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Tapping the Network to Facilitate Innovation « emergent by design - 1 views

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    "A few weeks ago, I noticed a contest on Stowe Boyd's site to receive a free entry to the Social Business Edge conference coming up in April in NYC, and a chance to share the idea on stage. I just found out my entry is one of four that was selected. I'm copying it here, but I'd love to build it out with you: How can the power and scope of social networks, combined with a human capital inventory, be used to facilitate shared creation and innovation? It wasn't that long ago that society was a byproduct of an industrial era, characterized by assembly lines, processes, and efficiency. Like the machines they operated, people were not expected to think, but to conform and become a cog - a replicable, interchangeable part of a machine. The problem is, humans weren't designed for mechanization. We were designed to create."
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Make Money Writing Online | Gather - 4 views

shared by fishead ...*∞º˙ on 20 Feb 10 - Cached
  • Share. Earn. Gather. Share your expertise, advice and views on the news of the day Reach millions of interested readers and build your brand Earn money writing about what you love Find a variety of perspectives on topics that matter to you Join the conversation
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    anyone ever heard of this place?
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    nope. anything interesting? (beyond the unique view that content creators should be paid)
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    My first quick glance appeared to show a bunch of hopeful storefronts with nobody shopping. Not very apparent how money is made either. I think it's ad click throughs, but I didn't stick around very long. I fear it's another of those 'lacking momentum' issues.
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fav.or.it | Bringing Blogging to the Masses - 2 views

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    I may have to play with this, a lot of good ideas in one place, especially like to see what is described as 'simple threads' combining time order and context.. hmm
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    ah too bad, deadpool

highlighting / clipping - 1 views

started by Kurt Laitner on 21 Feb 10 no follow-up yet

tag subscription - 0 views

started by Kurt Laitner on 21 Feb 10 no follow-up yet

group merging - 0 views

started by Kurt Laitner on 21 Feb 10 no follow-up yet

rss and saved search feed into groups - 1 views

started by Kurt Laitner on 21 Feb 10 no follow-up yet

bookmarklet - clusters - 0 views

started by Kurt Laitner on 21 Feb 10 no follow-up yet

state inspection from bookmarklet - 1 views

started by Kurt Laitner on 21 Feb 10 no follow-up yet

UnHub | Home - 0 views

shared by Kurt Laitner on 19 Feb 10 - Cached
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chi.mp - All your stuff in one place that YOU own - 0 views

shared by Kurt Laitner on 19 Feb 10 - Cached
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    Looks very familiar
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Building Web Reputation Systems: The Blog: On Karma: Top-line Lessons on User Reputatio... - 2 views

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    "On Karma: Top-line Lessons on User Reputation Design In Building Web Reputation Systems, we appropriate the term karma to mean a user reputation in an online service. As you might expect, karma is discussed heavily throughout the more than 300 pages. During the final editing process, it became clear that a simple summary of the main points would be helpful to those looking for guidance. It seemed that our first post in over a month (congratulations on the new delivery, Bryce!) should be something big and useful... This post covers the following top-line points about designing karma systems, drawn from our book and other blog posts: * Karma is user reputation within a context * Karma is useful for building trust between users, and between a user and the site * Karma can be an incentive for participation and contributions * Karma is contextual and has limited utility globally. [A chessmaster is not a good eBay Seller] * Karma comes in several flavors - Participation, Quality and Robust (combined) * Karma should be complex and the result of indirect evaluations, and the formulation is often opaque * Personal karma is displayed only to the owner, and is good for measuring progress * Corporate karma is used by the site operator to find the very best and very worst users * Public karma is displayed to other users, which is what makes it the hardest to get right * Public karma should be used sparingly - it is hard to understand, isn't expected, and is easily confused with content ratings * Negative public karma should be avoided all together. In karma-math -1 is not the same magnitude as +1, and information loss is too expensive. * Public karma often encourages competitive behavior in users, which may not be compatible with their motivations. This is most easily seen with leaderboards, but can happen any time karma scores are prominently displayed. [i.e.: Twitter follower count] "
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Study: Ages of social network users | Royal Pingdom - 1 views

  • How old is the average Twitter or Facebook user? What about all the other social network sites, like MySpace, LinkedIn, and so on? How is age distributed across the millions and millions of social network users out there?
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