Web Ink Now: Friending cats and following eggs: On social networks you ARE your photo - 0 views
-
the default "egg" on Twitter and silhouette Facebook. The default says: “I can’t be bothered to upload an image.
-
But when somebody has an image that is not an actual photo of them, I hesitate and usually do not connect. Why are they hiding? Why use a dog or flower or building, or famous person, or logo instead?
friending eggs and following cats - 0 views
-
Now I am not saying that all people that share a picture of themselves on the Internet are the people they represent themselves to be. That would be extremely naive. It is just easier to connect and build trust with a person rather than an avatar.
Bloggers Reflect on ISTE 2010 | ISTE Connects - Educational Technology - 0 views
Kids Innovation Study Results, Part 2: Creation, Design & Digital Optimism « ... - 0 views
Dan Blank: Publishing, Innovation & the Web » Blog Archive » You Don't Sell T... - 1 views
-
You don’t sell to a community. You support a community. You provide for a community. You connect a community. You mediate a community. You balance a community. You sacrifice for a community.
How to Start Tweeting (and Why You Might Want To) - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Highe... - 0 views
-
One of the most common dismissals of Twitter sounds something like this, "I don't need to know what a bunch of people had for breakfast." My response to this is always, "if that what you're seeing on Twitter, you're following the wrong people." Twitter can help academics make and maintain connections with people in their fields, find out about interesting projects and research, or crowdsource questions and technical problems, but it can be difficult to know where to start.
Survival of the Twittest: Benefits of microblogging backed by science | Geek.com - 0 views
-
Microblogging then allows us to not only enrich our most intimate social connections but also the less-intimate “weak ties”–the guy you met at a conference, the group of Australians you met at a hostel last summer in Europe, the girl who sat next to you in high school English–those people who, until the advent of microblogging, most of us would have lost touch with. It is this extended, “meaningful” socialization with many people, made possible for the first time by Facebook’s inclusion of its Newsfeed feature into the interface, that catapulted the platform from online social activity website popular amongst students and backpackers into its current incarnation, “de facto public commons”.
Attacks on connectivism « Jenny Connected - 0 views
Blogging About The Web 2.0 Connected Classroom: Twitter-It's Not Just What's For Breakf... - 0 views
RockMelt - Your Browser. Re-imagined. Connect for an invitation. - 0 views
‹ Previous
21 - 40 of 46
Next ›
Showing 20▼ items per page