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216 Articles match "January","Messages"
The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
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Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Details Magazine Buy Reprint Idea in Brief HBR.org > January–February 2010 Rethinking Marketing by Roland T. Cultivating Customers Not long ago, companies looking to get a message out to a large population had only one real option: blanket a huge swath of customers simultaneously, mostly using one-way mass communication. Harvard Business Review Cart My Account Downloads Explore Today on HBR Blogs Magazine Books Authors Store Harvard Business School
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Wednesday, March 3, 2010
At the end of January, the Economist published a special report on on social networking .Their An interesting afternoon at Vodafone in the UK saw a tweet on their official @VodafoneUK account that was clearly not the kind of message the brand intended to share with its customers. But, in addition to some rather questionable grammar, the message was offensive and not appropriate for a brand’s Twitter stream at all. Image by Xavier Lozano via Flickr
At FreshNetworks, we aim to bring you the best posts in social media, online communities and customer engagement
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Sunday, February 28, 2010
Anyhow here's a translated post: (foto door cheryljns ) I've started in January with an online course 'Think till you are thin" ' Denk je slank in Dutch ' It works I lost 4 kilos!). The way it is set up is fun, with exercises, text-messaging, videos and a coach, though I miss the interaction. typical example of a message: "I started the course today and hope I get the book soon! Note: this is a translation of a Dutch blogpost. I'm thinking how to continue with a Dutch and an English blog.
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The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
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Sunday, January 4, 2009
/Message « Jay Rosen on Press Migration | Main | Louis Gray on Why Friendfeed Will Fail » January 03, 2009 Nature Or Nurture In Social Networking by Stowe Boyd We suffer from a collective delusion, in Western society, and it comes to the fore this time of year, like clockwork, as we make New Years resolutions. Read More] Tracked on January 05, 2009 at 09:00 AM Comments Nature Or Nurture In Social Networking We suffer from a collective delusion, in Western
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Wednesday, September 5, 2007
/Message « Blogs Go Mainstream: Advertising Toilets | Main | Stowe Boyd » September 05, 2007 The Architecture of Sociality: Building In Openness by Stowe Boyd A lot of discussion boiling recently about openness in social applications (like the Bill Of Rights movement manifesto and supporting comments , and Brad Fitzpatricks Thoughts On The Social Graph . This is how Yahoo and Microsoft now support interoperability in their instant messaging solutions today, although through some custom gateway, and no one else is invited
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Friday, July 11, 2008
/Message « Om Malik on Social Networks And Scale | Main | Web Culture: Individuality, Belonging, and Scalar Freedom » June 14, 2008 Overload, Schmoverload: The Myth Of Personal Productivity by Stowe Boyd The newest attack on connectedness and whole brain attention is here, spouting conventional wisdom as gospel: [from Lost in E-Mail, Tech Firms Face Self-Made Beast by Matt Richtel] The onslaught of cellphone calls and e-mail and instant messages is fracturing attention spans and hurting productivity. A typical information
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Sunday, May 18, 2008
/Message « Enterprise 2.0 Launchpad: First Round Results | Main | Marketonomy: WHIM Interview with Stowe Boyd » May 14, 2008 Everything Is Different by Stowe Boyd [Originally published on the Visible Path Centrality blog, 10 January 2005] In Albert-László Barabási’s Linked, the author explains that the origin of the “six degrees of separation” notion that underlies all social networking theory was the brain child of a Hungarian writer, Frigyes Karinthy. In 1929, Karinthy published his forty-sixth book, a collection of short stories entitled “Everything Is Different” (Minden masképpen van), which is now out of print and apparently lost to us.
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Sunday, September 7, 2008
/Message « Snackr: An RSS News Ticker | Main | I’m So Totally, Digitally Close to You » September 07, 2008 Clive Thompson On Streaming by Stowe Boyd Clive Thompson has done a magisterial job in his exploration into the belly of streaming (or flow) applications, focusing on the mouthfeel of Twitter and Facebook, and doing what I would have thought was impossible: getting across the value of this foreign, hivemind experience to a hypothetical Everyman: [from Brave New World of Digital Intimacy by Clive Thompson] [...] One
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Tuesday, October 2, 2007
/Message « Design Police: Wheres The New Button? | Main | Guy Kawaski on The Blogosphere » October 02, 2007 Dave McClure Is Wrong, Continued: Social Graph v Social Network by Stowe Boyd Dave McClure responded to my recent post about the redundant and unhelpful Social Graph meme. Social graphs exist within systems designed to model those social networks, systems whose purpose may be to enhance (or even spawn) real-world social networks. Posted by: Joel Helbling | November 07, 2007 at 08:14 AM
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Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Good for Enterprise offers enterprise-class messaging and collaboration for IBM Lotus Domino and Notes users. Lots of news around Lotus ... a consequence of the Lotusphere 2010 conference this week ...
Mainsoft Integrating Notes and SharePoint 2010 ...
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Friday, July 4, 2008
/Message « Planes, Trains, And Laptops | Main | Snakes And Widgets » July 02, 2008 9cays: Embracing The Email Beast For Lightweight Collaboration by Stowe Boyd I am fond of quoting my dear friend, Doc Searls, who once said, "Email is where knowledge goes to die." While I may feel like threaded messages in Gmail are similar, they are not shared. But still, I spend a lot of time in email, and I seem to remain in that workspace fringe zone where I am working with a shifting crowd of collaborators, sometimes on very short-term or low-wattage projects, and we never seem to get around to setting up a Basecamp project (and Workstreamer is still in closed beta).
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Wednesday, February 25, 2009
The February 2009 edition of Messaging News is now available. My article starts on page 24 of the PDF, providing a review of Lotusphere 2009.
" The messaging and collaboration year kicks off in January with the annual IBM love fest for Lotus customers. This year was no exception as Lotusphere 2009 was held in Florida January 19-23, and saw IBM coming out swinging for greater mindshare and a revised perception of strength and capability among IT strategists. "
You can download the PDF (5.5 MB, 36 pages).
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Friday, January 16, 2009
What: WSJ article on how text messaging may prevent languages from fading Posts to which it is related: None
Bottom line: Language advocates worry that languages may not stay relevant if they are not used to send text messages on a cellphone. In 2006, cellphone users in India with predictive text averaged 70 messages a week compared to 18 messages sent by those without predictive text on their cellphones. However, texting on a cellphone can be cumbersome because one has to make multiple taps on keys to select some letters. This becomes even harder in languages
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