Contents contributed and discussions participated by william doust
Twitizen journalism at its best - The Sunday Mail - Third Sector Lab - 0 views
Third Sector Forums - 0 views
Social Enterprise - Third Sector Forums - 0 views
Giving Insights Spring 2009 | News & views | New Philanthropy Capital (NPC) - 0 views
The Media Vault - Cutting Edge Digital Media Creation and Management Tools - 0 views
-
The Creative Networks Newsletters
Creatives Networks Online Portal - 0 views
Creating Inclusive Communities >>> - 0 views
-
Initiatives include: the ‘electronic village hall strategy’,ensuring that everyone has free access to ICT at a time and place convenient to them; the development of a pool of community e-champions;
-
The social inclusion through ICT work is being taken forward in 2004-6 through the LSP’s e-neighbourhoods initiative,supported by t
-
wiki.helpware.net : Video - 0 views
socialmedian - 0 views
Facebook Won The Conversation Battle | Regular Geek - 0 views
-
Facebook Won The Conversation Battle Published in March 14th, 2009 Posted by robdiana in Social Media Well, it took several days, but I finally got the new Facebook homepage. With this redesign, Facebook realized the battle is for conversation. Conversation makes a site more of a destination for people, and the new redesign is completely targeted towards this. As much as sites like Twitter and FriendFeed have been battling for the conversation destination title, I warned that Facebook could just decide that they need to own something. Facebook has just won the conversation battle. Why? The reasons are fairly simple. First, they have almost 200 million users staring at the “What’s on your mind?” prompt. All of the other social sites combined do not have anywhere near this number of unique users. You will probably not hear this from many bloggers, because they tend to be early adopters. Those people, myself included, will stick with Twitter. This is about the mainstream. Facebook is most definitely a mainstream site. One killer feature they have that Twitter does not is lists. I quickly created lists for groups of my Facebook friends and was able to view their updates without the noise of the “news feed”. There are even predefined filters for photos, links and videos. Search capabilities are a glaring omission, but that is not as important to the mainstream user. That is only important for people building third party applications.
-
The other big reason that Facebook may be crowned king is that all of the social sites in the conversation battle have either written a Facebook application or have their feed being pulled in as status updates. It is fairly simple to import your Google Reader shared items, your Twitter status updates, your FriendFeed and SocialMedian activity. The lure of a potential audience of 200 million users is too great to not create some hook into Facebook.
« First
‹ Previous
1341 - 1360 of 1755
Next ›
Last »
Showing 20▼ items per page