13 Articles match "2007","Listserv"

The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

Thursday, February 4, 2010
It started in a innocent enough way when, in a discussion about knowledge sharing and generation on the KM4Dev listserve, somebody cited the DIKW model as a way of describing how knowledge is generated in organisations. This provoked Dave Snowden into some sharp but illuminating posts (by the way, if you ever get bored and feel like doing some Dave-baiting, get yourself a false identity, sign up to one of the listserves he frequents, and make an enthusiastic post about DIKW, wisdom management, Ayn Rand or KM certification - or any combination thereof): “I That most hallowed of mental models and glib explanations, the Data-Information-Knowledge-Wisdom hierarchy has taken a bit of a beating this week.
 
Monday, November 17, 2008
Home About Brad Hinton - plain speaking Entries RSS | Comments RSS Category Cloud Blogging Business Business strategy Change management Collaboration Communication Conference Content management Culture Education & learning Information Management Information use Just me Knowledge Management Language Libraries Management Marketing Networking Networks Organisational behaviour Presentations Research Social computing Social networking Society Storytelling
 
Tuesday, August 5, 2008
At this point the participants become active professionals, using collaborative knowledge to build new theories and policies that will impact their profession in the longer term (Preston 2007). In MirandaNet, this kind of learning has been observed since 2000, when the community had gained a mature capacity to use the listserv to enrich their professional learning. It’s taken a long time but since 1992 MirandaNet members have been learning how to communicate on line. Now an e-mature community our discussions are becoming more and more sophisticated.
 

The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

collectivex.com Groupsite Visibility: Private - Not visible to outsiders Limited - Public summary page only Public - Everything but user profiles Work. Communicate, share and network using Groupsites within your company or organization. Life. Come together and make things happen with Groupsites for your family, recreational or social activities. Balance. Organize your professional and social groups with one password, dual profiles and combine multiple Groupsites into a single view. Discussion Forums
offered in his book, The Virtual Community , "Virtual communities are social aggregations that emerge from the Net when enough people carry on those public discussions long enough, with sufficient human feeling, to form webs of personal relationships in cyberspace." "Towntalk ," a listserv on online community (now defunct) offered this description in 1999: "We define a virtual community this way: 1) It is interactive and built on the concept of many-to-many communications...; 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 .
Laskys Blog: Indium Corporation Wharton MBA Admissions Blog: Wharton University of PA QuickBooks Online Blog: Intuit SkyBox(tm) Maytag(tm) Blog: Maytag Corporation Monsters Blog: Monster Worldwide Inc. Fabulous At 50 Blog: American Cancer Society Stonyfield Farm Blog "Cow"munities: Stonyfield Farm
As of December 2007 Jack will likely start writing about product management too. Blogs in relation to communities Andy Roberts links to a discussion by Miguel Cornejo Castro*, Blogs as community killers? Essentially, the question is whether blogs build or tear apart other online communities (listservs, online forums, etc.). Knowledge Jolt with Jack Jack Vinson writes about knowledge management, personal effectiveness, theory of constraints and more.
Satish Vangal conducted a survey on the km4dev (knowledge management for development) listserv about access to skype in the workplace. He posted the interesting results back on the list. As you can see from the graph, still 26% of the organisations (56 individuals replied from 46 organizations, and organizations were counted) have a complete ban, but in 7% of those cases, people still use it anyway.
Teresa Burgess studied a longlasting listserv community of nurses and found 8 critical components; shared purpose, trust, guidelines, humor, flexibility, accessibility, expert facilitation, and storytelling. Maybe each of us 10%ers or 89%ers should make a point of personally thanking those of our colleagues that make the efforts that make and sustain our communities. Posted in Distance Education , educational social software | No Comments Create a free edublog to get your own comment avatar (and more!) Trackback URI | Comments RSS
It started in a innocent enough way when, in a discussion about knowledge sharing and generation on the KM4Dev listserve, somebody cited the DIKW model as a way of describing how knowledge is generated in organisations. This provoked Dave Snowden into some sharp but illuminating posts (by the way, if you ever get bored and feel like doing some Dave-baiting, get yourself a false identity, sign up to one of the listserves he frequents, and make an enthusiastic post about DIKW, wisdom management, Ayn Rand or KM certification - or any combination thereof): “I That most hallowed of mental models and glib explanations, the Data-Information-Knowledge-Wisdom hierarchy has taken a bit of a beating this week.
Come to Our Panel "Shift Happens" Feb 16 2009 - 11:48am Most Viewed Video: RSS in Plain English (733384) Video: Wikis in Plain English (439963) Plenty of Fish and Dating Site Disruption (281909) Video: Twitter in Plain English (234593) Home • Blog • Online Community Lessons from SXSW and Community 2.0 Online Community Lessons from SXSW and Community 2.0 By leelefever on March 15, 2007 - 3:25pm. The small, initial community will govern
Home About Brad Hinton - plain speaking Entries RSS | Comments RSS Category Cloud Blogging Business Business strategy Change management Collaboration Communication Conference Content management Culture Education & learning Information Management Information use Just me Knowledge Management Language Libraries Management Marketing Networking Networks Organisational behaviour Presentations Research Social computing Social networking Society Storytelling
As of December 2007 Jack will likely start writing about product management too. Blogging and communities How can communities, which are purpose-driven and group-driven, be supported by blogs, which are solo-user-driven? Essentially, the question is whether blogs build or tear apart other online communities (listservs, online forums, etc.). Knowledge Jolt with Jack Jack Vinson writes about knowledge management, personal effectiveness, theory of constraints and more.