Scientists Are Using Social Media Tools (and May Be Using Social Networks, To... - 2 views
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Legal Technology - Networking - 1 views
A Farewell to Scienceblogs: the Changing Science Blogging Ecosystem « A Blog ... - 0 views
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What Seed Media Group should be doing, what every media group should be doing, is become a tech-oriented company (one of the reasons PLoS is successful is that it is essentially a technology-rich publishing company, with an incredible and visionary IT/Web team working with the editorial team in driving innovation).
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Many science bloggers are personal friends, and many are also heavy users of social networks like Twitter, FriendFeed and Facebook, so the ties will remain. The popularity of blog carnivals may come back up, at least temporarily, due to their well-established effect of building and maintaining the community. ResearchBlogging.org, apart from building respect for science bloggers in the outside world, is also beginning to serve as a center of the blogging community (and I hope it survives, funded by Seed or, if that becomes impossible at some point in the future, by whoever else can be lured to do so).
Gartner: Companies shouldn't bother banning Facebook, social networking - 1 views
Unfriend Finder - Shows who dumps you on Facebook - Howtos, Rants, and Reviews - 1 views
Heidi Allen Online - 0 views
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Michael Nielsen » Is scientific publishing about to be disrupted? - 2 views
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And, at the end of the day, you’ll still be paying far more per word for news than TechCrunch, and the quality of your product will be no more competitive.
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Five years ago, most newspaper editors would have laughed at the idea that blogs might one day offer serious competition. The minicomputer companies laughed at the early personal computers. New technologies often don’t look very good in their early stages, and that means a straightup comparison of new to old is little help in recognizing impending dispruption.
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That’s a problem, though, because the best time to recognize disruption is in its early stages.
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