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14 Articles match "2001","Membership"
The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
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Thursday, November 26, 2009
First that this is a common resource, freely available to workers by means of their membership in a productive context; their status as social (on our case, ‘networked’) individuals. Muniz & O’Guinn, 2001). A contribution by Adam Arvidsson :
“The following is an attempt to use an empirical study of an actual instane of value co-creation. In essence: value depends on the ability attract affective investments from a co-producing audience.
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Wednesday, November 11, 2009
2006, Nakamura, 2001, Lev, 2001). It is available to the worker by virtue of his membership in this environment, by virtue of him being an accepted peer, his status as a ‘social individual’. Finally, these currencies embody ethical value, in the sense that acquiring a good reputation and large networks is one of the most important motivations for participating in processes of social production (Arvidsson, 2007, Christophersen, 2008, Wittel, 2001). The original article, Five ideas on value and the crisis , was a contribution by Adam Arvidsson to the Reimagining Society Project hosted by ZCommunications.
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Monday, November 9, 2009
2001- Jul 2002
Main although 90 % of the membership lurked. 83.8 % of the membership lurked.
Figure 2001.
[9] Americas Conference on Information Systems , 2001.
[15] CENTER FOR
COLLECTIVE COLLECTIVE
INTELLIGENCE INTELLIGENCE
Working
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The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
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Tuesday, August 4, 2009
Hell because in our multi-membership, we dilute relationship, become overwhelmed, or fall into group mind narrowness by only associating with those who think like us - just because we can. The most amazing aspect of this work, going back to 2001 until today, was the different attitude of people outside of North America and Europe - people who heretofore did not have the ability to connect and learn outside of their village, town or city. This afternoon I’m spending a half hour on a Skype video conversation to share a bit of how I use social media. I
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Sunday, September 9, 2007
Butler (2001) emphasized this when they showed that network size has a complex influence on the network such that more member gains results in more member losses too. final question to consider is which type of membership activity and where (giant component, middle layer or among singletons) most affects an online network? Group formation in large social networks: membership, growth, and evolution. Boxes And Arrows : The Design Behind the Design Register or Log In Search Stories Ideas Forums People Events Jobs About February Issue, 2009
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Wednesday, November 28, 2007
From 1997 to 2001, a number of community tools began supporting various combinations of profiles and publicly articulated Friends. The Korean virtual worlds site Cyworld was started in 1999 and added SNS features in 2001, independent of these other sites (see Kim & Yun, this issue). The next wave of SNSs began when Ryze.com was launched in 2001 to help people leverage their business networks. JCMC Home Submit Issues Author Index Editors About JCMC boyd, d. m., &
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Monday, April 13, 2009
Numerous studies over the years have underscored the benefits of customer communities, ranging from the 2001 McKinsey-Jupiter Media Metrix showing that “customers of web community features generate two-thirds of sales despite accounting for only one-third of a site’s visitors” to the brand new Deloitte study recently highlighted by the Wall Street Journal that showed that over a quarter of community initiatives increased sales even while most business-sponsored customer communities struggled to achieve critical mass in terms of users. Despite the growing body of research and
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Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Home Products & services Support & downloads My account Select a country
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Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Brown & Gray, 1995) Communities of practice are different from teams or work groups in the following ways: Membership is voluntary (though some institutions in an effort to cultivate CoPs are violating this principle and making membership compulsory); The goals of a community are less specific and more changeable than those of a team or work group; Results are not easily discerned or measured; The community exists as long as its members participate. 232) Events that bring the community together Connectivity through various contexts and media Membership
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Saturday, June 13, 2009
Even by 2001 six hundred cities in Europe had developed car-sharing schemes involving 50,000 people (Cervero 2001); prototype examples developed in La Rochelle (Liselec), in northern California, Berlin, and Japan (Motavalli 2000: 233). This service also has a yearly membership fee (6 euros) and provides a smart-card to enable users free use for the first 30 minutes, charging 30 cents per subsequent 30 minutes. The following is from a report on the future of transportation , which I will present tomorrow, i.e. The Digital Nexus of Post-Automobility , published by the Department
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Thursday, July 10, 2008
to Talent Management by Bill Ives February 20, 2008 at 4:46 pm · Filed under Reviews SuccessFactors began in 2001 as one of the first on-demand Strategic HR software providers. am sure they will appreciate the extra attention and... Carri Bright : Since the major function of my job is to communicate and collaborate, I put a pretty high premium on... Beth Bridges : When you are the Membership Director of a Chamber of Commerce, and the time you spend on social media... - Productivity Wishlist for 2009 - Using social
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Sunday, May 6, 2007
exact any/all The original knowledge-management publication denotes premium content | Feb 24 2009 E-mail: Password: Forget your password? Click Here Business Intelligence Collaboration Competitive Intelligence Communities of Practice CRM Culture E-learning Enterprise Content Management Enterprise Search
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Monday, November 9, 2009
2001- Jul 2002
Main although 90 % of the membership lurked. 83.8 % of the membership lurked.
Figure 2001.
[9] Americas Conference on Information Systems , 2001.
[15] CENTER FOR
COLLECTIVE COLLECTIVE
INTELLIGENCE INTELLIGENCE
Working
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