This link has been bookmarked by 4 people . It was first bookmarked on 23 Mar 2009, by Joshua Yeidel.
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30 May 09
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innovation in social and collaborative systems is almost exclusively coming from the consumer Web
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SharePoint was designed before we had learned many of the modern social computing lessons
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excessively complex
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weak support for the most common Enterprise 2.0 application types
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multi-level security, governance, and policy controls
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more difficult than with other platforms which were designed to function in highly diverse environments
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Users should be able to create sites
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customize them over time to meet the local requirements
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evolve and improve through shared contributions
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complexity and high cost
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27 Mar 09
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24 Mar 09
Vahid Masrouri wouldn't mind training people in how to use this...
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the Enterprise 2.0 story is primarily aimed at knowledge workers engaged in complex, collaborative projects which have had few effective software tools until recently, in other words strategic business activities. Industries like finance, government, civil engineering, transportation, and many others are trend to be top heavy with this kind of worker and are likely the last major bastions of productivity gains in modern economies, if the right solutions can be brought to bear. In other words, Enterprise 2.0 can help some of our most important and most valuable workers do better work while providing more value to the organization as a whole.
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23 Mar 09
Joshua Yeidel...due the fact that the single most frequently asked question I get about Enterprise 2.0 is if SharePoint is a suitable platform for it (short answer: it definitely depends), I’ve spent the last few weeks taking a hard look at SharePoint the product itself, talked extensively with SharePoint and Enterprise 2.0 practitioners both, and created the resulting analysis.
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