This link has been bookmarked by 47 people . It was first bookmarked on 26 Jun 2006, by Tom.
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19 Nov 08
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In late 2000 Wales was introduced to wikis, which are (again, according to Wikipedia) "<!--StartFragment -->a type of website that allows anyone visiting the site to add, remove, or otherwise edit all content, quickly and easily, often without the need for registration." Wikis were invented by Ward Cunningham, who’s most frequently-repeated quote is "What’s the simplest thing that could possibly work?"
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16 Nov 08
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The Impact of Information Technology (IT) on Businesses and their Leaders Andrew McAfee Associate Professor, Harvard Business School -
Andrew McAfee Associate Professor, Harvard Business School -
what I call Enterprise 2.0 -- the emerging use of Web 2.0 technologies like blogs and wikis (both perfect examples of network IT) within the Intranet
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Blogs, wikis, and RSS have been brewing since the 1990s, and folksonomies and AJAX since the early years of this decade.
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concerning the changing relationship between those who offer technologies and those who use them
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Simple, Free Platforms for Self-Expression
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Emergent Structures, Rather than Imposed Ones.
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As technologists were building the new platforms they were also rethinking their roles, and making a fundamental philosophical shift
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he history of Wikipedia provides a great example of this shift.
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Yahoo!’s purchase, in late 2005, of del.icio.us provides another example of the same broad shift in philosophy
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Yahoo! attempted to organize the Web’s content hierarchically, placing individual sites into pre-defined categories like Health, Arts, and Computers, and into sub-categories within them.
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Taxonomy is the science of classifying things, usually hierarchically
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’folksonomy‘ -- a categorization system developed over time by folk
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Order from Chaos
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tendencies to impose structure, the technologists of Web 2.0 are providing a third valuable service
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hey’re rolling out tools that help us filter, sort, prioritize, and generally stay on top of the flood of new online content.
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how to harness Web 2.0 to create Enterprise 2.0.
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15 Oct 08
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what I call Enterprise 2.0 -- the emerging use of Web 2.0 technologies like blogs and wikis (both perfect examples of network IT) within the Intranet
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01 Oct 08
Proven PartnersThe Trends Underlying Enterprise 2.0
I have an article in the spring 2006 issue of Sloan Management Review (SMR) on what I call Enterprise 2.0 -- the emerging use of Web 2.0 technologies like blogs and wikis (both perfect examples of network IT) with -
22 Aug 08
Will StewartI have an article in the spring 2006 issue of Sloan Management Review (SMR) on what I call Enterprise 2.0 -- the emerging use of Web 2.0 technologies like blogs and wikis (both perfect examples of network IT) within the Intranet. The article describes w
wikis wiki web2.0 web trends tagging software socialsoftware tags
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16 Jan 08
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04 Dec 07
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11 Nov 07
Adriana Lukasa very important piece. Please read the whole thing, it's what is being said and by whom. the concept of 'transparent technology' is discussed although he is not using the term, which I know from Page Sands. Also talks about emergent structures rather ...
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07 Nov 07
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28 Oct 07
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23 Sep 07
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31 Aug 07
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27 Aug 07
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30 Jul 07
Johann RichardThe Trends Underlying Enterprise 2.0
ajax articles blog blogging business communication corporate collaboration wikis socialsoftware trends enterprise2.0 web2.0 enterprise for:unic.com for:surber ****
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04 May 07
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26 Dec 06
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20 Dec 06
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06 Dec 06
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I have an article in the spring 2006 issue of Sloan Management Review (SMR) on what I call Enterprise 2.0 -- the emerging use of Web 2.0 technologies like blogs and wikis (both perfect examples of network IT) within the Intranet.
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04 Sep 06
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25 Aug 06
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23 Aug 06
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21 Aug 06
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15 Aug 06
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08 Aug 06
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Why is this? There are a number of reasons, both technical and social, which are explained in the SMR article and will be considered in later posts. One of the main ones is that the shift from Nupedia to Wikipedia was a huge reduction in the amount of structure in the content creation and editing process. The structure was intended to act as a barrier to bad content, but instead it acted as a barrier to all types of content, and to broad participation. When this structure was abandoned—when Wikipedia’s philosophy became explicitly ‘non-credentialist‘ and one of "making it easier to correct mistakes, rather than making it difficult to make them" -- the project took off and became something legitimately astonishing.
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27 Jun 06
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26 Jun 06
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11 May 06
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26 Apr 06
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13 Apr 06
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