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1758 Articles match "Information","Sharing"
The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
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Friday, March 19, 2010
Here's Streetbank , a site to support lending and sharing at neighbourhood level. All power to their elbows - it's a niche that the local websites haven't been big on, as far as I'm aware, based on the reflection that because we don't know our neighbours so well, we have more stuff than we need and don't lend and share when we might.
Tags: Information and communication Neighbourhood relation Someone will correct me if I'm wrong, it won't be the first time, but I think while neighbourhood sites encourage recycling, 'going to a good home', local trader recommendations etc and of course local social connections generally, few have got down to the nitty-gritty of instrumental reciprocity.
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Friday, March 19, 2010
Now it’s all over, the hangover has faded but the jetlag is lingering longer than would be ideal, there are a few observations from my first sxsw that I would like to share.
The standout moment for me was Clay Shirky’s talk “Monkeys with Internet Access: Sharing, Human Nature, and Digital Data.” He created a beautifully articulate argument for how abundance breaks more I wrote a week or so ago about what I wanted to get from South by South West.
8221; He captivated the audience for an hour, weaving together seemingly unrelated topics and themes (underwear,
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Friday, March 19, 2010
The creation of stock companies with transferable shares should not be subsidized and the property rights, which will be strictly confined to the inhabitants of the local society, must be universal and non transferable.
The sale prices for small producers will finally have to shaped freely and the consumers themselves should be the direct buyers in a smart, emancipated and P2P informed energy market. This article by George Papanikolaou appeared in a special issue of the Greek bi-lingual Re-Public magazine, Issue on P2P Energy, 2009
The same issue has articles by Erik Hunting
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The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
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Sunday, April 5, 2009
We concluded that what councils need in order to share so-called “best practice” is not more consultancy, reports and databases, but video clips, conversations, and encouragement to tell bad stories as well a good. The event was organised by Steve Dale , who works with IDeA on improving how our councils operate - in his case by developing communities of practice for knowledge sharing, with Michael Norton, as I reported here .
Last week I spent half a day in a workshop on local government knowledge management. Boring waste of time?
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Friday, November 27, 2009
Just reflecting on a couple of cases where team performance – by design – depends a lot on sharing the same room. Sharing a room is good for productivity and builds on all kinds of powerful activities that happen in physical space. Operating in a shared space makes various interactions informal and their value implicit – everyone is there, questions are asked and answered, insights and artefacts shared, actions observed. However, there are a couple of issues with that.
However, this means that if someone is not in the room for whatever
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Thursday, September 14, 2006
Its potential is described in just 3 words on the website : keep, share and discover. Information on the internet can be collected, shared and discovered online with this social bookmarking tool. All the information stored on del.icio.us By assigning different The tool: del.icio.us Del.icio.us is an online tool.
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Thursday, January 28, 2010
wanted to share some of them, and find out what you use and how. Patrick Lambe and the folks at Straitsknowledge created a deck of cards to introduce people to knowledge management and knowledge sharing methods. have only played with them in small, informal groups and have not used them with clients. I love things you can touch and play with when facilitating face to face. This is probably why I was so attracted to the “drawing on walls” involved in graphic facilitation , kinesthetic modeling and just plain PLAY as a way to work together.
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Sunday, June 7, 2009
I’ve been co-designing and c0-facilitating a number of workshops for the CGIAR and FAO over the past few years about knowledge sharing, and more recently, this phenomenon people call “social media.” thought I’d share a few of them on this blog. What type of quantitative and qualitative information do we need to track to measure 8221; Part of this work has been to comb through resources and create some launch pads that are relevant to NGOs and non profits. I
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Friday, September 7, 2007
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
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Tuesday, August 4, 2009
This afternoon I’m spending a half hour on a Skype video conversation to share a bit of how I use social media. As with online communities, learning communities benefit from facilitation, both formal and informal, designated or spontaneous and self-generated. “Build Global Networks & Knowledge Sharing
I figured it would be good to exercise my memory a bit and unearth some of the key stories that led me to to my social media use today, and perhaps surface some of my patterns.
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Monday, September 28, 2009
Funny enough, that has been like that for quite a while, having gotten started around 2001, when I was first getting exposed to Knowledge Management (KM or Knowledge Sharing, whatever you would prefer) as time and time again I kept bumping into multiple knowledge managers wanting to define it. Steve Barth ventured, earlier on this year, into putting some very thought-provoking arguments on the need for one, after all, and he shares his favourite one :
" Most of the folks out there who know me, and have been following this blog for a while, have probably realised by now how much I dislike definitions, and putting labels on things, in general.
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Monday, December 8, 2008
This is a brief report and things we learned about the experimental ‘knowledge networking’ and ‘social reporting’ facilitation work done at Online Information 2008 , co-authored between David Wilcox and Emma Wallace and me.
As delegates entered this information as part of their profiles, this gathered two ‘tag clouds’ which reflected the interests of the attendees and gave them a natural route to finding eachother. We worked with Lorna Candy and the team at Incisive Media to help them provide more networking opportunities for delegates and speakers before and during the conference, online and offline, using different tools.
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Sunday, July 5, 2009
In a world of information abundance, knowledge workers and learning professionals need to be able to scan, both through the discerning use of aggregating technologies and their own ability to quickly read, and estimate the quality and value of the information passing by them in this “river.” The five minute questions would be to ask 1) What are your daily information scanning practices? It is hard to let some Tony Karrer disappointment persist. After posting my 4 Meta Skills for Learning Professionals in response to Tony’s July “Big Question,” he commented:
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