4 Articles match "Case Study","Netiquette"

The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

Wednesday, June 24, 2009
This is followed by a summary of the case study on Wikipedia where this framework is applied. Archaic force also manifests itself in received netiquette conventions and patterns of online discourse that encourage symbolic violence. O’Neil writes that “In general women have a deep aversion towards the kinds of adversarial exchange that men thrive on”, and argues that early netiquette specifically encouraged male styles of adversarial discussion, There is a really good review of Mathieu O’Neill’s Cyberchiefs book. We covered that important
 
Friday, May 8, 2009
3) Studies of other free-software projects have shown that small groups are responsible for the majority of work. 4) A study of the development of Apache showed that out of 400 developers, the top 15 contributed between 83 and 91 per cent of changes, whilst ‘bug’ (or problem) reports were much more evenly distributed. (5) 7) Studies of patterns of questions and responses on the debian-french user list reveals a tension between a system of massively distributed This is the third and last part of our treatment of a landmark book on the governance of online ‘tribes’.
 
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
The opportunity to build better products and services through this real-time live focus group are ripe, in many cases, customer communities have been waiting for a chance to give feedback. I am surprised that there are any “specific TOPICAL goals” — since I would have expected rather an “open forum” (perhaps limited by more/less standardized rules of netiquette). About Contact Web Strategy Vault Web Strategy by Jeremiah Owyang | Social Media, Web Marketing Jeremiah Owyang discusses how web tools and social media enable companies to connect with customers The Four Tenets of the Community Manager November 25th, 2007 | Category: Community Manager , Community Marketing , Web Industry Summary The budding Community Manager industry holds 4 tenets; these values resonate as a common thread within the role.
 

The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

3) Studies of other free-software projects have shown that small groups are responsible for the majority of work. 4) A study of the development of Apache showed that out of 400 developers, the top 15 contributed between 83 and 91 per cent of changes, whilst ‘bug’ (or problem) reports were much more evenly distributed. (5) 7) Studies of patterns of questions and responses on the debian-french user list reveals a tension between a system of massively distributed This is the third and last part of our treatment of a landmark book on the governance of online ‘tribes’.
The opportunity to build better products and services through this real-time live focus group are ripe, in many cases, customer communities have been waiting for a chance to give feedback. I am surprised that there are any “specific TOPICAL goals” — since I would have expected rather an “open forum” (perhaps limited by more/less standardized rules of netiquette). About Contact Web Strategy Vault Web Strategy by Jeremiah Owyang | Social Media, Web Marketing Jeremiah Owyang discusses how web tools and social media enable companies to connect with customers The Four Tenets of the Community Manager November 25th, 2007 | Category: Community Manager , Community Marketing , Web Industry Summary The budding Community Manager industry holds 4 tenets; these values resonate as a common thread within the role.
Applications include: Virtual work groups and teams Online events (especially time-delimited) Key skills include: traditional project management skills writing and summarization skills technical skills such as HTML to create information and summaries with visual impact ability to abstract information and process it for the group Links to articles Interview With Sue Thomas Case Study: the IBM/Electric Minds Kasparov vs.. Applications include: social, conversational communities topic oriented discussion groups customer service workgroups ecommerce
This is followed by a summary of the case study on Wikipedia where this framework is applied. Archaic force also manifests itself in received netiquette conventions and patterns of online discourse that encourage symbolic violence. O’Neil writes that “In general women have a deep aversion towards the kinds of adversarial exchange that men thrive on”, and argues that early netiquette specifically encouraged male styles of adversarial discussion, There is a really good review of Mathieu O’Neill’s Cyberchiefs book. We covered that important