309 Articles match "Open","September"

The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

Wednesday, March 10, 2010
We use this model in a number of ways: As a mental model for understanding all the areas and skill sets required for community management and hopefully, to remind community managers that it is about assembling a internal team to gather all the required skills – not to try and be the expert in all of them individually As a tool for community managers to educate and set the expectations of colleagues and advocates within the organization As a roadmap for community managers looking to understand what is important to do given their current state of evolution, and in what order To organize
 
Thursday, February 25, 2010
you probably need a close reading of the full original article to understand the excerpts well) “On 9 September 2008, the Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter published an op-ed that marked a shift in the contemporary art of government. According to Tarde, the mind is completely open to the world – there is no difference between what happens inside and outside the human skull. Excerpts from an article by Karl Palmas in the Swedish magazine Arena : In the emergent “panspectric” order, human society is seen in terms of “information traffic”.
 
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Benjamin Chiao gives an example to show how open source companies can exclude people from using free software, thereby effectively privatising it: “Over the last four years, the author measured the time needed to download various versions of Red Hat Linux, from 5.2 In September 2002, the author spent about 10 hours to download this software through the Internet. In a 2003 essay, BENJAMIN HAK-FUNG CHIAO makes the startling claim that FOSS is actually Private Property, not in the legal sense, which creates a fictional Common Property, but in a economic sense, as individuals and companies can effectively exclude others from using it, thereby achieving one of the key characteristics of private property.
 

The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community

Ben and the CCAlps Salon invited me to speak on Open Everything in Vienna on 11 September at 19:30 in the Museumsquarter. by open and free input , which is participatorily processed to result in a universally available commons , which in turn represents open and free input for further iterations. The main body of the visualization contains 6 aspects of processes representing the cycle of reproduction and growth of openness This mindmap could certainly be more beautifully designed and presented, but I can’t refrain from already sharing, as it presents such a condensation of the 3 years of research we’ve undertaken at the P2P Foundation.
Open Social Web September 5, 2008 Happy Birthday, Bill of Rights Filed under: Open Social Web — jsmarr @ 5:41 pm Hard to believe, but the Bill of Rights for Users of the Social Web is one year old today. Harder still to believe how much the social web has opened up in that year! Here’s Thank you to everyone that’s supported this movement, and here’s to another amazing year ahead. That said, this Bill of Rights is not a document “carved in stone” (or written on paper).
Also, IT staffers have opened up the wiki so that they can use it to work with outside suppliers. " More Zoho Discussions ... Zoho released it's first new product for 2009, Zoho Discussions. " Zoho Discussions allows organizations to create external and internal communities where problems are solved, topics are discussed and ideas are exchanged.
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the Week: September 12, 2009 image from caught sight of the open blue and became a whippoorwill. ...Tags: BLOG Links and Tweets of the from Does Congo Matter? by Emily Troutman PREPARING FOR
/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 . I offer a thought about deductive openness, by which I mean a path of low resistance for developers of application. Rather than striving for a theoretical openness, based on high-minded principles, I believe that developers will likely taking tactical, well-understood and intuitive paths toward adopting common services.
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 Six Apart Releases Statement About Opening the Social Graph Written by Marshall Kirkpatrick / September 20, 2007 1:00 PM / 4 Comments « Prior Post Next Post » Blog software vendor Six Apart this afternoon posted a long
Service Design Tools : An open collection of communication tools for complex design processes. Some of these things are now a bit old, but the internet gives everything an eternal life (as long as the links are valid!!), so here’s a list of stuff that we looked at over the last couple of months: 1.
« Purpose | Weblog Home | Twitter backlash » September 26, 2008 Pollard on Open Space Dave Pollard has a thoughtful and somewhat critical post about Open Space . First off, declaring my baggage at customs, Im a frequent user and something of an enthusiast for Open Space. I see that Jack Martin Leith has offered a few thoughts in response. And I know that its a process that some people find frustrating.
Chris Corrigan Going deep into Open Space Posted by Chris Corrigan - 26/09/08 at 09:09:28 am Great…so I’m just about to host a three day Art of Hosting workshop in which we will be talking about several methodologies, mental models and design tools, including Open Space.  And First I should say that I’ve never used Open Space to arrive at one solution for something.  I And today, right out of the blue come three incredibly amazing posts from Dave Pollard (who is joining us), Johnnie Moore (who almost joined us) and Jack Martin Leith about the process.