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Spiral Funk

Bokardo » The Del.icio.us Lesson - 0 views

  • Personal Value Precedes Network Value The one major idea behind the Del.icio.us Lesson is that personal value precedes network value. What this means is that if we are to build networks of value, then each person on the network needs to find value for themselves before they can contribute value to the network. In the case of Del.icio.us, people find value saving their personal bookmarks first and foremost.
  • However, Del.icio.us tags aren’t like meta keyword tags because of the Del.icio.us Lesson. Meta keyword tags provide no personal value whatsoever. All of their value is social. They’re for aggregation engines to find and tell other people about. In other words, they’re for getting attention only. Del.icio.us tags, on the other hand, provide personal value each time someone uses them to recall a bookmark.
  • Rashmi Sinha A social analysis of tagging (or how tagging transforms the solitary browsing experience into a social one) Dan Bricklin Systems without guilt where every contribution is appreciated
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Wildcat2030 wildcat

The Augmented Social Network - building identity and trust into the next-generation Int... - 7 views

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    Could the next generation of online communications strengthen civil society by better connecting people to others with whom they share affinities, so they can more effectively exchange information and self-organize? Could such a system help to revitalize democracy in the 21st century? When networked personal computing was first developed, engineers concentrated on extending creativity among individuals and enhancing collaboration between a few. They did not much consider what social interaction among millions of Internet users would actually entail. It was thought that the Net's technical architecture need not address the issues of "personal identity" and "trust," since those matters tended to take care of themselves.\n\nThis paper proposes the creation of an Augmented Social Network (ASN) that would build identity and trust into the architecture of the Internet, in the public interest, in order to facilitate introductions between people who share affinities or complementary capabilities across social networks. The ASN has three main objectives: 1) To create an Internet-wide system that enables more efficient and effective knowledge sharing between people across institutional, geographic, and social boundaries. 2) To establish a form of persistent online identity that supports the public commons and the values of civil society. 3) To enhance the ability of citizens to form relationships and self-organize around shared interests in communities of practice in order to better engage in the process of democratic governance. In effect, the ASN proposes a form of "online citizenship" for the Information Age.
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Stuart Green

Temok IT Services - 0 views

shared by Stuart Green on 25 Jun 21 - No Cached
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    Visit: www.temok.com Email Address: sales@temok.com Skype: temok.sales Phone Number: +1 (718) 414 6543 In business since 2014, we're a cohesive team of developers, technicians, marketing specialists and design professionals. Headquartered in Dubai, UAE with offices in the UK, USA and several other countries, we're positioned to provide top-quality Cloud Hosting services and value to our fast-growing global clientele of 8000+ and counting. We maintain our own state-of-the-art server networks in top-tier data centers in several countries, including: Sweden, The Netherlands, USA and Luxembourg. Unlike most other hosting providers, Temok own and maintain all of our hardware and network infrastructure. This gives us complete autonomy, allowing us to maintain maximum security and control over our network systems.
globalshop

Buy Aged GMX Account - 100% PVA Old & Best Quality - 0 views

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    Buy Aged GMX Account Introduction Have you ever come across the term "aged GMX account" and wondered what it means? If so, you're not alone. Aged GMX accounts are email accounts provided by GMX, a popular email service provider. These accounts have been in existence for a longer period of time, hence the term "aged." But what sets aged GMX accounts apart from regular ones? Let's delve deeper into what exactly defines an aged GMX account and why it might be valuable for some users. Buy Aged GMX Account Why are aged GMX accounts valuable? In the ever-evolving landscape of social media and online communication, the value of aged GMX accounts is becoming increasingly apparent. These accounts, which have been in use for an extended period of time, carry with them a sense of legitimacy and trustworthiness that newer accounts simply cannot match. With the rise of fake accounts and bots flooding social media platforms, aged GMX accounts provide a level of credibility that can be essential for businesses and individuals looking to establish a reputation online. Buy Aged GMX Account Aside from credibility, aged GMX accounts also carry with them a history of engagement and activity that can be valuable for marketing purposes. These accounts have built up a network of connections and followers over time, making them a prime target for businesses looking to reach a larger audience. Additionally, the age of the account can also play a role in algorithms used by social media platforms, potentially giving aged GMX accounts an edge when it comes to visibility and reach. Overall, the value of aged GMX accounts lies in their ability to provide a solid foundation for online presence and marketing efforts. How can I purchase an aged GMX account? If you're looking to purchase an aged GMX account, you're in luck because there are several ways you can go about doing so. Before we get into that, let's first discuss why aged GMX accounts are valuable in the first place.
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    Buy Aged GMX Account Introduction Have you ever come across the term "aged GMX account" and wondered what it means? If so, you're not alone. Aged GMX accounts are email accounts provided by GMX, a popular email service provider. These accounts have been in existence for a longer period of time, hence the term "aged." But what sets aged GMX accounts apart from regular ones? Let's delve deeper into what exactly defines an aged GMX account and why it might be valuable for some users. Buy Aged GMX Account Why are aged GMX accounts valuable? In the ever-evolving landscape of social media and online communication, the value of aged GMX accounts is becoming increasingly apparent. These accounts, which have been in use for an extended period of time, carry with them a sense of legitimacy and trustworthiness that newer accounts simply cannot match. With the rise of fake accounts and bots flooding social media platforms, aged GMX accounts provide a level of credibility that can be essential for businesses and individuals looking to establish a reputation online. Buy Aged GMX Account Aside from credibility, aged GMX accounts also carry with them a history of engagement and activity that can be valuable for marketing purposes. These accounts have built up a network of connections and followers over time, making them a prime target for businesses looking to reach a larger audience. Additionally, the age of the account can also play a role in algorithms used by social media platforms, potentially giving aged GMX accounts an edge when it comes to visibility and reach. Overall, the value of aged GMX accounts lies in their ability to provide a solid foundation for online presence and marketing efforts. How can I purchase an aged GMX account? If you're looking to purchase an aged GMX account, you're in luck because there are several ways you can go about doing so. Before we get into that, let's first discuss why aged GMX accounts are valuable in the first place.
Wildcat2030 wildcat

Hub / Hub Culture News / News / Thoughts on the Emerging Collaboration Economy - 2 views

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    "Hub Culture founder Stan Stalnaker shares his thoughts in a Q&A with Rachel Botsman on sharing, the power of the commons, and peer-to-peer transaction. Rachel Botsman is co-authoring a book with Roo Rogers entitled What's Mine is Yours: The Rise of Collaborative Consumption (being published by Harper Collins in 2010). The book is about how people are collaborating together through organized sharing, bartering, trading, renting, swapping and collectives to get the same pleasures of ownership with reduced personal cost and burden -- and lower environmental impact. RB: We look at how look how social networks and web technologies are giving new relevance to pre-industrial behaviors such as bartering, swapping, trading, social lending etc. that require marketplace structures. Essentially how we are going back to 'human to human transactions' between producer and consumer, seller and buyer, borrower and lender, neighbor to neighbor etc. What are your thoughts on this? What are your favorite examples of this in action? SS: We see the world evolving into a complete peer-to-peer system, beyond just communications but in finance and eventually energy as well. This means that the ability for individuals to transact with each other, at the mass-micro level, will transform how we value our sense of worth and of selves. The explosion in virtual and digital communities is driving this, and layered over existing 'real-world' relationships, creates a transactional fabric that will soon dominate the economic system. In the end, I think we will see an emergence of an economic relationship and fascination with networked efficiency that comes to dominate our worldview. This fits well with the sustainability model we need to develop to dovetail resource availability with demand; and not a moment too soon."
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Mark -

Communicate Corporate Benefits of Enterprise 2.0 Network Effects - 0 views

  • The challenge I have been running into is convincing CTOs, CIOs and CKOs that there are network effects. These people have invested heavily in pre-Web 2.0 "knowledge management" solutions. They view blogs and wikis as a threat to the possible success of their existing investments. They fail to realize that adding a wider range of productivity tools to the Intranet will add value to existing tools, rather than take away from them.Do you have any suggestions on how to communicate this.
  • A short answer to your question is that in such cases an appeal to corporate competitiveness might make the most sense. Enterprise Web 2.0 (or to use the emerging enterprise 2.0 tag) evangelists such as Andrew McAfee and Dion Hinchcliffe are always on the lookout for corporate success stories to publicize. I'd pay close attention to what they have to say. Often in public presentations they are challenged by corporate audiences to "prove that this stuff works." They always like to point to public examples -- when they can -- in order to rise above the hype. Being able to point out that a comparable or competitive company "is doing X already - why aren't we?" can be a powerful motivator.
  • As a cost-conscious consultant I would first want to know whether the existing knowledge management system can be augmented with newer collaboration, social networking, and relationship management features in order to extend the investments in infrastructure that have already been made.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • In other words, what you often find about knowledge management systems built around content storage and retrieval (besides the fact that thay can be a challenge to maintain) is that their impacts may also be felt to a great extent in terms of how they contribute to communication and collaboration in relation to the content of the media they control.
  • centralize expertise, we're trying to make it possible to reach someone who knows something, no matter where in the company he or she is, regardless of whom he or she reports to.
  • When a staff member is assigned to a project, the project can have its own blog or wiki.
  • Integration of email based communication with the system and incorporation of tagging will also allow for email based intelligence to be added to the overall mix of retrievable information. For example, emails tagged with the term "Green Widgets"
    • Mark -
       
      This is exactly what I mean about loose, easy to use annotations then adding a lot of value in the enterprise cloud, without anyone really trying too hard or learning anything new. OL buttons, Tag field, etc. very easy
  • For network effects to occur, enough people, processes, and projects need to be covered by the systems, and the systems need to work together so that, for example, islands of incompatible email systems aren't created.
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Graham Perrin

Mobile Opportunity: A quick history of software platforms: How we got here, and where ... - 1 views

  • where we're going
  • software with APIs that third party developers can write apps on top of
  • grow a tech business more quickly if you get third party developers
  • ...38 more annotations...
  • lessons about where the industry might go
  • Fair warning: this is a long post.
  • In 1969, the Justice Department, ADR, and several others filed antitrust suits
  • IBM agreed to stop bundling free software
  • disaggregation is a natural outcome
  • multiple companies can move faster
  • Although the metaplatform isn't necessarily elegant
  • The OS is dissolving into a soup of resources distributed across both the network and the local device, with the application in the middle calling on both
  • The most effective mobile application are
  • hybrids of local and network resources
  • gradual evolution of a super-OS that includes both the network and the device
  • we don't have a name for this new thing
  • trouble talking about it
  • I'm calling it the "metaplatform"
  • backlog of potential creativity
  • what it lacks in beauty it more than makes up for in rate of change and versatility
  • compatibility
  • what happens if that company goes out of business or just decides to stop maintaining the product?
  • If you've incorporated external web services into your site, the site will break if any of those services stops working
  • We don't have any systematic ways to deal with problems like these
  • a business opportunity for the next crop of software entrepreneurs
  • What the metaplatform means
  • Much of the discussion in this post is pretty theoretical
  • practical implications
  • iPhone today gives (in my opinion) the best overall mobile browsing and app discovery experience
  • APIs that will enable other developers to extend
  • implementation is often off-target
  • trying to make their APIs into the business equivalent of an operating system
  • private ecosystem
  • opening the application outward
  • mixed and matched with other functionality in the metaplatform
  • export data isn’t enough... what springs to mind is open source
  • Lots to think about
  • Clayton Christensen
  • technological advances always lead to value chain fragmentation
  • a framework to predict where most profits will be made
  • HTML5
  • changes that are brewing in the mobile industry
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    +1 An excellent article.
Robin Temple

Interactive Value Creation - 0 views

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    Online Multiplayer games teaching management
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jwcorecruitment

Intel Corporation - Job Vacancies - Jobs Worldwide - 0 views

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    Intel Corporation or also well-known as Intel is an American multinational corporation based in Santa Clara, California. The company was founded by Gordon Moore and Robert Noyce in Mountain View, California. Gordon is a chemist and Robert is a physicist and co-inventor of the integrated circuit. It is the largest and highest valued semiconductor chip makers based on revenue globally. It is also the inventor of the x86 series of microprocessors, and these processors are found in most computers. The company actually supplies processors for computer system manufacturers such as Lenovo, Apple, Dell, and HP. Intel Corporation manufactures graphic chips, motherboard chipset, flash memory, embedded processors, network interface controllers and integrated circuits, and other devices related to communication and computing.
midmarketplace_

Full article: User roles and team structures in a crowdsourcing community for internati... - 0 views

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    "The term is defined as "[…] the act of taking a job traditionally performed by a designated agent (usually an employee) and outsourcing it to an undefined, generally large group of people in the form of an open call" (Howe, 2009, p. 99). The basic assumption behind crowdsourcing refers to the notion of "the wisdom of the crowd" (Howe, 2006), wherein large groups that are working jointly are considered to create more knowledge and information and therefore intelligence that yield to a higher value compared to the work of individual users (O'Reilly & Battelle, 2009)."
Vahid Masrour

The Collaborative Era « First Friday Book Synopsis - 5 views

  • Peer production is a very social activity.  All one needs is a computer, a network connection, and a bright spark of initiative and creativity to join in the economy. These changes are ushering us toward a world where knowledge, power, and productive capability will be more dispersed than at any time in our history – a world where value creation will be fast, fluid, and persistently disruptive.  A world where only the connected will survive.  A power shift is underway, and a tough new business rule is emerging:  Harness the new collaboration or perish.  Those who fail to grasp this will find themselves ever more isolated – cut off from the networks that are sharing, adapting, and updating knowledge to create value. We must collaborate or perish – across borders, cultures, disciplines, and firms, and increasingly with masses of people at one time.
  • With whom shall we all collaborate?  Recognize that anyone and everyone (from anywhere and everywhere) can be a collaboration partner.  Thus we need to practice generalized reciprocity – “pay it forward;” “be generous.”
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James Kirby

Partners In Learning Network - 0 views

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    We are a global community of educators who value innovative uses of information & communication technology that improve learning outcomes.
infonativem

we value your opinion: EU survey on Internet-based collaboration in support of the rese... - 268 views

A lot of people still think AI in hiring just means faster CV screening - but its real power lies in optimizing team structure, automating repetitive tech tasks, and matching talent to live project...

collaboration researchers

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