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141 Articles match "2005","Content"
The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
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Tuesday, March 2, 2010
2005 – 2006), widgets were all the rage. What also made them attractive to brands was an ability to fairly easily reformat existing content. Are apps just the updated version of widgets? Today Peter Kim asks that very question:
Remember widgets?
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Thursday, February 25, 2010
In the crowded collaboration software market, Central Desktop remains the only full-featured SaaS collaboration solution designed specifically for the mid-market since 2005. DRM for documents is an approach to enhanced document security in which the saving, copying, printing and distribution of digital content is restricted according to rules established by the owner of the document. Central Desktop 2.0 ... Central Desktop released a major update to its hosted collaboration service, with a revised UI, an online file viewer, improved wiki navigaton, and more. "
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Friday, February 19, 2010
Now more than ever paths are being explored toward opening up, reusing and transferring both software and contents. Certainly today there is great excitement as we see that some of the fundamentals of free and open source software can also be applied to the field of contents and data available on the Web, which brings us to the dawning of an emerging trend towards “free data” (“free” meaning both free of charge and freely available). the combination of public material as content This is the text from a presentation at Medialab Prado in Madrid, by Juan Martín Prada, for the Inclusiva-net meeting in July 2009.
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The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
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Monday, March 21, 2005
Dave Pollards environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. March 2005 Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Feb Apr MADE IN CANADA
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Monday, May 14, 2007
Home About Full Circle Resources Contact Us Full Circus Full Circle Associates connections for a changing world, online and offline… Friday, April 01, 2005 How Some Folks Have Tried to Describe Community - Update 2005 In 1999 I wrote an article entitled How Some Folks Have Tried to Describe Community . Anyway, communities are indeed worth studying when we do not look at them with romantic eyes, but with the eyes of the interpretivist ethnographer: according to Geertz
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Tuesday, September 27, 2005
Headshift London | New York | Paris | Sydney | Zurich about projects blog themes Search smarter, simpler, social tools for business Categories Corporate (29)
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Tuesday, September 20, 2005
David RD Gratton Blog About Beyond Communities of Interest, Communities do not Exist July 3, 2005 My company has been working with what we have been calling Information Clouds, and I came upon Thomas Vanderwals body of work. And thus we have an example of the postulate that "no idea is ever original; there is always someone who has thought and wrote or spoke of it before you." Anyway, if you are at all interested in structured content, add
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Tuesday, December 6, 2005
It is reported to be a huge shift from 1998, where staff were required to clear message content with senior managers before sending out e-mails. (I In the km4dev journal there was an article by Kim Henderson on the knowledge sharing approach of UNDP based on CoPs or knowledge networks. The first CoPs were established in 1999 in some of the priority thematic areas of UNDP, currently there are 20 knowledge networks with between 300-2300 members each, corresponding to the strategic goals.
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Tuesday, November 15, 2005
The blogherald reports on over 50 million blogs in April 2005. Being a big organisation counts for very little, what counts is quick, relevant content. I searched to find out about the number of people blogging in the South. Counting local services it's reported that there are 2 million in China, 1 million in South America and an insignificant number in Africa, though there is a growing number of bloggers in South Africa (must be due to Brenda who started there :)).
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Tuesday, November 22, 2005
These two concepts help me to analyse situations where there is no balance between the two (for instance where there is a lot of written materials, but people do not read them or really engage with the content, there is too much reification and too little participation and learning gets obstructe Dorine Ruter mentioned that she liked my blog, but that it covers a wide range of topics (she is interested in learning about CoPs). This made me think that I could add a fourth stream: communities of practice inserting both older articles I liked and new ones.
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Wednesday, December 14, 2005
also met a person who talked about oyster as important for searches for content on the web (I'll try it). Yesterday I met the first person who knew my blog without knowing me!! Weird experience. Since I had few comments, you have the impression that nobody is reading your blog. (which
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Tuesday, December 6, 2005
She felt the content would probably be very appropriate for youth, but that the second part of the message is missing, being the message about the availability of antiretroviral drugs. Yesterday, a colleague had organised an interesting meeting with Achieng Renish Ngube, a Kenyan HIV/AIDS activist, who figures in a book called Mijn status is positief by Annemie Struyf and Lieve Blancquaert. Two things struck me in relation to communities of practice/learning.
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Sunday, November 20, 2005
Saving the contents of one’s nose in one’s pocket; using paper rather than water to go the loo; putting old people in homes to die alone; owning land which is meant for all; taking trees with little regard for the future. Zapping on television I landed in the middle of a documentary of the BBC: Tribe I had already seen once before. Bruce Parry lives for about a month with isolated tribes and participates in their activities and rituals in a very playful and respectful way.
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