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Sunday, March 30, 2008
Baronness Susan Greenfield, a professor of Synaptic Pharmacology at Lincoln College, Oxford, and Director of the Royal Institution of Great Britain, has warned that the experience of growing up immersed in hyper-stimulating digital technologies will result in human minds characterized [...] Featured Post Archive Recent Posts Guest Blogger: “Collaboration: Concept, Power and Magic” by Julie Lindsay Facebook is ‘infantilising’ the human mind Trying to pull off an engaging customer experience Blog It, Earn It - Barter Based
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Monday, September 14, 2009
So when Bill Ives just recently questioned whether you could make use of Twitter as a Personal Knowledge Management tool I couldn’t help but wonder myself whether I am using it as well as my PKM tool of choice, along with my own personal business blog and a couple of other tools. simply couldn’t consider Twitter in this area for the many various flaws that it has, specially its lack of searching capabilities beyond, roughly, a week old tweets , or its inability to allow me to keep an archive of all things I have tweeted in the past that I can access at my own convenience
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Sunday, June 10, 2007
can temper any opinions I receive from people I know with my knowledge of their perspective, which is obviously harder to do when you don’t know the person sharing the opinion - see my post about user reviews on Yelp . It *is* like that in the offline world too… but its more organic and there’s much more room for grey area when it comes to expressing who you are. Communities vs Networks | SoulSoup: e-learning blog, elearning blog, knowledge management, e-learning
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Monday, January 11, 2010
Weblogs are often discussed as a tool that supports bottom-up knowledge management. In a series of two articles I will discuss how blogging might be relevant from an individual perspective, focusing on two tasks that come along with knowledge work: developing ideas and personal networking.
It is not uncommon to hear bloggers talking about reusing their archives, either to save time by sending a link to old weblog post to answer a question, or by turning them into a report or even a book. While my Dutch is still far from perfect I am happy with any opportunity to reach local audiences.
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Wednesday, June 20, 2007
UIE.com | UIE Roadshow | UIE Web App Summit | UIE Virtual Seminars User Interface Engineering Home About Us Services Articles Events Reports Blog Podcasts Blog home Archived posts RSS Feed ( What is rss? ) Why Invest in Social Features for Your Web Site? By Joshua Porter May 1st, 2007 This is the first in a multi-part series on the topic of social design, a follow-up
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Monday, May 14, 2007
2007 Home Journal Home About Subscribe Contact The Knowledge Tree 2007 Welcome to the 2007 editions of The Knowledge Tree . ISSN 1448-2673 Subscribe by email Select to receive email updates from The Knowledge Tree - completely spam free. Social Network Sites: Public, Private, or What? danah boyd is a PhD candidate in the School of Information at University of California, Berkeley and a fellow at the University of Southern California (USC) Annenberg Center for Communications. To view other editions please visit the journals portal .
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Friday, April 10, 2009
Knowledge Management? area called Knowledge Management. they invest in training them, when the essential knowledge they need
must context-free archived documents that were of almost no use to anyone
but take responsibility for their own learning and their own knowledge,
and BLOG What's Next After
Knowledge A
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Sunday, February 3, 2008
We have realised, after more than 10 years of web development and Knowledge Management, that when you put knowledge in a box, it becomes something in a box; only by setting it free and sharing it does it grow and thrive through distributed conversations. They can finally manage their own knowledge and interaction spaces and choose to share things with us, rather than having no other place to develop personally. Ed Mitchell: Platform neutral Network and community design and facilitation; event design and facilitation. Blog About Ed Projects Services Three types of community November 16, 2007 – 10:20 am This is a brief overview of three community models.
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Friday, June 27, 2008
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Thursday, March 5, 2009
Baronness Susan Greenfield, a professor of Synaptic Pharmacology at Lincoln College, Oxford, and Director of the Royal Institution of Great Britain, has warned that the experience of growing up immersed in hyper-stimulating digital technologies will result in human minds characterized [...] Featured Post Archive Recent Posts Putting the YouTube Long Tail in Perspective Skittles moves their homepage to Twitter: Crazy? Matthew Dreitlein on Putting the YouTube Long Tail in Perspective Karen Jacobs on The Boss fuels lawsuit against Ticket Master
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