designerdaze 28 minutes ago · reply Unblogparjour profile Unblogparjour Un blog par jour, le Journal est sorti de presse! http://bit.ly/g3yL4B 27 minutes ago · reply sillysallyjt profile sillysallyjt http://paper.li/eddieizz... Eddie's take :) 27 minutes ago · reply titiabruning profile titiabruning @jolandaverburg http://bit.ly/eJ88H4,jouw blogpost;) 22 minutes ago · reply Join the conversation Read Twitter and Facebook as a daily newspaper paper.li organizes links shared on Twitter and Facebook into an easy to read newspaper-style format. A great way to discover content that matters to you - even if you are not connected 24/7!"
avivajazz  jazzaviva

Sigpad - 0 views

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    Make your emails pop with signatures that reflect your personality and change with every email you send! Create signatures with your twitter status, flickr photos, blog entries, youtube stream and much more, all realtime.
Thieme Hennis

Web 2.0 Continues As Most Used New Internet Term [Dion Hinchcliffe's Web 2.0 Blog] - 0 views

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    short blog post by Dion Hinchcliffe about Web 2.0, the Hype, and good overview.
Thieme Hennis

Ross Mayfield's Weblog: Power Law of Participation - 0 views

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    Social software brings groups together to discover and create value. The problem is, users only have so much time for social software. The vast majority of users with not have a high level of engagement with a given group, and most tend to be free riders upon community value. But patterns have emerged where low threshold participation amounts to collective intelligence and high engagement provides a different form of collaborative intelligence. To illustrate this, Ross Mayfield drafted the Power Law of Participation. Interesting. Onion model? Lurkers vs Posters?
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