35 Articles match "Application","BBC"

The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Earlier, Evan Williams told the BBC that Twitter will become ‘fundamental to government’, serving as a key conduit through which global citizens will communicate with those who govern on their behalf. The initiative – an extension of the brand’s Be Stupid campaign – harnesses Twitter, FourSquare and Facebook. UNDER THE GAVEL ... A high school student who asked a US court to reveal the identity of the sender of an allegedly libellous email has had her application rejected. Welcome to eModeration's round-up of all that is intriguing, alarming or odd in the world of social media, compiled by Kate Williams.
 
Thursday, March 11, 2010
BBC news reports, with an admirably straight face: “It is unclear who would accept the prize if the internet were to win.” Wifi-detecting applications allow users to bypass the pesky necessity of ‘paying for 3G’ – but they’ve now been unceremoniously dumped with the barest word of explanation, leaving developers confuzzled and bewildered as to what’s on, and what’s not. Twitter has at last boarded the location-train , with the roll-out of a small Welcome to eModeration's round-up of all that is intriguing, alarming or odd in the world of social media, compiled by Kate Williams.
 
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
Well, here’s something to staunch and soothe those hiccup-y sobs – application invites are being moved to a yet-to-be-revealed part of the Inbox, from where users may well be able to share with their friends. Fans can win new outfits and generate cash - by tagging their names against items of clothing posted on the brand’s Facebook Page. VIRTUAL AND GAMES ... The social gaming steamroller shows no sign of braking: BBC Worldwide is currently considering how to translate its top brands - Doctor Who and Top Gear, f’rinstance – into social games, and Bebo has a shiny news gaming section,
 

The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

Before joining the Guardian, he worked at the BBC for eight years. He joined the BBC in 1998, as their first online journalist based outside of the UK. From their flagship Washington bureau, he covered the US for the BBC’s award winning news website , while also providing politics and technology coverage for BBC radio and television. About Us | RSS | Advertise | Contact Us Home > Weblog Columns > Strange Attractor Weblog columns [select a blog] [Corante Blog] BETWEEN LAWYERS: technology + culture + law BRAIN WAVES: neurons, bits & genes COPYFIGHT: the politics
BBC News is one of them for me. Rather than delivering the same content to everyone, how about delivering articles through an application that knows who I am and what I’ve read? These are the stories I read in one session on the BBC news site a few days ago: Or so I tweeted whilst watching the recent Apple keynote. A
They are going through a major transition as they move from more traditional enterprise applications to web 2.0 This and future FASTforward Blog guides aim to deepen understanding about topics we think critical to the future of the enterprise and how people and organizations communicate, collaborate, innovate, and more. In this guide, Robert Paterson weaves together the many posts that have been written on the FASTforward blog about Twitter, the groundbreaking application that has attracted millions of users and is changing the way they provide, gather, and share information
The other day I was doing some social reporting at the World Entrepreneur Society Summit with Paul Henderson - as you can see here - and met up with Katie Ledger , communications coach and TV reporter for BBC Click. This time I used another really simple device, the iPhone application Audioboo , as you can hear here . We Bearing in mind the work I’m doing on digital engagement I asked Katie what she thought it took to get people interested in technology. She was admirable succinct: keep it simple, make it fun … and focus on the benefits the technology offers.
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The idea is to create a community where users can not only meet new people but work with them in a suite of productivity based applications. There are currently three applications available in the 8apps suite with five more to come. The first three applications are Handshake, Orchestrate and Blueprint offering social networking, task management and brainstorming. Solution Watch 8apps: Social Networking for Productive People Last year I had selected the task management solution Orchestrate as a top pick in 25 To Do Lists to Stay Productive . Now Tokyo based
8221; Nick says that social networking applications will occupy a very different place within enterprises than traditional enterprise software, however. Social networking applications will be part of the informal organization (collaborative and non-hierarchical), versus the way software has traditionally been applied within the formal organization (very hierarchical, procedure oriented, highly political). Designed Why the Future of Corporate Computing is ‘Informal’ by Joe McKendrick December 1, 2007 at 6:07 pm · Filed under 2.0 Design Thinking
We discussed their recently announced Facebook integration through their Awareness Facebook Application Framework. discussed how Facebook is not a business-oriented platform for solving business problems inside the enterprise, with rare exceptions, as it is a consumer web application with different objectives. with traditional enterprise applications. Awareness Makes a Smart Move with Its Facebook Integration by Bill Ives May 5, 2008 at 7:12 am · Filed under Enterprise 2.0 Last week I had an interesting conversation with Eric Schurr, VP of Marketing and Direct sales at Awareness .
For example, BBC Radio4’s More or Less team probed (as they always do) the claims in more detail and posted the following response to clarify inaccuracies. 60;object width=”425″ height=”344″><param name=”movie” value=”[link] name=”allowFullScreen” value=”true”></param><param name=”allowscriptaccess” value=”always”></param><embed src=”[link] type=”application/x-shockwave-flash” allowscriptaccess=”always” allowfullscreen=”true”
Others, such as Facebook, allow users to add modules ("Applications") that enhance their profile. Then, in July 2005, News Corporation purchased MySpace for $580 million (BBC, 2005), attracting massive media attention. Another feature that differentiates Facebook is the ability for outside developers to build "Applications" which allow users to personalize their profiles and perform other tasks, such as compare movie preferences and chart travel histories. JCMC Home Submit Issues Author Index Editors About JCMC boyd, d.