This link has been bookmarked by 66 people . It was first bookmarked on 06 Nov 2006, by Morten Mork.
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17 Mar 10
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04 Jan 10
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04 Nov 09
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29 Jun 09
Bradley DilgerDion Hinchcliffe | Eight principles from O'Reilly book herein; pretty much same as "What is Web 2.0"
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28 Jun 09
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20 Mar 09
Kjell SJSLATES describes the combined use of effective enterprise search and discovery, using links to connect information together into a meaningful information ecosystem using the model of the Web, providing low-barrier social tools for public authorship of ent
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30 Jan 09
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02 Dec 08
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16 Oct 08
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SLATES describes the combined use of effective enterprise search and discovery, using links to connect information together into a meaningful information ecosystem using the model of the Web, providing low-barrier social tools for public authorship of enterprise content, tags to let users create emergent organizational structure, extensions to spontaneously provide intelligent content suggestions similar to Amazon's recommendation system, and signals to let users know when enterprise information they care about has been published or updated, such as when a corporate RSS feed of interest changes.
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30 Sep 08
Sean BradyA discussion of E 2.0 and the 6 things to have in place to get a good E 2.0 implementation running. Specifically covering the SLATES idea in E 2.0.
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SLATES describes the combined use of effective enterprise search and discovery, using links to connect information together into a meaningful information ecosystem using the model of the Web, providing low-barrier social tools for public authorship of enterprise content, tags to let users create emergent organizational structure, extensions to spontaneously provide intelligent content suggestions similar to Amazon's recommendation system, and signals to let users know when enterprise information they care about has been published or updated, such as when a corporate RSS feed of interest changes.
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22 Aug 08
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29 Jun 08
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17 Apr 08
Tony HirstSLATES - search, links, authorship, extensions, signals
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09 Feb 08
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Enterprise 2.0, which is the application of Web 2.0 technologies to workers using network software within an organization or business.
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Andrew McAfee
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eight core patterns of Web 2.0
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20 Jan 08
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07 Nov 07
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19 Oct 07
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12 Oct 07
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05 Sep 07
bartbSLATES: describes the combined use of effective enterprise search and discovery, using links to connect information together into a meaningful information ecosystem using the model of the Web, providing low-barrier social tools for public authorship of en
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19 Jun 07
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21 Mar 07
urban sheepSLATES describes the use of enterprise search, using links to connect information into an ecosystem, providing social tools for public authorship of content, tags to create emergent org-structure, extensions to provide intelligent content suggestions, and
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21 Feb 07
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SLATES describes the combined use of effective enterprise search and discovery, using links to connect information together into a meaningful information ecosystem using the model of the Web, providing low-barrier social tools for public authorship of enterprise content, tags to let users create emergent organizational structure, extensions to spontaneously provide intelligent content suggestions similar to Amazon's recommendation system, and signals to let users know when enterprise information they care about has been published or updated, such as when a corporate RSS feed of interest changes.
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- Harnessing Collective Intelligence: Sometimes described as the core pattern of Web 2.0, this describes architectures of participation that embraces the effective use of network effects and feedback loops to create systems that get better the more that people use them.
- Data is the Next "Intel Inside": A phrase that captures the fact that information that information has become as important, or more important, than software, which has become relentlessly commoditized.
- Innovation in Assembly: The Web has become a massive source of small pieces of data and services, loosely joined, increasing the recombinant possibilities and unintended uses of systems and information.
- Rich User Experiences: The Web page has evolved to become far more than HTML markup and now embodies full software experiences that enable interaction and immersion in innovative new ways.
- Software Above the Level of a Single Device: Software like the horizontally federated blogosphere (hundreds of blog platforms and aggregators) or the vertically integrated iTunes (server farm + online store + iTunes client + iPods) are changing our software landscape.
- Perpetual Beta: Software releases are disappearing and continuous change is becoming the norm.
- Leveraging the Long Tail: The mass servicing of micromarkets cost effectively via the Web is one of the primary "killer business models" made possible by the Internet in its present form.
- Lightweight Software/Business Models and Cost Effective Scalability: Everything from Amazon's S3, to RSS, to Ruby on Rails are changing the economics of online software development fundamentally, providing new players powerful new weapons against established players and even entire industries.
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12 Jan 07
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09 Jan 07
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25 Dec 06
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16 Nov 06
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eight core patterns of Web 2.0
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14 Nov 06
Sandy KemsleyDion Hinchcliffe on O'Reilly's updated Web 2.0 definition and what this means for Enterprise 2.0
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13 Nov 06
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11 Nov 06
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09 Nov 06
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06 Nov 06

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