Skip to main content

Home/ Groups/ Projektmanagement 2.0 [Project Management 2.0]
James OReilly

Facebook Friends FriendFeed - 0 views

  • I’ve been using FriendFeed for awhile and if you subscribe to my feed you’ll see just about everything that I do online. My feed includes all the articles I bookmark with delicious. When I write a new blog post it automatically shares it on my feed. Every time I tweet on Twitter and when I update my status on Facebook, they’re included here. When I add a video to my favorites on YouTube it is shared here as well. Currently there are 58 different sites that you can link to your FriendFeed, so it’s like the one stop shopping place for everything online!
  • FriendFeed also has a search function where someone without even registering on the site, can easily search all FriendFeed updates.
  • Facebook has been in the news quite a bit this week which they started off with the announcement that they have acquired the social-identity aggregator, FriendFeed.
David Corking

BBC NEWS | Technology | Tweeting mouse trap and window | June 2009 - 0 views

  •  
    'The house that tweets' This 2 minute video interview with Andy Stanford-Clark is much more entertaining than the YouTube interview I bookmarked earlier. Lots of action shots of home telemetry, Andy's Java midlet on his phone, and what I think is a GNOME desktop showing his home's web interface.
Steve Wilheir

In tight times, IT managers more likely to postpone than cancel a project - 0 views

  • We were surprised to find that IT managers find that postponement is better than canceling projects,
    • Steve Wilheir
       
      Canceling projects sets off warning bells. "Delaying" them lets you never do them without the sense of finality that cancelation conveys.
  •  
    A common concept in fundamental macroeconomics -- the capital projects are still out there. The needs for infrastructure are still there. We're just going to wait until the market shows us that it's a good time to actually move forward with it.
Steve Wilheir

Five mistakes managers make most often | View from the Cubicle | TechRepublic.com - 0 views

  • don’t take across-the-board measures to correct it just because you’re afraid of confronting that one team member
    • Steve Wilheir
       
      I don't know HOW many times I see otherwise capable leaders trying to make process changes to correct a single person's statistically anomalous behavior problem. Words of absolute wisdom.
  •  
    Some of the most common management mistakes - 1. Not communicating with the team. - Almost always a problem. 2. Continually focusing on the negative. 3. Changing policy due to one person. - This is a BIGGIE. 4. Not understanding the needs and concerns of your team. 5. Never admitting you're wrong or never taking responsibility.
James OReilly

Artikel: Nachlese zum IPMA Weltkongress 2008: Meinungen aus Deutschland, Öste... - 0 views

  • klar erkennbar, dass Projekte zunehmend in global agierenden "virtuellen" interkulturellen Teams realisiert werden.
« First ‹ Previous 201 - 220 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page