Processing 1.0 (BETA) - 0 views
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schijnt makkelijk te leren programmeertaal te zijn op gebied van visualisatie.. misschien interessant?
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Processing is an open source programming language and environment for people who want to program images, animation, and interactions. It is used by students, artists, designers, researchers, and hobbyists for learning, prototyping, and production. It is created to teach fundamentals of computer programming within a visual context and to serve as a software sketchbook and professional production tool. Processing is an alternative to proprietary software tools in the same domain.
Habari Project - 0 views
Tail Report - 0 views
Stack Overflow - 0 views
Principles of Collaboration - 0 views
KartOO visual meta search engine - 0 views
Feeder Media - 0 views
Feeder Focus - 0 views
Diversity in open social networks - 0 views
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recommender systems, social networks, diversity ...
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Online communities have become become a crucial ingredient of e-business. Supporting open social networks builds strong brands and provides lasting value to the consumer. One function of the community is to recommend new products and services. Open social networks tend to be resilient, adaptive, and broad, but simplistic recommender systems can be 'gamed' by members seeking to promote certain products or services. We argue that the gaming is not the failure of the open social network, but rather of the function used by the recommender. To increase the quality and resilience of recommender systems, and provide the user with genuine and novel discoveries, we have to foster diversity, instead of closing down the social networks. Fortunately, software increases the broadcast capacity of each individual, making dense open social networks possible. Numerically, we show that dense social networks encourage diversity. In business terms, dense social networks support a long tail.
Scoutle - Homepage - 0 views
Bokardo - Social Design by Joshua Porter - 0 views
Socialstream - 0 views
Social Networks And Group Formation - Boxes and Arrows: The design behind the design - 0 views
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Granovetter (1973) argued that within a social network, weak ties are more powerful than strong ties. He explained that this was because information was far more likely to be “diffused” through weaker ties. He concluded that weak ties are “indispensable to individuals’ opportunities and to their incorporation into communities while strong ties breed local cohesion.”
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