Tuesday, June 16, 2009
ROI in special libraries session
Sunday, June 7, 2009
Brightkite application for android
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Skittles.com
Also, if you click on the link to their products via a little overlay they have set up, it directs you to their wikipedia page. This I find to be also clever and brave.
There's also some facebook integration going on here.
Thursday, January 22, 2009
The White House adopts creative commons
from: http://www.whitehouse.gov/copyright/
Copyright Notice
Pursuant to federal law, government-produced materials appearing on this site are not copyright protected. The United States Government may receive and hold copyrights transferred to it by assignment, bequest, or otherwise.
Except where otherwise noted, third-party content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. Visitors to this website agree to grant a non-exclusive, irrevocable, royalty-free license to the rest of the world for their submissions to Whitehouse.gov under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
DMCA Notice
The White House respects the intellectual property of others, and we ask users of our Web sites to do the same. In accordance with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) and other applicable law, we have adopted a policy of terminating, in appropriate circumstances and at our sole discretion, subscribers or account holders who are deemed to be repeat infringers. We may also at our sole discretion limit access to our Web site and/or terminate the accounts of any users who infringe any intellectual property rights of others, whether or not there is any repeat infringement.
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Brightkite to add an Android Application
It also looks like Brightkite is about to release an application for the iphone as well, and they are showing some screenshots.
The T-Mobile G1, android operating system phone, is supposed to be in Denver on about November 22nd, a month after the official release. This is also when T-Mobile is supposed to get 3G access.
Brightkite is based in Denver, CO but works anywhere through the web, text messaging, and through mobile browsers.
Thursday, September 25, 2008
KMWorld - Next Generation Communities of Practice
Next Generation Communities of Practice: Taking KM to the Next Level with Web 2.0
Eric Sauve - http://www.tomoye.com/TomoyeLeadership.html
notes from Eric Sauve's presentation:
communities vs social networking
design principle #1 - Communities need to prove a range of interactivity:
options: 1) basic interaction - mouse only,
2) more advanced interaction - minimal typing,
3) power users or leaders
design principle #2 - They need to be simple
design principle #3 - They neeed to create ownership for engagement
- enterprise idea: add a voting button similar to digg: helpful? yes /no
design principle #4 - Let the community do some of the heavy lifting
- best practice identification
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KMWorld - How to Measure Web 2.0 Content by Carmine Porco
Carmine discussed a number of issues around measurements with web 2.0 use in a knowledge management implementation. It seemed to be much more of an all around guide to web 2.0 KM than being specifically about measurement. Unfortunately, although he included a few measurements in the presentation, he didn't focus on how to measure. Also, his presentation was outdated with old figures and references to sites, pages or products that no longer exist.
Carmine's bio: http://www.prescientdigital.com/about-us/team/carmine-porco-vice-president
Here are some notes from the presentation:
The power of groups:
- collective guesses are closer than individual guesses.
- Google uses collective intelligence in the page rank
Web evolution: web 1.0 -> web 2.0
publishing -> participation
CMS -> wiki
taxonomy -> folksonomy
Sun Microsystems Community Equity - tracks and rewards employees for collaboration
Webnext - Their portal is supposed to be 90% what an employee cares about, 10% ideas that the organization is pushing down
Generate data from simple surveys at the end of blog posts, etc.: Did this help? yes / no
Creating a blog at ehobbies.com doubled the conversion rate (from 2% to 4%)
- the blog doesn't seem to exist anymore though (from my quick search)
Carmine says not to use a wiki as a Content Management System because there is no control, etc. He does say you can use a wiki with teams with time limits.
- I argue that you can have controls on wiki's, and in my practice deploying wiki's on intranets I haven't seen the pandemonium that Carmine says exists. I think they can work, at least for a limited group, as an editable knowledge base.
He mentioned that some people won't go to your company (work for?) if you ban facebook. He discussed how some companies are using facebook or requiring employees to log on for a certain amount of time.
He showed globalincidentmap.com - "a global incident map showing terrorist acts and other suspicious events"
He suggests using an executive blog that combines posts from various executives including the CEO.
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