296 Articles match "Messages","RSS"

The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

Wednesday, March 10, 2010
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. Take This Test Keep Up With HBR Follow us on Twitter » Become a Fan on Facebook » HBR on YouTube » Get Email Alerts From HBR    Harvard Business Review Daily Alert    Management Tip of the Day    The Daily Stat    Weekly Hotlist    See all newsletters »
 
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
You dilute the message by promoting everything the tool can do. Provided by Corporate Executive Board —What the Best Companies Do™ Reader Discussion Post a comment about this story in Reader Discussion… BW Extras Podcasts Mandel on Economics Behind the Cover CEO Guide to Tech more… RSS Feeds Most Popular Top News Innovation Trends more… E-mails Asia Insider MBA Express BW.com Insider more… Blogs Blogspotting Hot Property
 
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Sending lots of @ messages to non-followers is outright spam and ought to be reported using the “report for spam” link. Subscribe to my RSS feed or by e-mail . Have you ever been slapped by Google or by one of the major business networking sites ? I have — more
 

The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

Enterprise RSS . The consumption of Enterprise RSS feeds and the creation of the content in the feeds are both at fault here. There isn't enough 'good' information coming out of 'enterprise' RSS feeds and many people don't understand RSS (still). When it comes to RSS readers, we've got to look at the enterprise itself and ask the following questions: A lot of great comments over at the main article: R.I.P I
ReadWriteWeb ReadWriteWeb ReadWriteTalk Enterprise Jobwire About Subscribe Contact Advertise RSS RWW Daily by Email RSS RWW Weekly Wrap-up Home Products Trends Best of RWW Archives Feedbuddy: RSS Matchmaking Written by Josh Catone / August 6, 2007 12:37 PM / 8 Comments « Prior Post Next Post » Feedbuddy is a social network that was bound to happen: one built around RSS feeds.
/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 . Largely, today, we are living in a world with thousands of centralized social applications, providing very little interoperability aside from the bleed-over of RSS-based
retweet, reply…favourite, and direct message are missing. If you are after a mini embeddable RSS Reader for Twitter check out Twazr , see my post . All these have RSS feeds if you prefer to read in Google Reader. Another tool on the block is Filttr …this too does group and search streams (and offers RSS feeds)…it TwitteReader looks similar to Google Reader, where you can mark read/unread tweets. You can already do this in Google Reader by subscribing to “you and your friends” timeline feed.
Twitter — or, rather, the idea of a pervasive, public short messaging network — could be too important to be left under one entity’s control. Winer, one of the creators of RSS, proposes using Web syndication as a replacement for Twitter. His idea, called RSS Cloud, is technically complex, but it boils down to this: When you send out an update, it’ll go to a set of servers in the Web cloud. The people behind the OpenMicroBlogging (OMB) movement say it’s time for the 140-character, publicly-subscribable format pioneered by Twitter to become an open standard, in part because, as last week’s attack showed, Twitter is as vulnerable as it is vital.
Users have access to the entire history of available messages either via searching or by paging through the history of activity. For Traction TeamPage's LiveBlog product: security, access controls, archiving/logging, LDAP/AD integration, and policy management (including groups defined by dynamic LDAP/AD queries) are all handled by the TeamPage engine (along with permission aware display of search results, RSS/Atom feeds, IM notification, email digests, and inline comments, and paragraph level tagging). Yammer, despite multiple requests, did not respond to my earlier post on the need for tools in this category to support policy, integration, security and other capabilities expected by enterprise decision-makers.
/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 of the key elements is the addition of micro-blogging or micro-messaging. Integrates Twitter with Comprehensive RSS Reader Capabilities It seems like all the enterprise collaboration platforms are adding more features to become a suite. Th emor eI talk to the more they are developing a similar comprehensive suite. This is not a bad
/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. i made the analogy with XML & RSS, as i believe this is a similar situation -- RSS is a more specific & nuanced implementation of XML, that emphasizes a standard for content publishing (rather than a more generic structured data standard).
/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).