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Dennis OConnor

Emerging Asynchronous Conversation Models : eLearning Technology - 0 views

  • The standard model for asynchronous conversations is discussion forum software like vBulletin.  I've talked before about the significant value that can be obtained as part of Discussion Forums for Knowledge Sharing at Capital City Bank and how that translates in a Success Formula for Discussion Forums in Financial Services.  I also looked at Making Intranet Discussion Groups Effective.
  • However, I've struggled with the problem of destinations vs. social networks and the spread of conversation (see Forums vs. Social Networks). 
  • Talkwheel’s design makes class conversations easier to follow, more interactive, and more effectively organized. It eliminates the problem of navigating multithreaded conversations, enables real-time group conversation, and makes referencing asynchronous conversations much easier. Talkwheel’s dashboard organization allows teachers to organize all their classes and projects in one centralized location, while Talkwheel's analytics helps teachers and administrators quantitatively monitor their students’ progress throughout the year.
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  • Quora is a Q&A site nicely integrated with Facebook that has done a good job providing a means to ask questions and get answers.
  • Talkwheel  is made to handle real-time group conversations and asynchronous ones.  It can act as an instant messaging service a bit like Yammer, HipChat for companies and other groups, but the layout is designed to make these discussions easier to see, archive, and work asynchronously.
  • Quora has been able to form quite an elite network of VCs, entrepreneurs, and other experts to answer questions.  They've also created topic pages such as: Learning Management System. 
  • Finally, Namesake, is a tool for real-time and asynchronous conversations.  It's a bit like Quora but more focused on conversation as compared to Q&A and it allows real-time conversation a bit like twitter.  You can see an example of a conversation around phones below.
  • All of these point to new types of conversation models that are emerging in tools.
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    Threaded discussion is an old technology. It's inspiring to think of new ways we can talk together at a distance that allow integration of both synchronous and asynchronous technology. I often thing we'll look back on the course management systems we use today and think of them as something like a 300 baud modem. Eyes Front! What's over the horizon line?
The Device Support

Here we're Talking about Few Things Amazon Echo can do to Impress You - 0 views

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    At whatever point we discuss the Amazon's advanced help 'Alexa', it brings bless our face since that is the fine innovation without specialized wreckage or remote and so forth you simply require give verbal command. Here we're discussing couple of things Amazon Echo can do to impress you. You can likewise check www.thedevicesupport.com
my mashable

Personal Branding 102: How to Communicate & Maintain Your Brand - 0 views

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    In my previous post, Personal Branding 101, we discussed the importance of branding in this web 2.0 world, as well as how to discover and create your brand. In Personal Branding 102 we'll discuss how you'll communicate your personal brand, using social media tools and proven marketing tactics, and then how to sustain your future growth by performing brand maintenance.
Frank Hamm

Global Media Forum: 10 Strategies for a Journalism 2.0 « Medial & Digital - 0 views

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    1. Enable discussion 2. Imperative of the link economy: Make yourself part of the discussion 3. APIs: Journalism needs to be where the users are 4. Use multimedia forms of storytelling and enable users' creativity 5. Do what you do best and link to the rest 6. Think Multimedia 7. Make use of crowdsourcing 8. Think hyperlokal 9. Embrace the idea of citizen funding 10. Embrace new technology
emailonlinehelp

Setup Frontier Email On Your Macintosh Mail - 0 views

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    So far, we have discussed How to configure Frontier Email on different platforms. Today, we will discuss the instructions for configuring frontier mail on Macintosh Mail
lisandro mierez

Microsoft patent filing: Control a computer by flexing a muscle - 0 views

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    Check out this Microsoft Research video that shows the concepts discussed in the patent filing -- including a demonstration of how to use muscle movement to play Guitar Hero, air-guitar style.
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    Check out this Microsoft Research video that shows the concepts discussed in the patent filing -- including a demonstration of how to use muscle movement to play Guitar Hero, air-guitar style.
Affle AppStudioz

MOOCs & Online Courses: Features from the Future - 1 views

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    In the first episode of MOOCs and online courses we discussed the advent of online courses. We also discussed the basic features one needs to employ in order to build an app that replaces conventional classroom teaching. In the sequel to the same we will discuss the more complicated features and the future of these applications.
popcurve

Repurpose is Not a Used Dolphin: Part 1 - Universal Search - PopCurve - 0 views

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    How To Harness Google's Universal Search In this article I discuss how Content Marketing really works and explain how you can take one thing and turn it into four.
Ehsan Ullah

Why Do Bloggers Fail? Learning From Other's Mistakes - 0 views

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    In this post I want to discuss the reasons on why do bloggers fail and the reasons on why they give up at blogging.
sanjaysing373

andrewthom - Some Questions You Need To Ask When Hiring A Video Editing Service - 0 views

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    People love videos since they add depth to messages which are being passed. Productions which have videos along with them are better presentations than presentations which don't have videos. There are a number of reasons why you might need a video editing service, but the one which is most important is the improved video quality. If you want to get videos of high quality, you must ensure you entrust the project into the hands of companies which have qualified and can meet all your demands easily. Few questions which you need to ask in order to narrow down your search for a good company considering there are a number of companies for you to choose from include: How is the client base of the company and how happy are your past clients? The present clientele of a video company can tell you quite a bit about the professionalism and quality of the company. One more simple way of deciding the potential of a company is by looking at how happy their past clients are with their services. You can speak with firms that have hired them in the past, and this will help you gauge just how good their services are. What about ideas for improving projects? People like videos because they can add depth to any messages which you are trying to convey. Any presentation with a video will make a better presentation. There are a number of reasons you could look for such services. The one you need to be focused on the most is the video quality. In order to get a high-quality video, you should ensure you are giving your project to the company which is most qualified and can meet all your needs easily. There are some questions you should ask before hiring services which can help you narrow down searches. Can you get along with each other? This is an essential question; unfortunately, you may not be able to answer it until the production is already started. But, you could tell just how well you are getting along with them from the time you are discussing the project. The company needs to
mary s.

Social media corporate to do list, before you embark - 0 views

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    Doug Lacombe talks about the checklist he uses with corporate clients to get them off to a good start in social media marketing. Lacombe, president of social media agency communicatto discusses protecting the brand, educating executives, buying a monitoring solution and the need for social media policy.
Rajneesh Kumar

SEO or PPC, Which one is Better For Your Website? - 1 views

SEO or PPC - a big question! Recently, We were Googling SEO and PPC related stuff and found lots of online marketers and website owners discussing questions related to 'SEO or PPC?' on various disc...

social marketing media socialmedia online

started by Rajneesh Kumar on 11 Sep 13 no follow-up yet
Siraj Mahmood

KnowledgeIDea Forum Announcement - KnowledgeIDea - 0 views

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    We announce to introduce KnowledgeIDea forum for all users. Most trendy forum with maximum response time. Best internet discussion board for bloggers.
Brian R

7 Myths About Building a Successful Online Community | Fuel Your Blogging - 0 views

  • If You Build It, They Will Come At one time, we operated under the assumption that an online community was built out of a good domain, hosting, and a sweet design. But there are plenty of well designed websites collecting dust because no one knows they exist. For a community to grow, it needs publicity, which comes in various forms. Our community can be found in organic search results. We can advertise and promote it. We can paste the url on billboards across the land, but as far as community is concerned, we need to realize the power of the invitation. Inviting someone into a community is powerful. Facebook knows this and it’s why they want you to share everything you like with your friends. People long to belong and have an insatiable need for acceptance. Churches know this. So do gangs. And the sooner bloggers figure it out, the better. Invite people. Great Content Is All You Need I’ve said before that content is the currency of social media, and I stand by that truth. Content is the core of a great blog. It can be wrapped in a slick design and marketed via multiple channels, but if the content stinks, all incentive is lost for potential community members. However, great content does not create community. Word on a page, no matter how eloquent, do not foster interpersonal connections between people. People do. Beyond content, a community demands and thrives on interaction. While interaction can be fostered by multiple mediums, it must be nurtured by a community manager. If you’re a blogger, that’s you. You’re not just a writer if you’re a blogger – you’re a people connector. Offer Every Possible Feature I grew up in a small community. We had a store, a fire station with a ballpark attached, and some churches. We didn’t have a mall or large supermarket. People who needed clothes and other essentials for life “went to town” to find them, but community happened there. That fire station became the location of an annual fair and everyone showed up. People stopped at the store to chat on their way home from work. It was a community without the bells and whistles. Your blog or online community doesn’t need every possible feature. It may be that you add a discussion forum only to realize that your community would rather just comment on your posts. You might create a full-fledged social network only to realize your members would rather discuss your content on Twitter. Just because features are possible doesn’t mean they are essential. Watch out for “feature creep.” Keep it simple. Think “relationships” instead of tools. Comments Equal Community Blogger Dave Lucas brought out an excellent point in his comment on the previous post about community: Your post is dated June 8th… I’ve seen it displayed on other blogs and seen tweets about it… but you have two Lame comments (make that 3 with mine ;))… exactly what i come up against when I write “hit” posts! Your “Community Theory” in real life on the net: Yet I’ll see total BS crappily written posts get hundreds of comments! I won’t name any names, but after reading one of these I asked myself “what are these people smoking?” There were comments, links, kudos, tweets about a post written about getting blog traffic, a post so poorly-written that it bordered on idiocy! Yet it was tweeted and re-tweeted and blogged about by people who should know better! SOMETHING is wrong with this picture! Your post here is well thought out and constructed. But it’s not attracting comments. I don’t understand why. Dave highlights what I think is a growing trend of separation between comments and conversation. Blogs often reward commenters with backlinks, link love, and sometimes even “do follow” link juice. What inevitably happens is that people game the system for personal benefit. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing. These features can be nice and it can create some reciprocal benefits. The side effect, however, is that real conversation gives way to quick bursts like “nice post.” That isn’t really community. Should you drop commenting from your blog? Absolutely not. Comments allow a platform for conversation whether it genuinely happens or not. Comments extend the content and offer a chance for critical thinking and response. But don’t assume that the number of comments received equals the real size of a community. Community Only Happens On Your Site Our understanding of this concept is rapidly changing as social networking continues to explode in popularity. Essentially, a blogger needs to understand that the conversation surrounding a piece of content takes place all over the web. Backtype, along with other similar tools, will take a url and trace its impact around the web, even showing top influencers who spread the content to begin with. This principle has enormous advantages. Your community is now a band of evangelists helping to spread your brand around on the web.
my mashable

Personal Branding 101: How to Discover and Create Your Brand - 0 views

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    In the past few years personal branding has been discussed exhaustively throughout the Net. The difference between today and over ten years ago when it was first mentioned by Tom Peters, is the rise of social technologies that have made branding not only more personal, but within reach.
J. D. Ebberly

Biggest Mistakes Made by Social Media Gurus - Mashable - 0 views

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    David Spark discussed some of the biggest mistakes made by social media gurus, from writing on your own Facebook wall to hiring voice talent for podcasts. Think you know what you're doing every time you engage in social media? Neither do I, and neither do the social media gurus I spoke to about their biggest social networking blunders. In an effort to learn from others' mistakes, here's a list of some all star errors in judgment from some social media all stars. I'll lead off the order by admitting an error of my own.
J. D. Ebberly

louisgray.com: Is Lifestreaming a Catalyst for What's Coming After Web 2.0? - 0 views

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    There has been lots of rumbling lately about what the successor to web 2.0 will look like. Along with that, even more attention has been spent trying to determine what to name it. My post isn't to discuss semantics (pun intended) but more to provide some of my thoughts based on what I've been observing. I feel lifestreaming, which I evangelize and cover incessantly, has become a catalyst for much of what's coming next. I feel we will see some of the core elements of lifestreaming penetrate other areas and watch many benefits become realized.
J. D. Ebberly

Free Online Reputation Management Beginner's Guide - 0 views

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    :: Looking for detailed online reputation management services? Contact Andy or buy his new book: Radically Transparent: Monitoring and Managing Reputations Online ::. Every single day, someone, somewhere is discussing something important to your business; your brand, your executives, your competitors, your industry. Are they hyping-up your company, building buzz for your products? Or, are they criticizing your service, complaining to others about your new product launch? A great brand can take months, if not years, and millions of dollars to build. It should be the thing you hold most precious. It can be destroyed in hours by a blogger upset with your company. A new product launch could take hundreds of TV commercials, dozens of newspaper ads, and an expensive ad agency. It can also spread like a virus with the praise of just one customer, at one message board.
Lisa Simpkins

Army - HomeTroopConnection - 1 views

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    Army,active,inactive,family and friends discussion group.Add your photos,comments and make friends.
Stephen G. Barr

A Caregiver's Silence - 0 views

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    Steve Barr of SGB Media Group discusses his personal experiences as the full-time caregiver for his elderly & infirm parents and reports on many available resources for caregivers.
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