15 Articles match "Listserv","Twitter"

The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

Thursday, March 18, 2010
Instead, a student can interact directly with researchers through Twitter, blogs, Facebook, and listservs. George Siemens describes how networks disrupt traditional teaching : The old model, he writes, “works well when we can centralize both the content (curriculum) and the teacher. The model falls apart when we distribute content and extend the activities of the teacher to include multiple educator
 
Monday, January 11, 2010
In preparing for the session, I shared it on Twitter and Facebook and our newsletter. In every venue where I am present – from listservs to LinkedIn to individual phone conversations with people unrelated to consulting – we’ve been asking things like • The more we dive into what it means to run the Community-Driven Institute with true transparency, the more we learn at every step.  This week’s Q&A session on Community-Driven Consulting is turning out to be yet another example of that!
 
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Several months ago, when I was first jumping into Facebook and LinkedIn and Twitter, I shared this question on LinkedIn: “For what do you use which of these spaces?” His response came to mind as I watched a chat on Twitter tonight about the same subject - the line between the personal and the professional. And that reminded me of something I posted to a listserv several years ago, in response A young man sent this response: “While
 

The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

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
listserv or web forum, Twitter, etc.)   Spidergram examples of the Central Park Birdwatchers - click for larger image My friend Sue Wolff generously lent me two books recently. The first, Marie Winn’s “ Red-Tails in Love ” captured my heart and mind. It is the story of a community of birdwatchers in Central Park in New York City and how they observed,
listserv or web forum , Twitter , etc.) Spidergram examples of the Central Park Birdwatchers - click for larger image (Crossposted from my Full Circle blog ) My friend Sue Wolff generously lent me two books recently. The first, Marie Winn’s “ Red-Tails in Love ” captured my heart and mind.
Lately were most excited about making paperworks videos , our Video Store , and being lightweight. Subscribe to Our Blog Enter your email address: Got Twitter? @CommonCraft - New videos, behind the scenes @leelefever - personal, links, etc. @sachilefever sachilefever - personal We have a Twitter Page . People Are Talking Check out the latest mentions on: Twitter Blogs (Technorati) Bookmarks (Delicious) Friend Feed Possibly Related Clue Unit Podcast #20: A Conversation with Derek Powazek Your Community
Essentially, the question is whether blogs build or tear apart other online communities (listservs, online forums, etc.). He takes my thoughts and expands on them nicely. June 5, 2007 2:34 PM Leave a comment Name Email Address
Essentially, the question is whether blogs build or tear apart other online communities (listservs, online forums, etc.). They are mostly to be ignored, from my perspective. October 9, 2007 10:11 PM Leave a comment Name Email Address
think the gardener role in social media is paramount, I’m finding that distributed blog and twitter conversations can only be manually threaded together… There is so much good stuff in email silos, and I’d say the same about forums, etc…even though they are public (not siloed) we still need to bring to the front, neaten up, and showcase the good stuff. Sometimes there is so much tacit knowledge being made explicit in wikis and discussion forums and listservs that the meaning can sometimes be lost without spending the time to make sense of it all. Home About Brad Hinton - plain speaking Entries RSS | Comments RSS Category Cloud Blogging Business Business strategy Change management Collaboration Communication Conference Content management Culture Education & learning Information Management Information use Just me Knowledge Management Language Libraries Management Marketing Networking Networks Organisational behaviour Presentations Research Social computing Social networking Society Storytelling
Whether you are meeting people on Twitter or Facebook, at a blog or in real life, none of us wants to spend time with a walking brochure. have known some of these wonderful people since way back in the hey-day of listservs. I met others more recently, through Facebook and Twitter. Being in Day 3 of this fabulously energizing week, I have had little time to blog. I did, however, want to share an observation I have noted perhaps every single hour of this week:
In preparing for the session, I shared it on Twitter and Facebook and our newsletter. In every venue where I am present – from listservs to LinkedIn to individual phone conversations with people unrelated to consulting – we’ve been asking things like • The more we dive into what it means to run the Community-Driven Institute with true transparency, the more we learn at every step.  This week’s Q&A session on Community-Driven Consulting is turning out to be yet another example of that!
Need I say: No web, no listservs, and, of course, no Google, Wikipedia, Twitter or Facebook. Tags: Research Virtual Teams Twitter NetAge Social networking Gardening Me Writing Networks and Networking Web/Tech Books Education Facebook Weblogs Energy Internet/web Economy Environmen In 1982, Doubleday published Networking: The First Report and Directory , Jeff's and my first book. The story of how that book came to market someday will, or rather, should appear in the annals of publishing -- first publisher ( Methuen , a British publisher aiming to break into the US market) shelved its whole list just after we'd submitted manuscript; Doubleday picked it up, offering more than twice the original advance (great agent at time, Ron Bernstein); we got the contract to do the electronic typsetting, making it the first commercial book to be electronically typeset